PAGE TWO THE DAILYTAR HEEL SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1957 n n p in (C))v I il Rits In II 1m) 3 CAMPUS ' ' Sll n " r n n -n Cndo Arid u Last Week On Campus Was One Of Contrasts Charlie Sloan Personalities made news in Chapel Ilill last week in a wide range of subjects. The two venerable campus debating societies inaugurated their new leaders, a phyjicist family was completing plans for the first "World Conference on Gravitation" ever held in the United States, a dorm president and the editor of his dorm's newspaper squared off and exchanged verbal punches, and the en tire campus was shocked by the resignation of one of its best:liked administrators. University Librarian Andrew IL Horn's resignation was announc ed Thursday afternoon. Although a University regulation requires that announcements of resignations be made by the Chancellor, several top officials agreed that the genial administrator is. leaving Chapel Hill after two and one-half years. '. Horn's resignatioa was for 'personal: reasons," but it is un derstood that poor health rand lack of cooperation form the state legislature contributed to his. decision.' 'At'-, the last session "Of the legislature the Library's budget was cut ' in T half . , Two Doctors DeWitt, a scientific husband-wife team, will host an international conference on gravitation in Chapel Hill Jan. 18 to 24. Dr. Bryce De- Witt and Dr. Ce cile M. DeWitt ire in charge of 1 J .he year-old grav- tation project at t h e University. ! Their guests for. the conference A'ill include forty j in ternationj Vi illy, known phy ;icists working irea of tional phy slid te. They' -will work I sessions at the - conference, and in mr'"MMfl' i' ii'ii'i ailfciii "" DR. DEWITT . big conference will pool informa . ,tion., relating, to the role of gravity in physics. ; '. T ' ' ': Sponsoring the conference are iho Air Force, the National In stitute of Field Physics, the National Science Foundation and the French Dept. of Foreign Affairs. A brief flare-up occured in Battle-Vance Pettigrew when Cort land Edwards, editor of the B-V-P Times, accused Neil Bass, the dormitory's chief executive, of being neglect in his duties and of being illegally running an election. When Edwards' editorial appeared Bass answered with a state ment calling him an iconoclast and a rabble-rouser. Bass flatly denied Edwards' charges. "'','. Edwards commented that, after reading the article, he wondered ". . . who was more libelous "me or (Bass)." Two residents of Pettigrew then drew up a petition giving Bass a vote of confidence. Later Bass pointed out that he had received 50 signatures on these petitions, and that IDC President Sonny Hallford had signed a statement declaring the B-V-P election legal. When asked to produce the 50 signatures Bass reported that petitions circulated in Vance had disappeared, and he was only able to produce 17. He was quick to add that he did not suspect Edwards of any misconduct in the matter. Bass repeatedly declared that the affair was only a family squabble, and criticized The Daily Tar Heel for reporting the series of events. The dispute is currently deadlocked. Both parties are back on friendly terms, but the second issue of the B-V-P Times carried an editorial by Edwards saying that because of lack of cooperation he was forced to resign. Neither side will admit fault in the in cident, which brought threats of Honor Council action from boh sides. - Dr. William Poteat, UNC Associate Professor of Philosophy spoke at the Dialectic Senate's meeting Tuesday night. The society's of ficers were inaugurated at the meeting. President-Elect Stan Shaw delivered an address on "The Role - of the University and its Responsibilities to the State." In the speech he said the Di will circulate a petition urging the' state legislature to help the library. He said he hopes to get 5,000 signatures. Shaw charged that the state has been neglecting the Library and that the students must act to change the situation. Qmt-B aHp The official student publication '. of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published daily except Mon day and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Entered as second class matter in the' post office at Chapel Hill. N. C, under the act. of March 8, 1870. Subscription rates: Mailed, $4 a year. $2.50 per semester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester.. Editor Managing Editor Night News Eidtor Business Manager Night Editor THE DAILY TAR HEEL WEEK IN REVIEW Staff "Writers Frank Crowther, Charlie Sloan, Mary Alys Voorhees Night Eidtor J -"WORLD TV who are . in the c fl) ,Jf....;.V-;! ,V&, , gravita DR. DEWITT . . . planning a.. Heel FRED POWLEDGE CHARLIE SLOvN Wally Kuralt - BELL BOB PEEL Clarke Jones .J! Graham Snyder Chou Goes Visiting And lice Sp eaks After a weekend of contempla tion Congress of Eisenhower's Mideast Plan and the Hungarian .puppet government of its di lemma a few reactions and de cisions were reached on Mon day. ' . ' Congress thought it best to proceed slowly in granting the president any "big stick" powers regarding the Middle Eastern problem. Many officials wanted to hang restrictions onto any such fres hand. ' , Blue Monday became even more tainted when Premier Janos Ka dar knocked the props from un- der the hopes for general liberal ization policies in the new gov ernment, by proclaiming a back-to-Stalinism program. In Hollywood, a bruised and battered "body," Marie McDon ald, related a terribly tragic, if totally unbelievable, story of her abduction. In the Susz Canal, a string of ships, marooned for two months, began to move slowly through the locks and into the Mediter ranean. Tuesday, Sen. Knowland stole the headlines in announcing that he. was going to retire from the Ssnate to spend more time with his family. That may have been true, but many observers be lieved that, he wanted to spend that time in the White House with them in 1960. by way of the California Governorship. At Nukovov Airfield just out side Moscow, with fur hat and fur collared, coat, Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai decended .from, his sleek new Russian jet (which h3d been sent Iq, China as a taxi to bring the. Premier to Moscow) and grinned a, too. thy grin at his Russian counterpart. Premier Bulganin. Wednesday, Rep. Hays (D. Ohio)- walked out on Secretary of State , Dulles, charging that Dulles had asked for unwarrant ed secrecy necessitated by an executive session, when he was of the opinion that the meeting' should have been kept open to the public. F-ench Foreign Minister Pi neaa was on his way to Washing ton to seek the same Dulles aid in trying to break the present deadlock over the Sue& canal. In Madrid, Spain, Luis Arrese Magraz, boss of the Falange par ty, supposedly caused a govern ment crisis by offering dictator -Francisco France his resignation from the Cabinet. - hursday morning screamed headlines across the country of Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden's resignation from the head of the British goverment the night before. It seemed, that coins would be flipped to choose between R. A. Butler and Har-' old Macmilian as Eden's sue cessor4 Hugh Gaitskdll, Labor Party leader, was caught with his pants down he was at Har vard delivering the Godkin lectures. In the United Nations, the Hungarian ' debate was being fired up by Ambassador Lodge, who again called for a special neutral U.N. committee to inves tigate the Hungarian situation. Gov. Marvin Griffin of Georgia had called his militia to a stand-by during the night to, guard against "riots, insurrec tion, and breaches of the . peace" when six Negro ministers made a move to end segregation on Atlanta's traditionally segregated busses. ' Harold Macmilian, 62 year old Conservative Party member and former Foreign Secretary, took over Friday as the new Prime Minister of Britain his first problem was to patch up the British-American relations. President Eisenhower, in his State of the Union message of the day before, had sounded new .warnings against inflation and dictatorships in a compar atively short (33 minutes) mess age to Congress. yBy the -week's end, the north west .portion, of the country was 'digging out from a blizzard which had blocked roads and crippled schools. The snow -was moving eastward, and North . Carolina had begun to- feel-its affects , by Friday. ; 7 HOLDS MANY TITLES: Coed 1 Planning Wepching Careen; Is Atfi fe Mary Atys' Vo'orhees Somewhere in one of I the North there's a Jucky gropp of. studontS; nl ; ' ;""'' Bck jin the fall,' rhost of the coeds would, re ; Next , semester . they will.. have' Slisah stalker, tr'member 'her. work as a counselor, for Orientation senior coed from "Wilmington, as teacher. Fr not only has she been recognized for-her. beauty, but probably 'would be .rated as 'tops" in; versatility and ;pcr$ofialit$i- V .: , !3' ; i ' Right now Susan W'h-wUl ,receiVc her 'A.BhV English in June with a teaching "certificate in English and biology, doesn't know where, she will dS her practice teaching, but undoubtedly her stu dents will welcome her as their instrucloi.5 However, this 'is-not just one person's opinion her fellowv students voiced their opinion by se lecting her for the "many honors she. has received. Her classmates back at New Hanover High School in Wilmington were probpbjy. among 7tHV first to recognize her talents and elected her as president of her class, to the May Court, as well' as rnSny other offices. In the summer before she graduated' she was named to represent her school at Girls State, and then her classmates chose her the ' gii with the best personality in the Senior Class whlfn superla tives were elected. . v , f But this was not the end of her many outside participations--evidenced by her many 'activities here at the "Hill." Hardly had she been here a month when she W3s elected a junior class officer, and before the year was out she had added such honors as "Queen of the 1956 'Military Ball," vice president of Pi Beta Phi Sorority, a vice president of GMAB, com- In The State: Court Rulings Ik Dam Protests North Carolina's pupil assign ment plan wlir not "be " affected by-the Federal .court ruling that Virginia's pupil assignment law is "unconstitutional on its face," .'said. Attorney .General '.George B. Patton last Friday. . A ruling of the Fourth Circuit Court qf Appeals.nas,held North Carolina's, plan legal, he said. On a "different front discussion grew stronger -as Chatham Coun ty citizens protested the , pro posed Cap Fear Basin Dam: Most of the '49,400 . acre lake created by "the" flood' control project will cover the east corner of the cotmty. - - - ' Downstream' .from .New Hope B.iyer, people seem to be in favor or the project since., it will aid. flood control in a 17-countyarea. t f - MISS SUSAN WALKER . a Pi P:ii from Wilmington , , , jnencement marshal and president ni the -'AFROTC o r-. l . .'. l J 1 . v j l f V x " Ml .. sponsor aquaurun, Carolina schools.' 'Cadet Colonel , theif sfiident Wek by, devoting -iLJ telling them about the 'Carolina' Way of Life." Perhaps onevof;thp members " of her orientation group put it in better Vvords when .she was talking " to another new coed: "My counselor is Susan. WTalk-, er, and I'm ;telling'you, she is grand-person. If raHsthe coeds are as fine as she'is, I'm really go ing to enjoy it up here . . ." , Other activities which have consumed much of Susan's timethis year are her work on the Biparti san Board for Honor Council, being co-chairman of the marriage and courtship study group of the "YWCA, working with the Girl Scout branch of the YWCA and the Class Cuts Committee. 'And right now she-is one of the busiest coeds on campus, for not only does she have the school activities in which to participate, but she's spend ing quite a bit of time picking .out her silver and china and preparing for a June wedding. Her husband-to-be is Bruce Gustafson of Wash ington, D. C, a '56 UNC graduate and former DKE who is now serving in the U. S. Marine Cops, i But a closer look at what she does in her spare time when she has some. - As a creat lover of sports, no doubt a few hours are-devoted to tennis, horseback riding and folf . and sailing and swimming in the summertime down" at Wrightsville Beach. Then there's her favorite hobby sketching and x Writing poetry and short stories which she hopes to do something with in the future. At other times ft- L'il Abner Pogo i 7"ck,-c vrv f WE'LL STAGE TH' C AH'S HAVIN' V " ( AN' WE BETTER BUY UP A ' ' -L ( "S? lc J WEDDING IN TWO r 10,000 M)LLVUN CHEAP GUITARS.'.' I , IAdON'T CRY DAISY ruArT DPCTff WEEKS TO J HAWG MCAL.1- ) THAR'S BOUND TBE A &IG Jyp 7 I MAE THINKO' ?JHEJ PESTA J ( GIVE US TIME fS SHOES S f DEMAND FO'HIS OR'GtNAL. JA i Y HOW HAPPY" WE'LL T V I V TO PUT UP W MANUFACTURED, ( NSTROMENTf.rw-7 iij ' IVOtfT KNOW WHAT V - 'O THINK'" yxC : A giving ner ine line oi iiojjorary - long hoiirs to" 'the ;;; new' coeds l& POGO MXZZlZO TO ALBERT?" HiMf A$ fN THg ,eZ2T l KNOWS 0N Peacetime Censorship Mi In The State Dept. Arthur Krock In The Xezv York Times WASHINGTON, D. C Wben. the State DepartmentannounetA it would severely penalize mem bers of the, United States press for reportorial activity behind the Bamboo Curtain that the Communist Chinese Government had at last agreed to permit, de partment spokesmen offered the following reasons for this indi rect exercise of peacetime cen sorship of the press: If an American reporter en tered Communist China pn a United States passport, that would violate the restriction of the document on travel in one of three countries: Bulgaria, Albania and Red China. The President's Geneva pro gram that urge dthe expansion ;of : East-West exchanges, in cluding the free flow of' in formation and access . to its sources, applied "only to Soviet ; Russia and its European satel lites. . The United States cannot extend such exchanges to na tions "where our citizens lie in dungeons"; to do so would be to vitiate a section of our foreign policy. It is all very well for the press to be willing to take any risks involved in engaging in professional activities , in Red China. But( the Government cannot. And "if one of these reporters is locked up," said one official (as quoted in' this' space under date' cf Aug.' 6, '1956),' "his family, if not 'his1' boss; will bombard the Govern ment with demands to get him ' out, demands that could not ; 'be met -short of ' measures that could precipitate a state of war ctose to war itself."'- 1 Secretary ' Dulles is determ ined on these points, and 'hp ' criticism will" "budge" 'hirri. This last statement was veri-' fied'when; after three represent atives of the American "press' en tered Communist China for news-' gathering purposes, the depart ment revoked their passports and asked the Treasury to de termine if the three had also violated the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917. And mean while the remainder of the American press, which abided by the ban of the State Depart ment, must continue to depend for news about Communist Chi na on dispatches from reporters of other Western nations who availed themselves of the oppor tunity offered by Peiping. ' INTERNATIONAL SEQUELS The State Department has not developed its policy of indirect censorship of the American press to the direct censorship of revok ing the passports of publishers who have circulated these for eign dispatches and citing them under the 1917 act. Nor has it an? what wAscHwzcHy mu' v TO 30 ON WKB Off 35a Y fc announced that if dispatches from the three Americans in China are published it will ar raign them and their publishers under the act. Yet this second move could be inferrible from a Government action that re strains the American press, ful ly aware of its responsibilities and willing to assume the haz ards of news gathering, from opening to the American people the flow of information from a large part of the world that has been .closed for years. But though an attempt at di rect censorship is an inferrible development of the indirect forr " ' no one in Government has pro posed it. And if anyone did, however high his position, the essential t approval of President Eisenhower is inconceivable. There is some reason to believe he is not enthusiastic about the steps the dapartment has taken. And it will be interesting to note what the President will do if, in addition to revoking the pass ports of the three who went into. Communist China, the depart ment makes the revocation per- ; manent and prosecutes under the act of 1917. Should the policy be carried to any of these extremes. Reporter Worthy of The Baltimore Afro American and the two other that are now reporting in Com munist China should be added to the rell of those who have made' historic contributions to the free dom of reportihg and publication ' in the United States. Thus far the American press has unwill ingly conformed ; to the I ' baft.O though not conceding the con tention of the State Department that to challenge it would serve the international interests of Communist China against our own." But the questioning of the -soundness of this policy in peace time is mounting, and the view' it impinges on the guarantees of the First Amendment is gaining support. The situation arose when 15 United States news reporters, seme of whom had requested professional access to Commun ist China, were informed by the Peiping Government that en- . trance" visas would be available in Moscow. No conditions were imposed the American press would reject them anyhow. And this made it possible that for the first time since the Com munists took over China the American people, including the State Department, could learn at first hand of conditions in China from reports in their own press, written according to th standards of American journal ism. This clearly would be a great advance toward the free 'flow of information the Admini stration has been advocating. 6y AI Capp By Walt Kelly Wtt.' Bztczs t e?zzsz