TJ.TI.C. 'LIBS ART
SERIALS DEPT.
BOX 370
CIIAPEL HILL. M.C
REVIEW
The week in review. Site pn
WEATHER
Warmer with widely scattered
showers. Expected high 63.
VOL. LVII NO. 95
Complete (P) Wr Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1957
Offices in Graham Memorial
FOUR PACES THIS ISSUE
U K LM I J -HSS: fx III VJ
Ill-Will Is Seen
Between Editor
And Merchants
By JIM PURKS
Ill-will between several of the
Chapel Hill merchants and the edi
tor of the Chapel Hill Weekly,
Louis Graves, is currently making
it sell evident.
And the controversy which is
likely lo cii c all stems from a
misunderstanding, according to Joe
Augustine, chairman of the Trade
I Vomotions Committee of the Assn.
The cause of the ill-will was an
editorial in the Weekly in which
Graves attacked the merchants
idea of constructing billboards"
outside the city limits in order to
promote more trade.
As a result of the editorial,
three petitions -were sent to Au
gustine, all of them vigorously
opposing the idea of billboards.
One petition was signed by 67
University faculty members, and
two were signed by local garden
clubs.
Juc Augustine stated today that
the facts which Graves based his
editorial on "actually were rumors
from start to finii."
"The thing we've proposed
would not bo in the nature of bill
boards, put painted signs. We've
hid agencies mailing up samples
for 'us." Augu.-.ine pointed cut
that there would be no paper used
on the signs. He said the signs
would be painted and would pic
ture some aspect of University life.
' Our idea wasn't from the 'com
mercial view, but with the inten-
AFROfnits
Marched Well
In Inauguration
The AFKOTC Marching Band,
Color Guard, and Precision Drill
Team from UNC made "excellent
showings" at the Inaugural Pa
rade in Raleigh Thursday despite
bleak weather conditions and a
ficczinp downpour, according to
Major Jack Gabus, Commandant
of AFROTC.
The band was led by Cadet Capt.
Don Jefferson and the Drill Team
by Cadet Capt. Bob Harrington.
"I think the new white helmets
supplied the Drill Team helped
immeasurably in the performance
of my boys, as they not only felt
but looked sharper," said Capt.
Harrington.
The parade began at 1 p.m.
headed by a cavalcade of 20 cars
lead by Gov. and Mrs. Hodges.
Also included in the cavalcade of
cars were Gov. and Mrs. Stanley
of Virginia and Gov. and Mrs.
George B. Timmerman of South
Car:lina, followed by Mayor and
Mrs. Wheeler of Raleigh.
Several Are Planning
To Attend UN Seminar
A group of students from UNC
is planning a trip to New York
Cily for a Ujitcd Nations Seminar
on March 6-9.
UN Seminar Chairman Wally
Satterfield announced Thursday
ther2 were approximately 20 seats
open for any students interested
in going.
The purpose of this seminar is
to study the United Nations and
its problem of "Disarmament".
Satterfield said. "We plan to
visit with ten different delega
tions to the UN. in addition to
meeting with other government of
ficials. At each delegation we
want to get first-hand information
as to how the particular country
it represents feels toward dis
armament and what have they
Student Party Will Hold
Meeting Tomorrow Night
The Student Party will meet
Monday night, Chairman Sonny
Mallford announced Friday.
The meeting was originally
postponed due to V. K. Krishna
Menon's scheduled appearance
on campus. Menon canceled the
engagement earlier this week.
Hallford stated the party will
discuss nomination procedures
within the party for the coming
election.
ticn of trying to attract people to
see the University and we hope
they'll shop while they're here."
"We're not going to put any
thing up that -will be detrimental
(Scz ILL-WILL, page 3)
N.C. State
Loses Its
Captains
Co-Captains Cliff Hafcr and John
Maglio Saturday were lost to N. C.
State's basketball team because
ot scholastic difficulties.
State Chancellor Carey H. Bos
tian. in making the announcement,
said the two were placed on proba
tion, effective immediately. Tins
means they may remain in school
oy paying their own expenses, for
! i citing any aid.
! Bo ian said both were "not eligi
' ble to represent the college in any
; Lam oi intercollegiate competi
tion." j Bostian's action followed reports
from the college committee on
scholarships and student aid and
the faculty athletic committee,
i The scholarship committee rc-
commended the athletic grants for
Mugiij ahd Hafer "be cancelled
because of unsatisfactory grades
I and class attendance for the first
, seme.., or.
The faculty-athletic committee
recommended probation.
Maglio and Hafer,' both seniors,
j were not available for comment as
to whether they would remain in
School. - -
Maglio, a six-foot guard, is from
Havertown, Pa. and Hafer, a six
four forward, is from Middletown,
Ohio.
The loss of the co-captains at
this critical time apparently dooms
State to finish in the second div
ision of the Atlantic Coast Confer
I ence race. If they finish the season
still in fifth place where they are
now their first round opponent in
the ACC tournament will be UNC,
currently rated the top team in
the country.
ON WUNC RADIO
University raoio station
WUNC-FM will carry a play-by-play
broadcast of the Carolina
Virginia game in Charlottesville
tomorrow night. WUNC is locat
ed at 91.5 on the FM dial. Larry
Saunders wil voice the game.
Anyone wishing to hear the game
must have access to an FM ra
dio. done, if anything, to obtain this
end?"
The group will leave Chapel
Hill at 5 p.m. Wednesday, March
6, and will return to UNC no
later than 10 p.m. Sunday, March
JO.
The headquarters for th-e group
wil be in the Hotel Taft, while
most of the meetings will take
place in either the individual del
egate's embassy or in the UN
building on the East River.
Norman Gillis, the planning
committee chairman, said, "I have
received many pamphlets and
background material for all those
that plan to go. If you want to
read same of them over they are
available during the day in Anne
Queen's YWCA associate director
office in the YMCA."
In addition, Monday night Sam
Levering of Virginia, will speak
in 106 Hanes Hall at 7:30. He, as
chairman of the American Friends
committee on national legislation,
will speak on the UN, and the
problems brought about by dis
armament. Levering, an expert in the
field of the functions of the UN,
has traveled all over the United
States giving lectures, discussions,
(See SEMINAR, page 3)
omrny
news,
s - is Jj- "W
weft
New Middle East Crisis
WASHINGTON (AP) A new
crisis over the Middle East sent
President Eisenhower and Secre
tary of State DuUes into a long
distance telephone huddle yester
day. Besides talking to Eisenhower,
who is quail-shooting in Georgia,
Dulllcs also conferred urgently
with top advisers here
Officials are intensely worried
about tha prospect that the Presi
dent and Dulles will be caught in
a bad squeeze some time next
week bvc r the issue of sanctions
against Israel.. This could happen
unless Israel pulls its forces im
mediately out of the Gaza Strip
and the Gulf of Aqaba region, as
demanded bv the United Nations.
Moscow Invitation
LONDON (AP) Premier Nik
olai Bulganin has invited Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan to vis
it Moscow and has asked the Brit
ish leader to suggest a convenient
date.
The text of letters between the j
two, broadcast tonight by Mos- j
cow Radio, made it evidciit Bui- !
gen in did not intend to take "no" J
for an answer. Macmillan, is s-hunt- ;
ing aside an earlier inviiaiion to j
his predessor, Sir Anthony Eden, i
to visit Moscow in May, left open
the possibility of some future visit.
Moscow Radio broadcast the
letters a day after Washington i
sources said Macmillan and Pres-
ident Eisenhower were working ,
on plans for a meeting in Bermuda j
March 21.
McCarthy Speaks Out
CHICAGO (AP) Sen. McCar
thy (R.-Wis.) yesterday said that
under a proposed treaty the Unit
ed States could give away enough
atom bomb material to "destroy
every major city" in the United
States.
McCarthy spoke before a rally
of conservative Republican rank-
and-filers sponsored by the Abra-
ham Lincoln National Republican
Club, an organization which has j
no official connection with the Re- j
publican party. j
He said the proposed "atoms for !
peace" treaty would set up an in-1
ternational agency to distribute 1
uranium 235. The agency, he add- j
ed, would exchange know-how and :
atomic material to nations which i
lack them.
Alliance Ended
AMMAN, Jordan (AP) Brit
ain and Jordan have drafted a
joint communique fixing March 1
as the date for ending of their
mutual defense alliance, Abdul
lah Rimawi said today. Rimawi,
Jordan's state minister for foreign
affairs, said in an interview the
hope is negotiations over the end
of a British subsidy and cancella
tion of British base rights in Jor
dan will be completed by the end
of February'.
U. S. Reds Split
NEW YORK (AP) Top Amer
ican Communists split sharply in
the party's national convention to
day -on what policy the party should
follow the Moscow line or a so
called "American Road."
Eugene Dennis, General Secre
tary of the party, said American
Communists would make their own
decisions based on their own in
terpretation of Marxism despite
misgivings expressed by French
Communist leader Jacques Duclos.
But William Z. Foster, the par
ty's national chairman, said Duc
los was correct in warning against
"revisionist tendencies."
T
Kearns-
Ifh 16 -Seconds Left To
-' '-
f ":; V; - t ,
I , - - ' ' v v -S
' t- - - . . : . - -t
r '
v Artistry And A Basketball
Lennie Rosenbluth (right) leaps to roll the ba I over the blocking
Paul-Schmidt (15) looks on a the ball drops in f or two points.
' , -, ' - " ' . . I . ' . " " 'I r t
M
cGuireSweated: through That
One; Close
By BILL KING
A warning to people with weak
hearts! When the Carolina Tar
i Heels come to town move out. If
j the Tar Heels have many more
: games like the one last night in
j Woollen Gym, there's going to be
a heart specialist boom in Chapel
, Hill, and the first patient is going
! to be the Carolina basketball chief
I tian Frank McGuire.
! The personable Tar Heel coach
I walked into the dressing room fol
lowing last night's fracas with
Duke looking like a man who had
just had the jzare of his life. And
rightly so. McGuire had just watch
ed his Tar Heels squeeze out a
75-73 victory over the Duke Blue
Devils in a game that sent blood
HAPPENINGS ON THE HILL:
Three Pledge Dances Held
By MARY ALYS VOORHEES
Pink hearts and carnations form
ed the Valentine setting Friday
evening in the Carolina Inn Ball
room, for the Annual Chi Omega
Pledge formal, at which time the
1956 pledge class was presented.
About the walls of the ballroom
were la rg 2 pink hearts with fluffy
edges decorated with the Gre .
letters Chi and Omega. On the
wall of the stage other pink hearts
formed a background for Jim Crisp
and his orchestra, which provided
music for dancing.
Presentation of the 1956 pledge
class came at 10:30 p.m. Led by
pledge Class President Tog San-
ders of Charlotte, who was escort -
ed by Dick Taylor of Oxford, the
class was introduced by Ray Jef
feries, assistant to the dean of
student affairs.
WHITE GOWN
Dressed in billowing white
gowns and carrying nosegays of j
pink carnations on silver dolies
and tied with pink ribbon, the j
pledgss stepped through the en-1
trance which banked with spiral
candelabra and greenery to be
presented.
Other pledge class officers to
be introduced were Social Chair
man Margaret Brunson of Albe
marle with Jimmy Hill of Smith
field and Treasurer Jane Johnson
Sinks
Win': Over Duke
lijuiiijniiili.iniuiilijii.m-i)i urn. .,)'.. IJ. Lii'mmwimiilli wiiiiiiiiwi-4ri'Ml''IJL'l'JLull-ljIILI'J''1111' -J ' -" I f
iff
i
i
Game Bad
pressures soaring.
"I've passed the stage of worry
ing now," said McGuire, "I'm
numb. It happened so fast I didn't, one after this. It's too hard on the
know what had happened." He was heart."
referring to the lajl frantic mom-1 The smiling Irishman knew that
ents of the game in which he saw his boys were pressing. "The pres
his team lose a six point lead with I sure has really gotten to us," he
less than a minute to play. Tommy j continued. If we went into the
Kearns, who probably missed more
foul shots than he ever has, drop
ped in two from the charity line
with 16 seconds remaining to
clinch it for Carolina.
"Duke is a good ball club," he
stated. "We can never seem to
catch them on an off night. They
were hot out there tonight."
McGuire went for his handker
chief to wipe the perspiration from
of Spindale with Paul Carr of
Hillsboro.
SERENADE
When each pledge and her es
ccrt.. had been presented the
group formed the sorority's greek
letters after which the actives
serenaded them with the tradi
tional Chi O song, "My One Chi
O Girl." .. . . .
Fruit punch was served in one
corner of the room from the re
freshment table which was deco
rated with silver candelabra hold-
jng pink tapers and flanking an
j arrangement of pink carnations.
prior tothe dance a banquet was
j held at the Inn for the Chi Os and
J thcir dates.
! Like the dance, the spotlight
was aiso on presentations, al-
though of a different nature.
The most outstanding pledge
award was presented by Chi O
President Josephine Ruffin to
Katherine Coe of Washington, D C.
Scholarship Chairman Virginia
Tilly presented' the scholarship
award to Sarah Hudson of Atlanta,
Ga.
A pajama party at Hoenig's Cab
in got the weekend going for the
Kappa Psis Friday night, but the
main item on their pledge week
end program was the banquet and
formal last night at the Carolina
Inn.
. After the banquet which was
attended by faculty, alumni,
Two
t ree
' If II
n ' y J left
:.v
'hi
attempt of Duke's Jim Newcome.
' "
On Heart
his face. "This is the longest streak
I've ever had and I hope it con
tinues, but I don't want another
ACC Tourney like we were tonight
we'd get beaten on the first night.
The boys look like they need a
good rest."
McGuire seemed happy to change
the subject for a minute when he
was told that his Ail-American
forward Len Rosenbluth had bag
ged 35 points, he quipped" you
know, I believe we're gonna miss
Lennie next season."
pledges, actives, dates and wives
the party moved to the Ball
room fcr dancing and the presen
tation of the 1956 pledge class.
MUSIC
Music for the occasion was pro
vided by The Embers and feat
ured the vocals of UNC coed Pee
Wee Batten.
President Whit Moose of Mount
Pleasant, escorting High Point Col
lege coed Dot Ridenhour, was the
first to be introduced, followed
by Secretary - Treasurer Joe Fer
r?ll of Elizabeth City with Lu
Ruth SutUvi cf Raleigh; Chap
lain David Cooke of Hildenbran
with Nancy Stillwell of Hildebran;
and Soical Chairman Ronald Free
mand with Betty Davis cf WC.
As the names were called by
Kappa Psi Social Chairman Bob
Cromley, the pledges were pre
sented a fraternity paddle and
their dates were given a carna
tion corsage.
Among the guests at the dance
were six Kappa Psi brothers from
the chapter at Howard College
of Pharmacy in Birmingham, Ala.,
who are visiting the UNC chap
ter for the weekend.
CRYSTAL ROOM
The Crystal Room of the Wash
ington Duke Hotel was the scene
Friday night for the third pledge
dance taking place this weekend.
The Lambda Chis held their
(See HAPPENINGS, page 3)
rows
UNC
nve
Rosy Hits
Heels Win
By LARRY
Blue
(iurad Tommy Reams dropped in a pair ol lice
itli iG seconds left here last
the highly favored Carolina Tar Heels a 75-73 victory over
an inspired Duke University team that refused to roll over
and play dead before the nation's top ranked basketball team.
The c losinir moments of the routih tiu tumble si u 'lest
some )."oo
highly
Protest Meeting
Set For Today
At Wake Forest
WINSTON-SALEM v AP ) The
Wake Forest College faculty exec-;
utive committee and student legis
lature will meet at 2 p.m. today ;
to discuss "the overall program I
of : student government," Dean D. :
B. Bryan, chairman cfthe faculty
group, announced Friday. j
Today's conference is the re
sult of a wave of angry protest j
at the college over ' faculty dis- j
ciplinary action taken earlier this
week against several students who!
took part in last " month's panty j
raid at Wake Forest.
The meeting was requested by
the legislature Thursday during
fa special session brought about
when the entire Wake Forest men's
honor council resigned in protest
of what they termed "unjust" ex -
pulsion of two male students.
Dean Bryant said he met with
several members of the student
legislature Thursday afternoon in
what he described as a "pleasant,
co-operative session.
The women's honor council
Thursday night joined the protest
by attacking the executive com
mittee for increasing punishments
the council had metsd out to two
coeds involved in the panty raid.
Cossack Group
Completing
World Tour
The 1956-57 taur of toe Don Cos
.sack Chorus and Dancers, which
brings them to Memorial HaU
Tuesday at 8 p.m., completes a
A'orld-wid? tour which has taken
the Chorus to a total of 15 coun
tries. Now in the first month of their
U. S. and Canada tour, the Russ
:an troupe has been presented in
more than 7,800 concerts, has ap-
peared in
movies, radio and tele-
vision and has been featured in
LP albums for three major - re
cording companies.
The Don Cossack Chorus pre
sents a program of music which
is primarily Russian in origin,
flavored with frequent renditions
of original Cossack dances. Se
lectons from Tchaikovsky, Gret
chaninoff, Bortniansky, and Shve
doff are often chosen for their
concert presentations.
In addition to Russian church
music, folk song, and cavalry
marching songs, the Don Cossack's
feature a special interpretation of
the origin and history of Lie Chor
us itself, relating its part in the
Russian Revolution, Civil War,
and flight from their home coun
try. Beginning their career as
cavalry divisions for the Czars of
Russia, the group was organized
as a chorus in 1922 after their
flight from the persecutions of
the Revolution.
Sponsored by the Student Enter
tainment Committee, the Don Cos
sack concert will be free to stu
dents upon presentation of 3D
cards. A $1 admission is charged
to student wives, with a S2 ad
mission for others. Doors will
open at 7 p.m.
o
IL
35 As 1
Number
iTi r
CHEEK
throws
to uivc
ni"ht in Woollen Civn
partisan tans ireatnless. vv itli less
than a minute remaining, Coach
Frank McGuire s Tar Heels were
riding smoothly along with a 6
point lead, 73-67. but the Blue
Devils struck for 3 baskets in 21
seconds to knet the count at 73
a'l with onlv 24 seconds left.
Carolina put the ball in play
after Bob Vernon had tied thc
sccre. and Kearns was fouled by
Duke guard Bobby Joe Harris with
16 seconds ta go. The stubby
Kearns, who had missed 5 in a
row from tho line up to that point,
calmly sank thc two big ones to
give Carolina thc win and keep
them atop the Atlantic Coast Con
ference standings.
Duke brought the' ball down
the floor and missed a pair ",of
shots at the basket in the final
16 seconds. .
; -
, Lennie Rosenbluth rolled in 3.1
1 Points to take high scoring honors
for thc Tar HceIs' Kcari,s ' ioh
ioweo wmic t eie urcnudU
! had u- Buck' A1,cn toPPcd Dl,kc
j Wltn 16-
j Dukc rrabbcd the lead on a Jim
Newcome layup at the opening
tipoff and held it till the 12:11
mark when Rosenbluth hit a three
j p0;nter to put the Tar Heels out
! front, 18-17. The two teams
swapped baskets, then Brennan
gave Carolina their biggest lead
of the first half at 22-19. Then
, Duke dropped 6 straight tree
throws to take a 25-22 lead, and
j they never trailed in the opening
j stanza after that.
; Duke led 28-27 with a little
I over 7 minutes to go, but a sud
j den scoring spurt ran the margin
I up to 37-29, their biggest lead of
! thc night. Carolina trimmed it t'
I 39-36. but a pair of Blu? Devi!
: tree throws 2 seconds before half
timo made the score 41-36 at in
t:rmision. Rosenbluth and Brennan hit for
7 points at the start of thc sec
ond half to knot the count at 43-4;'.
Then with 14:18 remaining. Kearns
converted a pair cf free throws to
put Carolina out in front for good.
49-47. The Tar Heels began lo run
up a confortable margin, and with
7:50 to go, led by 11 points at 00-
! -
1 nntrp haol-rd slowlv awav but
(See TAR HEELS, page 4)
THE BOX
! DUKE G F V T
j Newcome f 4 4-9 4 It
J Schmidt f 3 4-6 5 10
! Miller f 2 0-0 3 t
j Barrett f 0 2-2 2 2
j Clement c 3 3-4 4 3
j Robertson c 0 0-0 5 0
j Allen g 5 6-9 2 15
Harris g 2 6-6 4 10
Vernon g 4 0-0 1 8
Totals 23 27-36 30 73
UNC G F P T
Rosenbluth f 11 13 21 1 3.3
Brennan f 2 7-8 5 11
Lotz f 0 0-0 2 0
Quigg c 10-14 2
Young c 12-3 3 4
Kearns g 4 6-12 1 14
Cunningham g 4 1-3 4 9
Rosemond g 0 0-10 0
Totals 23 29-49 20 75
DUKE 41 3273
NORTH CAROLINA U 3? 75