SUNDAY, NOVEMBER H 1957
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PAGE THREE
Recall Analyzed By Writer
nntinu. d From Page 2 Mr. Bass had to pass through one j and as such he was responsible for
Mr. KimMc is m fact less compe- last Spring. jail the material on pages one and
tent than Mr. P.ass. j The means to get the recall are three. Mr. Eisele was also in
It may well be that there was I indeed dubious, and I affirm that ehara. of arainiiina ind traSnina
.I, j mi y. i -mmmmm in n, mum m
vunii' reason tor keeping the gov
ernment of the students separate
trom the student newspaper, and
there may ho indeed some ques
tion as to whether Mr. Evans over
stepped his hounds, for Mr. Evans
in all his arguments for the Bass
f iivter never once to my know
U"S touched on the line that
mi;:lit he libelous.
It may be seen from this that
the petition was definitely not
alid because many of the peti
tioners did not know the issues.
th.it the main petitioners capitaliz
ed on a side issue which was not
a question of competence, but of
lieedom of the press, and that the
student body president, instead of
tling his duty and questioning tho
.ilulity of the petition, used his
i ffice as at least an outside pres
sure for the support of the peti
tion Moreover, it can be seen that
the freedom of the press issue is
.i live one since the petitioners
brought the issue into focus.
The validity of the election can
le douJrted since Mr. Evans saw
lit to follow all election laws ex
rept one there is no hi partisan
-election board for this election.
Konneth Royal Will
Speak Here Dec. 2
Former Secretary of the Army
Kenneth I'uyall will deliver on ad
dicts in the Heck Lecture Series
here Monday niht. Pee. 2.
l.'ny.iH. n native Tar Heel who
Practices law in New York and
Washington, will speak tinder the
spniishiii ship of the Law Students
in no case does the end justify the
means.
Moreover. I would like to try
to show that the end the op
position candidates are no more
competent that Mr. Bass, hence
making a very dubious end.
I know much less about candi
date Rule, than I do of candidate
Eisele, but one of the campaign
slogans that Mr. Rule is passing
around is that he will be able to
fully equip a shop for the Daily
Tar Heel for $5,000. I did some
cursory checking a few nights ago.
and I found out that the cost of
one rebuilt (not new) linotype
machine is $7,500. If Mr. Rule pro
poses that the paper be hand set.
then there will ensue, the Month
ly Tar Heel, rather than the Daily
the news staff. He did neither job
well.
If people have complaints that
the DTH has not exploited news
sources on the UNC campus, blame
Mr. Eisele, for he is responsible
for campus news. If people have
complaints about inaccuracies in
news stories, blame Mr. Eisele, for
it was Mr. Eisele's job to check
each and every story before it
went to the printers. If people sat
through Mr. Stevenson's brilliant
speech on individualism and edu
cation, and found that it received
cursory mention in the Tar Heel,
while his statement of Little Rock
received the top billing and most
of the article space, blame Mr.
Eisele, for it is his job to cover
news accurately or to see that it
I il Ant , iH
Tar Heel, and indeed expenses is covered accurately. If some on
will be cut down, but the student i a university campus were annoyed
will be getting one twenty-fourth 1 because Mr. Stevenson's talk was
CLASSIFIEDS
HIE DAILY TAR HEEL WILL
pay 10c for the first 40 issues
of the publication of Saturday,
October 19. 1957. Bring to busi
ness office, Graham Memorial.
the amount of papers that he is
entitled to.
Candidate Eisele was the form
er managing editor of the DTH,
IN THE INFIRMARY
Students in the infirmary yes
terday included: Misses Harriett
Ann Willis and Eugenia Cray
Rawls. and David Richard Carr,
Robert F.Ime Hawkins, Paul
Browning Walter, Frank Albert
F.lfland. Malcolm Dale Campbell
Lawrence Harlan Snyder. Robert
Ijwrence Cannon and Robert
Graham Peebles Jr.
given second hilling to 1he foot
ball game, blame Mr. Eisele, for
he is responsible for the selection
of the importance of news. Indeed,
if some were shocked, as I was, to
sec B-ing Crosby's wedding next to
the biggest story on the front page
of the Tar Heel, one can again
Cavalcade Tickets On Sale
Tickets are now on sale for the UNC campus, and decided that it
RAMESES ROLLS ON Despite the threatening weather, old
reliable Rameses watched his bitter rival Duke go down under a
mighty Tar Heel attack. (Norm Kantor)
WUNC-TVTo Begin Series
Coed Doing Well
Lucy Forsyth of Burlington,
Ala., who was injured in Fri
day's Reat Ie.k parade while
riding the Tri Delt float, was
released from the Infirmary yes
terday afternoon after spending
the night there.
She is reported to have suf
fered only minor bruises.
( T Vl Wonderful J
Say Merry Christmas To
Friends Via Personaliied
Greeting Cards . . . With
Your Name Engraved Or
Imprinted.
ORDER EARLY
157 E. Franklin St.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Wound mark
f. Quick
i Misnpre-
fcTt
10 KJ.ble bulb
.' Across
n Jiasftall hit
14 Monetary
unit Bulf )
15 Hiver
(Turk.)
16 Mr. Sullivan
17. A( i ess to
( t lUr
10. Affix
20. Ti usted
21. Channel
marker
22 ' and
Old Lace"
24 Alders
Scot. )
2fi A cannon
29 Half-close
( phonet. )
30 Kind of
xsndwich
31 Adjectival
KUffiX
32 Unwavering
33 Kuegian
Indian
34. Contract
2S Break
1 suddenly
37. Moved
furtively
38 Backs
of feet
39 Japanese
coin ( poss. )
40 Contludea
DOWN
1 Sr.arp
2. Lake port 19. Sold to
(Oh to) bidder
3. Haughtiness 21. Feather-
4. Music note
5. Pillage
. Cuckoos
7. Slight taste
8 City (Ohio)
Cle-yey
11. Boy's
nickname
13. Merchandise
symbol
15. Fills with
solemn
wonder
18 Melodies
ed
crea
ture 23. Model
24. Faultily
25. Abun
dantly 27,Histori-cal
records
2S. Harvests
30. Submerges
32. Native of
Helsinki
SUrdy's Aaiwr
35. Regret
36. Coin
(Jap.)
38. Letter
Heb.)
' ll L
"
w
VZl
iflll
w m&
blame Mr. Eisele, who was trying
to make the news fit the pao
make up, while the rule in journal
ism is the other way around.
I have seen picture captions
which were inaccurte, or were ac
curate to a point, but didn't tell
who was who. This again is Mr.
Fisele's responsibility, as he is re
sponsible for all the copy that goes
on page one and three, and it is
the lack of care, the irresponsibili
ty of Mr. Eisele that has wrought
such havoc with the news pages of
the Daily Tar IPeel.
Mr. Eisele has also shown that
he is unable in the field of page
lay-out, for many's the time that
there were three large headlines
one on top of another, each lead
ing to a separate story. The onlv
trouble was that the reader was
given no idea as to which headline
went with which story.
Another criticism of the paper
is that on pages one and three Mr.
Eisele has failed to mirror suffici
ently campus opinion. It is a valid
criticism for hp failed to exploit
the means at his command.
There have been times that the
paper was in jeopardy of coming out
at all. One time the first piece of
news copy came out to the print
ers at 6 p.m., when the contract
calls for 2:30 in the afternoon. An
other time Mr. Eisele left a twenty
inch hole in the layout for page
three and it was only due to ihi
alert work of the night editor,
that the paper came out without a
jackass on page three as had been
placed on page four. It is a fact
that the complaints from the shop
Tie mainly in the lateness of page:
one and three, and the lack of
copy reading care devoted to those
pages.
I In the field of organizing and
, teaching a staff, Mr. Eisele has
i also demonstrated his incapability,
i for it is under him that the philo-
j
i sophy of reporting has changed
J from the reporter going out to get
i the news, to one of the reporter
sitting back and waiting for the
news to come to him. There are
exceptions of course, but these
are the people of initiative who
prove the rule.
Moreover, I was a witness to the
teaching of a fellow staffer by Mr.
Eisele. The story was about the
appointment of Howard Henry t
the permanent directorship of Gra
ham Memorial. The third para
graph started off with the clause.
"It is generally conceded that . . .",
and went on to add that the per
manent director may bring an ad .
dition to the present Union build
in" as a result or a new Union
building. However, I doubt serious
ly that 50 percent of the campus
knew the significance of the ap
pointment, but Mr. Eisele knew
from his past information that this
might be the result of the appoint
ment, and he heard it from Tom
Lambeth and myself. If he wants
to quote Mr. Lambeth, myself, or
himself, this may be correct jour
nalism, but to admit a general con
cession without a poll of the ma
jority of students is inadmissahle.
Mr. Eisele has shown by his
deeds and in his teachings that he
is not ready or capable yet of as
suming the responsibility of the
editorship of the DTH.
Indeed one of the really bad
things that Mr. Bass has done was
the error of not firing Mr. Eisele
as managing editor a long time
ago. He might make a good re
porter. If the issue is freedom of the
press, the choice must be Bass. If
the issue is competence, the choice
must be Bits.
WUNC-TV, Channel 4. begins a j
new television series on artists and
their vorks today at 7 p.m. The se
ries, "Images of Art." was pro
dwed by Radiodif fusion Television
Francaise of Paris and is released
for telecasts in the United Slates
exclusively by the Educational Tele
vision and Radio Center.
The painting and sketches which
appear in "Images of Art" rep
resent the art treasures of Europe.
Many of the pictures have never
before been exhibited or repro
duced in the United States and give
an added insight into the lives and
works of their creators.
The narration in English was done
exclusively for American showing
by Robert Anderson, formerly on
the staff of the National Film Board
of Canada.
"Images of Art" tells the stories
of prominent European artists en
tirely through their art. Among the
artists whose paintings and drawing
are included in the 26 programs
are: Dore. Van Gogh, da Vinci,
Vermeer, Debucourt, Viergo, Mon
nier, Rembrandt, Corot. Rousseau.
Seurat, Watteau. Hogarth, Fragon
ard. Toulouse Lautrec, Poulbot,
Constain Guys, EI Greco,
Piranese, and Grandville.
Degas,
"Carolina Cavalcade of Talent" at
the Y building and at Graham Me
morial. The cost of tickets for the
show, which will De mis Tuesday
evening at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall,
will be 50 cents per person.
The talent show, which is well
on its way to becoming a tradition
of the UNC campus, was given for
the first time last fall as a co
function of the Y "Y Nite" com
mittee and Graham Memorial Acti
vities Board.
The idea for Y-Nites was ori
ginated in the spring of 1956 when
a Y planning committee conceived
the idea of having programs and
activities on the campus whiffi
would draw the campus closer to
gether.
That spring they had their first
Y-Nite in the form of a Bermuda
picnic held on the lawn with Dr.
Bernard Boyd speaking and George
Hamilton of recording fame and
the UNC band as entertainment.
The next fall GMAB noticed a
lot of outstanding talent on the
would be an excellent idea to have
a talent 'show.
The Y planning committee got
the same idea, so they co-sponsored
the first talent show for the
campus, an event which was so
outstanding that its fame spread
abroad and it was asked to go on
tour.
However, it just went to Women's
College .where it seemed to per
sonify the spirit of the Consolidated
University.
After its appearance here, the
show intends to again visit WC with
a program of outstanding talent
featuring such stars as Hoke Simp
son, Pee-Wee Batten, Oliver Bloom
er, Ken Kallender, the UNC Glee
Club and numerous' other song,
dance, instrumental, and dramatic
acts.
SERVE YOURSELF
If you have more friends than
money, remember our famous
fiwe-cent Christmas cards! Early
birds get widest choice.
The Intimate Bookshop
Chapel Hill
EVERY SUNDAY
BUFFET
5:30-7:30 P.M.
At The
RANCH HOUSE
HOME OF CHOICE HICKORY-SMOKED CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
13 Represent
UNC At Meet
Thirteen representatives of UNC
are in Gatlinburg. Tenn. this week- j
end attending the annual meeting j
of the Southern Political Science
Association. I
i
Prof. C. B. Robson. UNC political
science chairman, heads a delega
tion of 11 staff members from his
department: K. C. Frazer, I). G.
Monroe. F. N. Cleaveland. G. B.
Cleveland. R. E. Agger. Dr. R.
Matthtws, F. G. Gil. Mrs. Mar
jorie Mendenhall Applewhite, M. K.
Jennings and Marshall Ooldstoin.
Other UNC men attending will be
Prof. James L. Godfrey of the His
tory Department ,who will read a
paper on "Federal Problems in
Ghana;" and Warren J. Wicker,
assistant director of the Institute
of Government.
Prof. F. N. Cleaveland is the
chairman of a panel discussion of
"Research in Community Leader
ship and Decision-Making."
Vernon Culpepper !
Presides At FTA Meet
Five students and faculty mem
bers of the UNC School of Educa
tion participated in the recent fall
convention in Raleigh of the state's
future teachers groups.
The gathering of the Department
f Future Teachers of the N. C
Education Association was presided
over by Vernon Culpepper. UNC
student from Rocky Mount. Other
students attending, besides Culpep
per, were William Ilenshaw of Buies
Creek, president of UNC's Frank
P. Graham chapter; and Van Bass
of Middlesex.
'Thumbs'
(Continued From Page 1)
lenge reaffirms my belief that he
fears public discussion of election
issues and is willing to appear only
at a carefully controlled political
appeal for sympathy such as the
'Eisele for Editor' rally." -
Meanwhile, Rule's campaign man
ager, Grayson Mills, took verbal
swing at both Eisele and Editor
Neil Bass.
"Intelligent voters "he said," will
think twice before casting ballots
for an editor who has used ia
ethical practices in his conduct of
the Tar Heel editorial page or the
recall group's "pig in a poke' candidate."
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