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SERIALS DS?T. BOX 870 CHAPEL JJ!i? WEATHER Warmer and less cloudy with an expected high of 62. GUEST Comments from a Yale man. editorial, page 2. n i .Nr rill -s c cjr' iw? rv r is- VOL. LVII NO. 121 si HUN jut fcai aWfe$3V WttkJ GOVERNOR ..for industy. ndustry sked By By GRAHAM SNYDER Gov. Luther Hodges bid college rrr-A Hii nt e lafct nio'Vit Irk 'nnci r!r carefully staying and working out j A Vcur cwn destiny in North Caro-iraise lhe lovv inome groups if we a, bt iause the opportunity is arp gcins lJ et any -results. This htre arrd the potential for growth! providing more jobs and and development is tremendous." !more Payrolls to provide cash in i - ' come needed by individual workers Hodges, speaking in honor of the and their families." fifth Annual Business Fair, told j in conjunction with the states a Carroll Hall audience that in-' n!annin? hoarrf toward nonum. dutiria! deyeltpment offers "trem 'enJous opportunities f r eeoncmic growth and prosperity" for a state with Lhe moderate means of North Carolina. i"Ve know that North Carolina has just scratched the surface of hKr real petentiaL" he aid.-fle de-j sjfib-d thi state es at "a crucial ; slaga where; young pe-ple can make ; thoir most profcun.l contributicn investing in North Carolina' b-ow.n suvk anu conunumg me. gnat work which has gone before ; . . . i . i . . i us: " liodges, speaking of the various , program anci moves ny me state to encou.ago uwueviiupmeiu ui locai; ai ' Ui.-oi !ate industries, said that hi., "v.a.-ic stm since coining into ilw Governor's office has been u Students Mass In Town Aftet Carolina's Win Toilet paper flew and traffic ight.i went unhtecled last night t.ii Franklin St. as a mass of stu luVnts stopped traii'ic spasmodically wi;h cheers cf "Carolina!" - .lhe u.wd of an estimated 2000 fathered approximately 15 minutes, a.'tcr Carolina's win .ever Mich igan St; ate. ' The impromptu parade began as the game ended with cars converg ing on Franklin St. with herns blurring. Approximately EGO students led by John Carri George Ragsdalc, i Paul Carr Expresses Thanks To Student Party For Trust "I am very proud of the trust shown in me by, the Student Party aud pledg2 myself to work to the utin t of my ability to adequate ly fill this position," said Paul Carr recently, Student Party nomi nee fir Senior jClass President. "I fully realize the reSponsibili t'es and duties carried by this of fice." said Carr. "As the official repr2sentative cf my class I hops to find many opportunities to excercise my init iative and get thing:? done for the school." j Carr.. a pre-rriinisterial student from Hillsboro, las held many of fices in his three years at Caro lina. He is presently a member of the Men's Honor Council, the YilCA and the ; Freshman Camp Orientation Prcgram. . He is active in the Wesley Foundation and The Campus Christian Councij. lie is a past Com-plite Cf) - 7 mm. a.jt f-tmiiaitiiY-',-M LUTHER HODGES opportunities Photo by Bill King Growth' Hodges J raise the per capita income of our i people." 1o rai. the 'standard of living I ui uui peupie, lie iaiu, we niusi l' rt . i : i . ing industry, Hodges cited the work done by the Governor's Small In- du .ics Plan and the Business De- velopment Corp. With emphasis on a "do it your self approach" Hodges said that the Small Industries Program dir- eciea aPv,s aynick launcned 75 industries since the fall of 1954. Th? lack of "venture capital", ; Hodges said, "was a major handi- ap and hur(ile l)r most new small industries." Through long-term lcai?s . provided by stock programs inc, iending agencies. Hodges said that the 3lIsmcss Development Corp. has investment dollars at wnr,. in nnw snfiRtriP and fSee HODGES, Page 3) Smith Bracifield and Jeff Hare -iead:d a march down Franklin St. to Chancellor Robert House's home and set up a cheer "No Saturday Classes. The Chancellor's reply was "If I didn't think it would do you harm, I'd do it." Chancellor House thanked the ! students for the gesture and ex pressed pride at the basketball I lean's achievement. Meanwhile the crowd .veiled at i the pest 'office. One student climb ed the stop light, under the watch ful eye of sympathetic town cops. member of the Phi Society and the IDC Court. Compulsory Meeting For All Candidates A compulsory meeting of all candidates running for office in the spring elections will be held Monday night, according to Ar thur Sobel, vice chairman of the Elections Board. , Any candidate not in atten dance may be disqualified from the election, he said. Excuses may be obtained by contacting Ralph Cummirtgs, chairman of the Elections Board, within 43 hours after the meeting.. Excuses will be issued only for special circumstances, he said.' The public has been invited to attend the meetings as-the candi dates for student body offices and editor of . The Daily Tar Heel will make short speeches, Scbel stated. Wire Service r3 nn 31 AT BANQUET FRIDAY NIGHT: Wells Given Gardner Award Dr. Warner Lee Wells of the UNC School of Medicine was Friday night named the winner of the 1957 O. Max Gardner Award. i The award, a citation, also car-! ries a cash grant of the annual iii-J come of $23,000 placed in trust by the late Governor Gardner. The principal speaker at the an nual award banquet was Governor ---"; -- - x - wxssf "Snws I sJ-N "s I - s ' s 1 J DR. WARNER WELLS .. for welfare contributions 1 rmis-z i&i 111 15;. Four Earthquakes Hit SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Four j earthquakes two of them rumb- j ling snocks that swayed down town San Francisco buildings for 10 seconds caused some injuries .md sent frightened people into the streets across a 130-mile area of northern California Friday. Twisted ankles and bruises from ailing objects were dealt by the najor jolts shortly before noon. The first quake an hour earlier ind th fourth an haur later weret less severe. No loss of life was reported. But buildings cracked. Dishes broke. Merchandise was spilled in stores. There were read slides. People had to grab poles to keep from falling. There was at least one I report of a broken gas main. Marathon Meeting CAIRO (AP) D a g Hammar skjold of the UN and Egyptian President Nasser have scheduled a marathon meeting for today in an effort to find face-saving so ut'ons to Middle East deadlocks. They arranged for talks to be gin in mid-morning today at Nas ser's resthouse in a park on the Nile eight miles north of Cairo. These will continue through lunch and. on into the afternoon. This second meeting between, the two since the Secretary Gen-j eral arrived here early Thursday followed almost continuous sess ions today between Hammarskjold and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi. Altogether the two talked together more than 12 hours yesterday and today. Student Party Meet Time Moved To 7 On Monday The Student Party will meet Monday night at 7 instead of at 7:00 as usual, Chairman Sonny ,'Iallford announced Friday. The time of the meeting has been moved up so as not to con flict jvith a required meeting of ,ill candidates for office scheduled 'Cor 7:30 in Gerrard Hall, he said. Hallford urged all members to be oresent, as he said action is sched uled on several matters. ' i I V f s t ; - - - 1 y s s CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1957 ji'''aa - - 1 . . L cl Qui L)0OJS lff Luther H. Hodges. The banquet was held at Lenoir hall. , j The award, created by the Gard ner will, is given each year, "To that member of the faculty of the Consolidated University of North Carolina who, during the current scholastic year, has made the great est contribution to the welfare of the human race." f' The Consolidated University is composed of the University at Chap el Hill. N. C. State College at Ra leigh and the Woman's College at Greensboro. ' j DIARY j Dr. Weils, a member of the UNC School of Medicine faculty since 1952, is the translator and editor of "Hiroshima Diary." This was a Japanese doctor's account of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. j The book was published on the 10th anniversary of the bombing. Aug. 6, 1955. It immediately be come a best seller. i i Aside from being published in English, the book has been or is ' in the process of being translated into 10 other languages., aside from the original Japanese language. Governor Hodges said tonight; "Probably no other book has ever .'one out from North Carolina into o many "different tongues." "Iff. fK& literary world the book Is gen erally known as the first great hu- DAME SITWELL'S READING: Ill u mi noting Shocking To By ANTHONY WOLFF Hill Hall's auditorium was filled to overflowing for the second time in a week on , Thursday evening, when Dame Edith Sitwell gave an hour-long reading of some of her poetry. Dame Edith provided quite a shock for the mixed student-adult audience; a good many lef at inter mission, not knowing quite what to make of one of the greatest liv-l irg literary figures of the Western w :rld. , Throughbut the reading, there was a great deal of indecision as to when to clap and when to laugh. , : The fantastic apparel worn by the poetess helped to throw the audience eff balance. Over a green silk brocade dress she wore sev eral ornate breastplates, and her fingers yore decorated with var-1 ious rings of extraordinary size. The reading was delayed slightly by the necessity of moving the microphone closer to Dame Edith, ... ' - 'O DAME EDITH SITWELL . . . shocks audience ',' nfan document of the new atomic ge. CROSSROADS Governor Hodges said of Dr.! Wells, "In 1949, at the age of 36, j Dr. Wells stood at a crossroads in his career. Like so many of the de-J oression generation, he had worked his way through college and then through medical school. To give himself the best background for his chosen specialty of surgery, he. Lad spent six years In residence I training work. Then there had been three years in the army: j "Finally in 1947, he had reached a position that many young sur geons would envy, a private prac tce in a prosperous city and aj lectureship in a neighboring medi-( cal school . . . Then in 1949 came' a challenging offer to go to Hiro-; thima, Japan as a surgical con-j sultant to the Atomic Bomb Cas-J ualty Commission, to study the long range medical effects of the atomic i bombing." I Afier receiving the award, Dr.' Wells said, '"I could not be so; presumptuous as to stand before jou were this not an open letter: of tribute to my friends in Japan,' the people of this University and. what they stand for, the ( basic; morality of -our press,-, and "the ; be lief held by so many people in thef . (Sje WELLS. Page 3) E xperien ce Audience which in turn necessitated the mov ing of the desk, during which op eration the water pitcher was left sitting in the, middle 'of the stage floor. Chancellor House was called upon during the reading to retrieve it, which he did. The program was further inter rupted by the frequent adjustments of the public address system, which managed to pick up several radio stations along with Dame Edith's voice. The selections ran the range of her output, from her early sur realL'. efforts, with their whimsi cal music and meter, to the deeply religious poems which came out of the war. Although Dame Edith's accent, her age, and her persistent cough combined with the iradequacy of the amplifying system to make much of her reading impossible to understand, hearing the poems read by their creator was an illu minating experience. i) O OH. Sloan, Bass Endorsed For Editor Charlie Sloan and Neil Bass have been approved by the Bi partisan Selections Board as can didates for editorship of The Daily Tar Heel, it was announced Friday by board Chairman Fred Powledge. A third candidate, Frank Crow ther. has dropped out of the race. The board met three times to consider the candidates who ap peared before it. Board members were informed before they met for the last time that Crowther had resigned his candidacy, according to Powledge. The board consisted of Pow ledge, Tom Lambeth of the Gra ham Memorial Activities Board, Sonny Hallford of the Student Party, and Mike Weinman of the University Party. With its work completed, Pow- ledge announced the board is abol rn ished for the present academic 'are composed of promises and o-tate-vear . j ments which never seem to come Pres? Women To Meet Here Over Weekend (AP) Writing prize - winning stories will be a major topic at the o n nn o I enri net rrrrt t ri cr in PVi o ro1 Hill this weekend of the North Carolina Press Women's Assn. Th? institute will officially open. this morning with registration at 9:30 a.m. at the Carolina Inn. The Board of directors of the Press Women's Assn. held a preliminary gathering last night, also at the Inn. How to write prize-winning features, news stories and inter views will be discussed at the first nanpl sossinn toHnv at 1 1 a m in j - Carroll Hall. Walter Spearman of the UNC Journalism School will act as moderator for the panel, composed of Marjorie Hunter of The Winston-Salem Journal, Bun ny Harris of The Charlotte Obser ver, and Elizabeth Peel of The Wilson Daily Times. The emphasis on good writing will be climaxed Sunday at "the closing session of the meeting, when annual awards for the best stories of the year by members will be presented at a luncheon. Keynote speaker for the two day institute ,will be Doris Flee son of Washington, D. C, politi cal columnist for United Features Syndicate. Mrs. Fleeson will ad dress a dinner meeting tonight at 7 . o'clock in the Inn ballroom. A 'second guest speaker today will be Mrs. Dorothy Jurney, wo men's editor of the Miami, Fla., Herald, who will lead a 2 p.m. session in Carroll Hall. Her topic will be "Giving Your Pages More Eye Appeal." Dean Norval Neil Luxon and Mrs.Luxon will entertain the in stitute participants at a social hour at 5 p.m. today at their home here. The press women will elect of ficers Sunday morning at 11 at the Inn. The awards luncheon will fol low at 12:30 p.m. Handling ar - rangements for the institute are Dotty Cameron, Raleigh, institute chairman; Frances Walker, Bre - vard, president and Mrs. Lucille ! Cathey Bost. WTinston-Salem con- test chairman. . Offictt in Graham Memorial I "" i . J I I d (I JiyU i i w n rennan n 2n By LARRY CHEEK Special To The Daily Tar Heel KANSAS CITY.-Mo.-North Carolina's masnifit cut Tar Heels wouldn't be beaten here last night. Although it took three overtimes to do the trick, they advanced in to the NCAA championship game against Kansas tonight by whipping Michigan State, 74-70. It was the unbeaten Tar Heels closest call of a long, long season in which they have swept to 31 straight wins with out a. loss. The . plucky Spartans, for much of the game, had Coach Frank McGuire's Kastern Regional' champions on the ropes time after time but there was nobody to deliver a knockout punch. A capacity crowd of io,.)oo (tickets were selling at S,-,o Baum Says UP Has No Plank; Denies Editorial Bill Baum denied Friday bis platform consisted of only one plank as a Daily Tar Heel editorial stated Friday. "I believe that the student body - ! nas naa enougn piauorms wmcu m .1 t . r true. Consequently, I deny the statement, that the University Par ty's platform is composed of only one plank. It has no planks. "The UP has an idea; and idea which, if the student body allows it to be put into action, will be one step toward turning student gov ernment back t'j realistic service i to the students," Baum stated. "Student . government here at . Carolina was instituted originally ! to enact measures within its own Jurisdiction to benefit the student -.m..u u.c iuUlmand at intermission, the score- to other areas with advice and co- ; operation. The Student Legislature, ! .in the begnining, may have been re- prevntatve, but such is not now the case," he said. "The Student Legislature is the law-making body of our student government the program whicn would be outlined by the "student Senate would aid it immeasurably in its work. They are clearly not ! . ... 1 111 iuiuiill wiiii one anoiner: :n- aeen, iney win worK nand in . hand " hp s'-id POWLEDGE OPPOSES "Editor Powledge stated that the executive's duty is 'to act as a spokesman and leader for the stu- J 4 1 1 aeni ooay; dui wnen a means is proposed to give the executive a clearer conception of what to -peak for and in what direction to lead, Mr. Powledge opposes. "There is a conflict in reason- ing here which I cannot follow. To seek to work for what the student body feels is important does not, to me, indicate a personal weakness 4on the part of a president, or on the part of a student government " , he said "Finally, Mr. Powledge states that 'any decisions that would come out of such a mixture of people (as the Student Senate) would either be obvious or so unrealis- tic as to make them impossible to act on," Baum said. FAITH ' T wish to remind Editor Pow- ledge that the 'mixture' of people to which he refers is the student i body of the University of North Carolina. L for one, am proud to j be a member of that body, and I i have faith that these people can judge, maturely and rationally, as i well as realistically, what are their important needs. J j "Furthermore, I assert that they j will, if given the chance, work with j the president to see" those needs j ! fulfilled. I intend, if elected, to, ' give them this chance, and I don't ; believe I will 'be disappointed," ! ' Baum said. SIX PACES THIS ISSUE IjULlLjU,.? s nero a piece before game time) sat enthralled as the underdog Big Ten representatives battled the Tar Heels off their feet until the clutch moments came. It was in that fatal third over time that All-American Lennie "os enbluth put his team out in front by two points, 70-68, on a pair of long one-handed jump shots. Tommy Kearns followed Posey's important points with two of his own via the foul line at the 1:48 mark to put the Tar Heels up by four, 72-63. , Then Rosenbluth entered the act again. The long armed UNC captain stole a Spartan pass at mid-court, fed to "Bob Young un der the basket, and Carolina had a six-point spread, 74-68, with 1:33 left. Michigan State cut that mar gin to 74-70 with 42 seconds to go, but their golden opportunity had passed. The game was airtight all the way with first cne team and then the other holding the edge. It was . tied five times in the first half. ; board read Carolina 29, Michigan , State 29. It was the same story in the second half until Michigan State opened up a five point lead, 54 49. with 5:42 remaining. That didn't last Ion? however, as Bob Cunningham and Piosenbluth hit s:x quick markers to put the Tar Heels ahead. It was nip and tuck to the wire, and with a little under two minutes to go and th? score tied. Carolina (See CAROLINA. Page 6) THE BOX micH. STATE QUiggie f Ferguson f Anderson f j Heddert f Green c Bencie c gtt f Wilson g j Totals ' ' N. CAROLINA G 6 4 2 4 4 1 2 0 F 8-10 2- 3 3- G 6-7 3-6 0-0 0-2 2-2 P 1 5 2 5 2 1 1 1 T 20 10 7 14 li 4 2 70 T 31 14 0 0 2 2 19 t; 74 -70 -74 23 24 3G 18 G F P 12 7-9 1 6 2-4 -5 0 00 0 0 0-0 1 1 0-1 1 0 2-3 5 8 3-4 5 1 4-5 4 23 18-26 22 23 29 6 2 4 29 29 6 2 8- Rosenbluth f Brennan f Searcy f Lt7 f Young c Quigg c -Cunningham g Kearns g Totals 'Mich. State : North Carolina IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss Hope Sparger and Ried Haynes, Yates Palmer, Norman Draper, Stephen Bank, Bobby Deaver, Harris Schoen, Milton McSwain, Stephen Bialek, Har vey Jones, Stanford Thompson, Benton Beard, Davie Marring, Charles Saunders, Tate Robert son, Mitten Barber, Francis James, and Ray Kyzak. 1J ; U 0 0 j i 1 i(!h n
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 23, 1957, edition 1
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