U II C Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill. N. C. WEATHER Occasional rain ending tonight followed by partial clearing anJ turning colder tomorrow. HigW temperatures 50-58. OUT-OF-STATERS Better than native Tar Htl? See editorial, page 2. VOL. LVII NO. 78 Complete (P) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS" ISSU I 1 w t I t 4)0' rp-rp fill Injured Sophomore s Condition Satisfactory Laurence Berg, sophomore from West Long Branch, X. J., was reported by Memorial Hospital as being in "satis factory condition" alter injuries sustained in a wreck. Ex tent of injury is reported as a fractured vertebra. According to Jim Caldwell. Berg's roommate, the wreck occurred at 12 o'clock Saturday night, two miles east of Smithlield. The car was traveling toward Chapel Hill. Berg was riding with N. C : State College student David Wil son in a 1956 Ford. The car, un able to make a curve, ran on to the shoulder of the road. It over turned as Wilson tried to pull it back onto the highway. Commissioners To Meet Here January 17-18 County commissioners from all over Xcrth Casylina will meet here Jan. 17-18 at ' a school con ducted by the Institute of Govern ment. Registration will begin at the new Institute of Government building at noon on Thursday. Jan. 17, and the school will close at 4 p.m. Friday, Jan. 18. . The subject matter of the meet ing , is designed primarily for newly-elected county commission ers, but all county commissioners have been invited. Many com missioners with long years of ser vice and man j' board chairmen have already notified the Insti tute that they will attend. ' A part of the Institute of Gov ernment's training program for county and municipal officials, the school ,wiJl be concerned with the pers and duties of countj commissfoners in the field of county- finance and property tax-1 ation and with the duties of com-j missioners in connection with the' financing cf public schools and welfare programs. On the agenda are such subjects as' the taxing power of counties, j revenue from non-tax sources in-1 eluding grants from the state and , federal governments, and budget , procedures. j Henry Lewis and Alex McMa hon, of the Institute staff, will di rect the program. HAPPENINGS ON THE HILL Yule Season. Abounds In Nuptials, Parties By MARY ALYS VOORHEES Cupid, no doubt has had to r- plcnish his supply of arrows. And from here it seems he, was perhaps as busy aj- Santa Claus during the holidays. Evidence of this may be sezn by noticing ail the diamond rings, wedding bands, fraternity pir.s and wha! have you, which have ap peared on the scene since Chris mas. The Alpha Gams head the list with six engagements, one pinning and one wedding, followed by the Pi Phis and Sigma Nus. But mor ? about that later. HOLIDAY REVIEW First, while on the ioibject of the holidays, and before we start talk ing of Easter, lets do a brief c view of the Yule season and find out how the southern ladies and gentlemen passed the( vacation time. As soon as school was out the Lambda Chis began celebrating. On Dec. 21 most of the fraternity gathered at Bob Ferrcll's home i 1 Graham. After a cocktail party a dance and other social activities- took place. Then after a ten day period spent with their families the group was off again, this time to New York for a few days. Included on their itinerary were visits to Basin Street and Birdland, where they feaw Louis Armstrong and Coun'. liasie, and a tour of Greenwich Village. On the other end of the line Atlanta had to offer while attend ing the wedding of one of tluir The car belonged to Wilson, who was only slightly injured in the wreck. AT Dl MEETING Shaw Pledges Library Aid; Dr. Pot eat Talks Speaking last night at the inaug uration of the new officers of the j Dialectic Senate, Dr. William H. j Poteat chose as his subject "The Peiil of the Person in the Contem I porary World." President-elect Stan Shaw, pre ceding Dr. Poteat, had for the top ic of his inaugural address: "The Role of the University and It Responsibilities to the State." In his speech Senator Shaw stat ed ."February is to be a period in which the Senator shall aid and i join the cause of the Wilson Libra- ly in. every manner ... "The new ! president claimed the State haj i been neglecting the Library and I that the :.tudent must act to change I the situation, i j He .id in keeping with the DI's I traditional interest in the library ! the Di Would circulate a petition which wrill urge the state legisla ture to help the library. He hopes to set 5.000 signatures. After" a brief and humorous" pW log.ie. Dr.. Poteat said he wished to emphasize "the person!" He j went on to say there are two basl i oppositions of the human spint j (1) love and prayer and (2) rate and teoimicology. The speaker re lated tbs first disposition to the "I and thou" concept of the Jewish philosopher Buber and the latter Buyer's idea of "I and it." Stating the ancient world consid ered nature divine and therefore was not interested in natural brothers Chi Phi Steward Bird and Duke Graduate Edith Pans were married Dec. 27 with 13 brother? and the house mother, Mrs. Var.n McNair, present. In the wedding party were Allen Holt, Tony Morris. Collie CollLvon and Charlie Fitzgerald, who served a groomsmen. Some of the nuptial festivities on the Chi Psis' program were a cocktail party and supper, rehear sal party, wedding breakfast, wed ding and the reception, plus visits io various Atlanta night spots. YULE NUPTIALS On this same day, Dec. .27, Kap pa Sig Bob Hendley and St. Mary's graduate Mary FJkins of Raleigh were united in Raleigh with Kapp:, Sigs Bill Dameron, Charles Sp:l lant and Bill Timlake serving as ushers;, ADPi Ann Gage Mc Conaughy became the bride of Mitchell Baker of the University of South Carolina; and SPE Ronald Fox wed Margaret Smith in New ton, her hometown with SPEs Harry Holding, Jeff Corbin, Char lie Daniels and Ron Belk as ush ers. ' Other nuptials taking place over the vacation period were the Dec. J 29 rites uniting Pi Phi Jane Ed wards and former UNC ATO Chuck Hauser; the marriage of Lambda Chi Eddie Greene to Toby Johnson of Winston-Salem in her hometown Dec. 23; the wedding of Alpha Gam Ann" Gillett to Johnnv Burt former Duke Lambda Chi now in the UNC grad school ia ( Enfield Dec. 28 with Alpha Gam j President Trudy Lefler a- a brides : maid; the Dec. 30 wedding of St. ! A Lauren Campbell to ADPi Gayie Noiman; and the marriage of SAE Student's Trial Is Continued A Carolina student charged with burning a cross in front of the Hillsboro home where Frank Gra ham was spending the holidays; has had his trial continued for tw weeks. William Cheshire haa admitted the cross burning, but at the re quest of R. Percy Reade of Dur ham, the defendant's attourney, ! the proceedings have been put oti until Jan. 21. science, Tr. Poteat said natural science began when Biblical re ligion placed man as the lord of God's dominion. He wnt on to sayvthe love and prayer attitude included sensit.ivi ty to other people while the rate and technicology inclined one to want to lay his hands on things. He concluded it has become "in creasingly difficult for us to see the world in the posture of the 'I and thou' attitude." IDC Meets Tonight At 7 The Interdormitery ' Council will roett tonight at 7 o'clock ir Phi Hall on tho fourth floor of New East Building. Thit will be th last Council meeting prior to fall semester examinations. All members have I been particularly encouraged to attend by IDC President $onny GM'S SLATE Activities - scheduled for Gra ham Memorial today include: Pan Hellenic Council 5-6, Grail Room; Cheerleaders, 4-4:30 and Jehovah's Witneses, 8-9:30, Roland Parker 1; Chem Fern mes, 8-10:15, Roland Parker 3; Bridge Class, 4:30-6, Rendezvous Room; APO, 7:30-8:30, APO Room. Pete Deli to Pi Phi Sharon War rington Dec. 29 with SAEs Pai Hunter and Dudley Baird as ush ers. Aiso during the holidays came he announcement of the marriage of Ed Hudgins to W. C. senior Patty Ann Mumford. . PINNING S . . . DU Roy Wood to William and Man' junior Con nie Hourcn. . . . Lambda Chi niPd student Curtis Lashley to WC freshman Pat McQuade. . . . Sigm? Chi Sonny Forbes to Stray Greek Ann Shelly. . . . Phi Gam Doug Farmer to Ami Howard of Mere dith College. - Phi Gam Jerry Gardner to Gin ger Roney of Peace Junior Col lege. . . . Phi Gam Freddie Byrum to Linda Downum of Edenton. . . . Alpha Gam Fredrice Trull to Wade Herring, Duke. Divinity student, former Delta Sigma Pi at Wofford College. ... Pika Branch Bobbitt to Louisburg College coed Patricia Pcrkinson. . . . Pika Rick Coker to Judy Aiexander of Waynesville . . . Pi Lam Richard Oresman to WC sophomore Judy Cooper. . . . SPE Bill Robbing to WC sopho- moie Sadie Anne Boyd. . . . DKE Shelby Miller to Pi Phi Sugur Dudley. . . . Sigma Nu Tommy Prewitt to Stray Greek Page Loit. Sigma Nu Harry Schoen to Mar garet Tucker of Washington,' D. C. .. . Thcta Chi Dave Wendt toWC sophomore Patricia Lentz. . . . Kappa Sig Bozie Tart to Tri Delt Mary Lee Breece. ENGAGEMENTS ... Chi 0 Marie Tyler to Jim Gardner of Rocky Mount. . . . Sigma Nu Boc .brawley, UNC med student, to UNC grad student Eleanor Rig fcins. ' Sigma Nu Tommy White to Al pha Gam Linda Blayney. . . . Al pha Gam Jackie Aldridge to stu dent buoy President- Bob Young (See HAPPENINGS, Page 3) Red China's Premier Lauds Soviets Highly MOSCOW UP) Premier Chou En-Lai of Red China heaped praise in a Kremlin speech Tuesday on the Soviet Communist Party as the leader of the world Communist movement. Chou conferred with both Soviet and East German Communist leaders on his first full day in Moscow. The Soviet government reported its talks with Chou ranged from Soviet-Chinese relations to "the international situation as it affects both countries." Chou told a luncheon gathering at the Kremlin the purpose of his visit to Moscow was "the binding of closest unity" between the two governments against "the disruptive efforts of the imperial ists." Chou spoke in answer to an address by Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin. "To defeat the enemy, we must strengthen the unity of the So cialist camp headed by the Soviet Union," Chou said. "The purpose of our visit to the Soviet Union is just this future binding of the closest unity between our two states. The great friendship of our countries is eternal and indestructible." Bulganin in his speech lavishly praiA;d Red China's support of Soviet intervention in Hungary. "We value highly," Bulganin said with startling frankness "th? position you took in connectcion with the counter-revolutionary up rising in Hungary. Your fraternal support and your' efforts aimed at disclosing the intrigues of the imperialists in eastern Europe helped us greatly, as well as the wtiole internatoinal CommunL-Jt movement. 23 Nations Press For Hungary Probe UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) The Hungarian situation will get a fresh airing before the U. N. today when the 80-nation Gen eral Assembly discusses a new proposal to probe conditions in the Soviet satellite. , The assembly is slated to meet at 10.30 a.m. (EST) to hear a resolution sponsored by the United States and 22 other nations. The proposal aims at seeking facts from vHungarian refugees on Soviet military interference during Hungary's short-lived revolt and other pertinent data. Informed sources'lsaid, the sponsors have agreed on the broad outlines of a proposal "4which would set up a special five-nation in vestigating committee. ' ' f The Russians already have declared such a move would get nowhere and warned that no probe team could get into Hungary. The sponsors of the resolution are Belgium, the Netherlands. ..Italy, Spain, Norway, Ireland, Argentina. Peru. Dominican Repub lic, El Salvador, Chile, Colombia, Pakistan. Philippines, Turkey, Thailand. United States, Fiance. Britain, Canada, and New Zealand, Japan, Liberia and Sweden. Israel Presses UN For Suez Rights UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.-(AP) Israel pressed Tuesday for U.N. assurances on its long range program for unrestricted navi gation in the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba as a price for its withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula. Diplomatic talks continued here on the question of Israel's rights in the Suez Canal as Britain and France were reported will ing to allow the U.N. to be their intermediary in talks with Egypt on ending the 6-month-old Suez Canal deadlock. But from Cairo came a new block. Egypt announced it would not negotiate directly or indirectly with Britain and France because of the British - French military action in the Suez Canal Zone. Abdcl Kaden Hatem, Egypt's information director, announced "Egypt can only discus.-? the matter within the framework of the United Nations." ' J0 Miss Martha Fouse To Sing In Musicale Program Sunday Les Petites Musicales will pre sent Miss Martha Fouse. soprano, as featured artist in their con cert to be held Sunday at 8 p.m. Sponsored by Graham Memor ial Activities Board, the concert will be given in the main lounge of Graham Memirial. .' Miss Fouse has studied under members of the UNC Music Dept. staff and now works with the UNC School of Social Work. During her singing, career she has ap peared in Mozart's opera "The Marriage ' of Figaro." ' 4 f Accompanist for the soloist will be Walter Golde. Featured on Les Petites Musi cales program will be works by Antonio Vivaldi, Robert Shumann, Claude Debussey, Paul Hindemith, Gardner Read, and Richard Hage man. "Poem for a Time of Change," based on a poem by Archibald Mac Leish and set to music by Robert Gould, will also be sung by the soloist. No admission is charged for the performance. '' uPont Grants o Colleges; UNC Final Bid Given To Menon A final invitation has been is sued to Indian UN delegate V. K. Krishna Menon to appear on the UNC campus Feb. 11, according to Jim Holmes, chairman of the Car olina Forum. Menon has postponed two speak ing engagements here, one sche duled before Christmas holidays, and another set for Jan. 7. Holmes said that a telegrffni, sent to Menon's office yesterday, stated that Menon will be "expect ed" to appear Feb. 11, as his of 1 fice had earlier stated that he would be available any date befoie Feb. 15 with the exception of Feb. 4 and 7. Menon will probably be unabie to appear here later in the year, according to Holmes, as he will be out of this country after the 15th. Other speakers on tap for the icst of this year will possibly in chivle Vice-President Richard Ni on. Sen. William O. Douglas o" Illinois, Adlai Stevenson, and Har ry Cain, former senator and mem ber of the Subversive Activities Control Board. "Holmes said that according to Nixon's office, the" Vice-President will be in this area in the latter part of February when he comes to address the North Carolina Re publican Convention in Charlotte. Harry Cain has set no date for ; hL- appearance here,' but has defin ! itely stated that he will come, Holmes said. ' The forum is attempting to sche dule Stewart Symington for an ap pearance, but has not as yet sue ceeded, according to Holmes. KA Celebrates Its Diamond Anniversary Upsilon chapter of Kappa Alpha this week celebrates the 75th an niversary of the chapter's found ing on the UNC campus. In conjunction with the anni versary celebration, the KA's will hold their annual 'Convivium, a banquet in the honor of Robert E. Lee's birthday. The banquet is scheduled for Tuesday evening, Jan. 15, at the Carolina Inn. Dr. McLeod Frampton of An derson, S. C, regional advisor for Smith Province of the Kappa Alpha Order, will be the princi ple speaker. KA alumni and other guests are to be present. Upsilon chapter's selection for Kappa Alpha Rose of 1957 will be announced and crowned at the banquet. A Convivium party will follow for brothers and their dates. BattaUixm C o m m and e r of, NROTC unit buying an army tank "L-uild-it-yourgelf"- kit. Carolina gentleman calling Cobb Dorm for another Caro lina gentleman and getting Mc Iver Dorm instead. Coed answer ed and flabbergasted, said "W'lw did yo-a nay?'' 1 IkL The DuPont Coin mil v ol Monday that it would ic lnoie than $1. 000.000 to 1-2-2 uni versities and collects in the next academic year, with empha sis on improving teaching. According to Dean Arnold Perry the School ol Educa tion received a .mailt of two scholarships horn the DuPont fund; which are to he used to train teachers ol mathematics or science tor secondary schools. Pcirv stated that this will be the third year that Caiolma received a DuPont jrant.He said that I'NC lias been the recipient of the awards because the School ol Education ha ! ; St. Anthony's Hall Is Sold To University St.' Anthony Hall has been sold! Education, to the. University for expansion; The increase of some S100.000 of the Carolina Inn. The amount ! above DuPont grants for the cur was undisclosed. I rent year will go almost entireli . The fraternity, whose Greek ! to encourage teaching, making letters are Delta Psi., diclined i more than half of the total pro comment on the transaction Tues- j gram for that purpose. Dupont of day. The home, at the corner f ficials said the shift in emphasis Cameron Ave. and Pittsboro St., j from science fellowships and funda- was sold along with the St. An- lU,,-.., Unll A , t, v tlia firmop M. C. S. Noble home on Pittsboro; St. With the purchase, the Univers ity has adequate space for ex-; nansion of the Inn. The project will not be undertaken immed iately, but is a certain future de velopment. The University and the fraterni ty Jiave been conferring about the sale for several . years. The St. A s had planned to build a ' new home on the lot where the i present building stands. j The fraternity has acquired from j H. A. Whitfield, as a site for its j new home, the Whitfield home and ! property and an adjoining lot on Pittsboro St., south of Cameron Ave. Red Paper Hits Youth Of Russia MOSCOW (AP) Trud. the So viet trade union paper, delivered a blistering attack today on what it called the '"outrageous behav ior" of Soviet youth and students. The half-page article was one of the most sweeping condemna tions of the ideological unrest among students in post-Stalin Russia yet printed here. It listed five colleges and in stitutes from the Baltic' to the Urals where it said students had fallen prey to bourgeois propagan da and '"become infatuated with gutter bougeois literature, formal istic painting and wild jazz music." Jn recent weeks the Soviet press has cited other centers of student ferment in the Ukraine, the Caucasus and Central Asia. Trud condemned student behavior in these places: Leningrad Institute of Precision Mechanics and Optics students have risen in their classes and charged that .'"creative initiative" among students was being sup pressed. Moscow Sta'te University the student wall newspaper, Tribuna, "has permitted rude and slandering attacks against the Soviet press in phrases borrowed from the bourgeois press." Polytechnical Institute at Sverd lovsk in the Urals students, '"under the guise of criticism and developing democracy, have been making demagogic statements in class which place Komsomol (the Communist Youth Organizations) in opposition to the Communist Party." Leningrad Polytechnical Insti tute students engaged in "drunk en debauchery." IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Betty Savage, Eugenia Rawls, Sally Simpson, Susan Mer rick, Ann Vachman, Lauradel Lawrence, and ' Riley Montgom ery, Robert Lewis, Shelton Tur ner, Garrett Nichols, Harmon King, John Morton, Stephen Mirman, and William High. G 1 lnmm ton, Del. .innoumea pioneered in setting up couis in mathematics, chemistry. Dotan and zoology especially for the training of school teachers. Perry asked that anyone inter ested in applying for one of the 1 scholarships- should contact him, Arnold Perry, Dean, School of mental research retiects me ! .Iinnniilt nt..'fli flf file tifhODlS. The sum will be used m tnree ways: to improve undergraduate chemical or technical education; to set up post-graduate, teaching ! assistantships; and to provide t scholarships for prospective teach ers of hiyh school science and mathematics. Chancellor To Join Faculty Next Year Chancellor Robert House will become a member of the facul ty next year and will teach two classes regularly. He will teach sophomore Engii.sh literature both semesters. House will also teach a section of Greek litefiture and trans lation in the fall and a section of Latin literature and transla tion in the spring. House, whose retirement be comes effective July 1. was ap pointed chancellor in 1945. Pre. viously he served as Dean of Ad ministration on campus. Refugees Fired Upoi At Borde VIENNA (AP) Hungarian border guards yesterday fired on and wonded a 2l2-year-old Hun garian boy and his father almost within sight of the Austrian Iron tier, police reported. Despite heavy bullet wounds in one leg. the Hungarian retuie? managed to reach Austrian terri tory 'with his bleeding son in hi? arms. The boy was . hit in the arm. During the dayliqht hours 209 more Hungarian refugees arrived in Austria, bringing the total since the beginning of the Hungarian rebellion to 161,587. The Interior Ministry, mean while, warned Hungarian refugees to respect Austrian laws and the nation's neutral status. A com munique said any refugee engag ing in political activities, will for feit his right of asylum. 'incorrigible' To Play Hero Tomorrow Graham Memorial Activities Board presents "Incorrigible" as another feature of its foreign film series for the fall semester tomor row in Carroll Hall at 8 p.m. The Swedish film revolvci around ihe delicate theme of a spoiled boy who develops icto a troublesome delinquent. After a cla'h with his professor, he takes out his revenge on the protein's daughter. Tickets for the showing wii' be S.50 for all students who li . riot hae series tickets.

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