U.M.C. Library Ccriala Dept. Tatfleeh wasnp WEATHER fnihy more snow, windy and cold todjy. Colder tonight and (air and rold Monday. SNOWBALLS They Should be aimed at men, not windows, editor says on page 2. VOL. LXV NO 94 Offices inGraham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1958 Complete P) Wire Service FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE ed! By Notre Dames Fo B g o Irish 0 7-.U Ice, Hit Snow 'Mir ITT WW-WW ' B Winter Germans a Then Rain Hy PARKER MADDREY Icy conditions will prevail today alter j est (" day 's rain on the three inches of f.illen snow. , Highways in the Chapel Hill area will remain hazardous today, after cstci days' snowfall, it was pre dicted Iloadi west of here in the Grcenshoro-Wmsion -Salem area are considered as impassable without chains. The mountain region was completely snowbound yesterday. Kast and southeast of here it is re ported clear, receiving heavy rains only. Snow (all was to have ended grad ually last night in this area. Three inches of snow fell in Chapel Hill by 4 p in yesterday one inch of which had iclded to the afternoon ram Another inch of snow was ex pected last night to give Chapel Hill its" largest snowfall of the season. In other areas, the eastern Pied mont receicd two to four inches and the western Piedmont received l ur to six inches of snow. It will Ik- partly cloudy with cold winds today, according to the U. S. Weather Bureau at the Raleigh Durham Airport. Graduate Club! To Hear Talk Tlir Graduate CJub will sponsor flir third In a scrioi of sapytrr dis- I cmsion meetings Monday night be- ginning at 6 p.m. in l.enotr Mall. !r. Minerva I'mncll. xisiting as sistant professor in (he Art Depart ment, w -.11 be the guest speaker, dis missing Sonne-, ot Imagery in the Visual Arts." i William A. Deatoiv club president j from Statcsville. announced that ; faculty, staff and undergraduates ' arc invited to attend the programs j along with graduate students. The I supper will begin at f p.m. in an up- j stairs dining room of Lenoir Hall, and Dr. Pinnell will speak at 6:30. A graduate of Kadclifie College with the A.M. and Ph.D. degrees, Miss Pinnell has taught previously at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs. X. V.. and at the Univer sity of Illinois, where she also did her undergraduate studies. Her European study has included two years' stay in Italy as a Ful bright Fellow, as well as visits to Germany. Austria, Fiance. Switzer land, Holland. Spain and the British Mes. Dr. PinncH's doctoral thesis dealt with a critical study of High Baro que Classicist ie paintings in Italy. Sue is a member of the College Art Association, and the Society of Architectural Historians. GM SLATE Thr following activities are scheduled for today at Graham Memorial: Presbyterians, 9: 1.1 a.m., Wil-Imun-Wolfe; Presbyterians, 9:1.1 a.m.. Kcndczvotis Room; Friends, 11 a. in., Williams-Wolie; Publica tions Hoard, (-.:. U) p.m., Roland Parker I.ounc" I; Women's Resi dence Council, 7 p.m., Grail Room. Thr following activities are scheduled for Monday: Graham Memorial Activities Hoar d. 4-6 p.m., Grail Room; Dance Com mittrr, 78 p.m., Grail Room; Student Party. 7-9:30 p.m.. Roland Parker Lounge 1-2; Order of the (rail. 9-11 p.m., Grail Room; lliiJ:,'rt Committer, 3-4 p.m., Ro land Parker Lounge I; Inter Fraternity Council, 2-5 p.m.. Wood house Conference Room; Bridge Club. 7-11 p.m.. Rendezvous Room, Traffic Committre, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Woodhnusr Conference Room. 1 ! 4 t f 1 t: MX -few' si. -- J Y7 r L w Sam TIPUC STASSEN T 1 lO M A S V1EL.E, C.A. Feb. 15 fr Harold E. Stassen stepped out today as President Eisenhower's disarmament adviser and announc ed he is a candidate for governor of Pennsylvania. Stassen's resignation in order lo 1 run on the Republican ticket in the May primary was announced at the President's vacation headqttar ters. ATLAS CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . Feb. 15 i.ri A test firing on an Atlas Intercontinental Ballistic Missile was halted today a split second before the "Big A" would have blasted off its firing pad. There was a huge belch of smoke but the fuel never got to the en- gines Of the Atlas, mightiest of American war weapons. Watchers outside the test center saw the great cloud of smoke and thought the Atlas had exploded on its launching pad. But when the smoke cleared away "the beast" could be seen still standing, its sharp nose pointed skyward. The Air Force announced that the test was "postponed after en countering technical difficulties immediately prior to the launch ing." TAXES WASHINGTON. Feb. 15 W The Eisenhower Administration and Democratic House leaders both arc reported working quietly and separately on tax reductions plans for use if business continues to slump. Each side wants to be ready to move quickly when and if neces sary. (See WORLD BRIEFS, jxifye 3) Thursday Date Set For Tennis Meet The GMAB sponsored table tennis tournament, originally planned Tor another date, has been rescheduled for Thursday. Feb. 20. Coeds and men may enter by call ing in or signing up at the GM Information Office. Entries must be in by Wednesday, Feb. 19. The tournament is of the single elimination type. Parings and play ing times will be announced on Feb. 20. The final winner will receive the prize. Bill Henshaw and Bob Galloway w ill act as coordinators during the ( tournament. f V s r X '- WINTER GERMANS WINTER WONDERLAND The Cuhl Civic. Shot fV' & T .(' T(f Fhh Ucyan WHITEY BELL FLUNKS Wolf pack's Basketball Fortunes Take Nosedive KM KKill. Feb. 1.1 V Uask-t-ball fin tones at North Carolina St.ite College nosedived with the mercury today when tw players, one of them the squad's captain, flunked out of school. The loss of Whitey Bell, cap tain and the team's top poiutmak er, and reserve guard Harold F.stis came a lew hours before the Woltpack went on their home court to play Maryland in an im- Northern Liohfs May Do Repeat Performance Soon The comparatively rare and beautiful display of northern lights, witnessed by probably millions of people last Monday night. may i quite possibly put on repeat per- ! formaiu es within the next 30 or 40 days," commented Tony .lenzaiio. (i;rt.fior of the Morehead Planetari um. He pointed out that statistics show the frequency period for these spectacle's of nature is about 2(5 j'' x:-. ) ... V -'S, : -' I PLANNING TUESDAY RECITAL L to R, Edgar Alden &'illiani Newman ywii win niTOTiWf- "(-:sV: 4 1 v 's s. A poitant Atlantic Coast Conference Same. "I'm certainly sorry to lose them. They will be sorely missed," said Coach Everett Case. There was a touch of history repeating itself in the news. About this time last year, the Woltpack lose the services of two stars John Maglio and Cliff Hater who were dropped for failure to attend classes. clays, c lose to the period of rota- tion of the sun, and that more dis plays have occurred in March and September than d u ring other months. "Some scientists. Jenzano com ( mentod, "have associated the ap pearance of the northern lights, or the aurora boiealis. with the pe riods when the earth is facing the surface area of the sun in which sunspots are more numerous." Ray Anthony, re oig Hits In Mid South Covered In Snow, Ice ATLANTA, Feb. 15 tPv A snow laden storm left a heavy blanket of white all across the Mid-South to day." It moved northeastward to ward the Atlantic Seaboard states with a threat of even heavier snow falls there. The storm dumped an inch or more of snow on most of Tennessee and parts of Arkansas. Missouri, Kentucky, Mississippi. Alabama, Georgia and the Carolinas. At least five traffic deaths were reported in the area with weather conditions listed as a factor in four of them. In Alabama, a 78-year-old woman was found dead, apparently from exposure. Gainesville, 52 miles northeast of Atlanta, snow. recorded 5l.i inches' Alabama Shivers North Alabama shivered in a paralyzing blanket of snow and plunMioA temperature. The heaviest snowfall was reported at Monte Sano Mountain east of Huntsville. Clay ton Braddock. a Veporter for the Huntsville Times, said 14 inches had accumulated there. An eight-inch snow was reported in Birmingham. Communieations lines and in some eases power lines snapped under the heavy weight of snow. Many highways, including U. S. 31 be- tween Cullman and Decatur and U. S. 11 at Gadsden were closed. i Muses were stalled at Huntsville and Decatur. Snow fell as far south as Jackson,' Miss., but did not stick on the ground there. A cold rain at Thomasville, Ga., kept President Eisenhower indoors again. A two-inch snowfall lay on the ground in the area near the Florida border, when the president arrived Thursday for a golfing and bird hunting vacation. Ice and slush made driving haz ardous throughout the Middle South where motorists are unaccustomed to such conditions. Communications facilities were disrupted in some areas, notably Northeastern Ala bama. Tuesday Series Slates Sonatas Three celebrated sonatas for violin and piano, by Beethoven. Tartini and Gabriel Faure, will be presented Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in Hill. Hall. Violinist Edgar Alden and pianist William S. Newman of the Music Department faculty will be the per formers in the third spring recital of the Tuesday Evening Series. The program is open to the public with out admission charge. Both men have been teaching at UNC since 1946 and have appeared in concerts together for the past eight years. For Tuesday's program they have chosen Beethoven's "Kreutzer Sonata,' Tartini's "De vil's Trill," and Faure's Sonata in A. Alden heads the UNC string di vision, teaching music theory and appreciation, is assistant conductor of the University Symphony Orches tra, and is first violinist for several chamber and orchestral groups. Newman, who has appeared as recitalist and soloist throughout the country, heads the piano division, teaching music appreciation and graduate musieology. 4. - . I -'-a . "'- L"? of I - A': .: I 1 1 A . OiiJ YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN ' ' lie W'oioed 'Em At Yesterday's Concert ' i Symposium Is Nearing $5,000 Says Chairman AI Goldsmith, chairman of the Finance Committee of the Carolina Symposium on Public Affairs, an nounced yesterday his committee was very close to the $3,000 budget the Symposium' needs in order to operate. - r Goldsmith said that several re cent contributions have put the goal of his committee within sight. He referred in general to sizable dona tions from the following organiza tions: The Interfaith Council, the Trade Union Program on Civil Lib erties and Rights and the Execu tive Program of the Business Ad ministration 'School. Greeks Contribute The Finance Committee will con elude their fraternity fund raising drive the first of next week. A great majority of the fraternities and all of the sororities have already contri buted. Goldsmith stated:' "From all in dications, we should cross the $5,000 mark this week, but as the Symposi um will still need more, the fund raising will continue up to and in cluding Symposium Week from March 16-23. "I would like to urge all groups to contribute that have not already done so. Those desiring to give money may contact me at the Sym posium Office in Graham Memorial or at the Chi Phi house. This should be done as soon as possible so that their names mav be placed in the Symposium Handbook and daily programs." Dormitory Campaign Goldsmith and his committee are also conducting a fund raising cam paign in the women's dormitories at this time. They also plan to con tact the presidents of the men's dormitories next week. Expenses The largest lump sum will go for honorariums, travel and board for speakers and will consume almost $3,000. The Handbook will also be a major expense, running in the neighborhood -.of $1,000. The following organizations along with those previously mentioned. have made recent' contributions: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Theta Chi, Alpha Tau Omega and Phi Beta Kappa. i Also: Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Nu, De Tau Epsikm Phi. Delta Upsilon. Del ta Sigma Pi. Pi Lambda .Phi and Kappa Siiima. AL GOLDSMITH Symposium Fund Cltairman Opera Series Starts On TV WUXC-TV, channel 4, will present the complete story of opera produc tion in a new series, "Opera for Tomorrow." which may be seen Sunday evenings at 8:30 o'clock and Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. The host of the 10-program se ries is Boris Goldovsky. the well known master of ceremonies for the "Opera News of the Air," the regular intermission feature of the Metropolitan Opera's Saturday aft ernoon radio broadcasts. Goldovsky was recently featured in another study of musical drama, "Opera for Todav." Actually. "The Meeting" is the second act in a five-act opera en- ! titled "Eastward in Eden" which j tells the story of the poet Emily J Dickinson. Written by Dorothy Gard- ' ner with music by Jan Meyerowitz, ; the particular act in "Opera for Tomorrow" concerns the meeting of ' Emily and Dr. Charles Wadsworth. a Philadelphia minister. Miss Gard- i ner is a recognized authority on j Emily Dickinson, and her opera is : i based on factual material about the ! j poet which has recently come lo ! , light I ' f " ; I- i A A - r-A rt Here Show Goes On Despite Snowfall By MARY ALYS VOORIIEES A Winter Germans audience which braved three inches of snow and a downpour of rain to attend the Ger mans concert yesterday afternoon went away happy and still praising Khe excellent entertainment they had just witnessed. For two hours they had applaud ed and swooned to the musical magic of Ray Anthony and his orchestra and laughed and sat spell bound at the comedy and vocal ta lents of the versatile comedian Lep De Lyon. As the concert came to a close, the audience was on ks feet practi cally shaking the glass winder panes with appreciative applause for the great display of talent it had just seen. ' . ' . Likes faroiina 'Thus, it was little wonder that Ray Anthony had commented back- stage shortly before the show, "This Is one -of our laA'orwe schools . . wc enjoy - this- type of performance the most because the kids know what is going on and get so much out of the program." After the concert a senior Ger mans Cum member congratulated ! the orchestra leader: I've' been to and I have 11 Germans concerts. never seen anything to equal the applause here today." Comedian Leo De Lyon held the audience spellbound during inter mission, making his second appear ance during the weekend. This per formance marked his second visit to the Carolina campus, having appear ed several years ago on the Winter . Germans entertainment bill. During his appearance he kept ! the audience in laughter with his ! various singing voices ranging i from high soprano to bass imita tions of sounds, quips, etc. At one time he whistled "Humoresque" while humming "Sewanee River." Closing out his part of the program, he imitated a trumpet and was join ed by the Ray Anthony band. Concert Numbers Presenting a' varied program, Ray Anthony and his orchestra pleased the packed house with such num bers as "Tenderly." "Harlem Noc turne," '"Stardust," and - "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine." Adding variety were vocalists Phil Grey and Joni Durell, who present ed several romantic and popular ballads, comedy singer Ned Flore and the Four Savoys, who added to the program with "Let's Go To the Hop." "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" was a big favorite with the Carolina crowd, who later rose to its feet as the band burst forth with "When the Saints Go Marching In" and Dixie." Favorite Number The crowd's favorite was un doubtedly "When the Saints . . ." After one stanza on the stage, An thony led the band in a march up and dow n the aisles of the auditori- (See GERMANS, page 3) IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Sandra Reid and Mary Frances Winbome and Glenn Melt zer, Lee Van Storey, Houston Everett, Richard Midkiff, NHson Hinton, William Evans, Fraak London, Willis Whitehead, Edjuaad Nash, Thomas White, Frank Mtt dau aud DouahJ Nelms,

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