Sp2 6 3358 carglk.'a room tf.TTC. Library CcriaZs DjpU Box CTp Cpsl GUI, B.C. WEATHER Modrttly warm with a high of FUTURE SOUTH And a little child shall lead them. See Page 2. 85. VOLUME LXVI NO. 9 Complete f.D Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1958 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE r i 1 ouri DOS ( U': jpv off fa-v -yp' - - fi rf' 5K Mm Heat C ' ;;:;.Y':::-,;;M:;!j,.. 'i."- . , slMAw October Meeting o V A. -V YACKINC IT UP- -Lln of I . L . in9 for the yearbook near.d the Morehead Grants May Increase, Armstrong Tells Exchange, Club T!u- MoiThcad Foundation, which is currently benefactor of 117 schol- j ;.rs at t lie University, hopes to cx-1 f p.tnd its proizam in the future, the O.apcl 1 1 ill Kxchangc Club was li'ld Tuesday nislit. Kiy Arnisironu. executive secre tary of the Foundation, told club members that Jti.in .Motley .More lKd. T3 year-old benefactor now Ji inv' in Uye, . V., hopes even iunUy in Uvw 3rt to 400 iktudonU iinder scholarship at one time." It is the hope to accomplish this, Mr. Armstrong said, by brinying in additional out-of-state prep school Planetarium Ends Show I ! the scholarship pn.gram in 1931 "to The final jx-rformance of ' Land, increase the distinction of the Uni Sea and Sky." the Morehead Plane, ersity, lie doesn't care if the ro tiiritrn's tribute to the International cipient is a pauper or a millionaire, ; oph sical Year, will be given at a lonj a.s he has real ability." r,:3f) Monday ni-ht. This KIY show! Since its inception in 1931, the has been running all summer. j foundation has awarded 179 schol The demonstration Includes up-io-1 arships with a financial outlay of tho-minule findings of scientists on. ! S'EOO.tXK). under and above the earth during the KJY. and points them up with drpth dive thousands of fathoms into the ocean and a zoom trip to the moon. ' Land, Sea and Sky" will be of fered nightly at 8 30 and at matinees mi Saturday at 11 a m., 3 and 4 pen., and on Sunday at 2. 3 and 4 p.m., until the final show Monday. A new production will open at the Morehead Planetarium Tuesday. Student Assn. Leaders To Visit U NC Campus United States National Student Association president Bob Kiley and former President Ray Farabee wi'l he on the University campus Saturdjy to meet with the teer- Voluntccr Workers Needed At Hospital Volunteer workers are ugently nrrded at N. C. Memorial Hospital for sericc in the Bandage Room nd Central Supply Room. IVrsom who an give a few hours time, or more, each month have tvn urged to contact Mrs. Robert Otmus at 8-18.")2 or call Mrs. Viola Jacobs at t!e hospital. G. M. SLATE Aclhitlm scheduled in Graham Meriori.il today include: The drahani Memorial Board, 2:30 p.m. In Ihr Grai! room; and II Caulina Symposium committee, t 5:20 p.m. in the WoodLouse rnffrrT rKm, ff " . v.- l - v -; - . ' - r N- v - ' 1 ' ' !'- v. ... -f . : students filled G ra'an Memorial' h.icomon " end of its first wtek. J0utlrs- ! vmii-i me sciioinrMiip pian. aoi u; i irolina youths receivt $3. COO grants and out-of-state scholars get the 'anie, pus the differential charged to non .North Caiolinians. Thc grants arc only to those who will attend the University in Chapel Hill. j Of the 117 no.v ;n the University, i7 are from .North Carolina public schools. 30 arc graduates of North Carolina senior colL?cs. 29 are from out of state prep schools, nine liom North Carolina Junior col leges, and four from North Caro lina state prep schools. There are 31 students in the cur lent University ireshman class un der Morehead scholarships, and one junior college graduate, j Mr Armstrong told the Exchang. i ers that Mr. Morehead originated RECEPTION THURSDAY Thursday night at the University's Morehead building, the senior class of Morehead scholars will be hosts to the incoming freshman class of Morehead Scholars at 6 o'clock. At a reception and dinner, the schol ars will be greeted by directors of the Morehead Foundation who will be here for the occasion. John L. Morehead, Charlotte, said that John Motley Morehead will not i be able to attend the annual Fall ing committee of the Sdlithern Student Human Relations Seminar. The group of 15 representatives of the five sponsoring agencies will meet in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial at 10 a.m. The Seminar to be held later this year will bring together 150 students from many colleges and universities in the South to dis cuss the problems of Human Rela tions, including the present press ing problem of race relations. The meeting Saturday is to se the time, location, speakers and program of the conference. An outgrowth of the Human Re lations Conference, held at Dela ware, Ohio, this year, which Frank Elkins, of UNC attended, the sem inar will be a three-day long gath ering in which students will be giv en a chance to look at, the Human Relations problem in all its aspects and from all viewpoints. Sponsoring the seminar will be the USNSA, the American Friends Service Committee, the YMCA, the' YWCA and the Council of , Churches. If" ' " .-. . fw.tiuuy S3 piCIUie Ta K" Slatf Photo by Buddy Spoon reception and dinner. Special guests io be present include Grcnville Benedict, of Phillips Academy, An-c'r-ver, Mass.; and Spencer .McCal lie, of the McCallie School. Chat-ti-nooga, Tenn. Others include R. 1. Fctzer, resident secretary, and I nigh Chatham.. Elkins, a trustee. One Orange county youth is now attending the University under a Morehead scholarship. He is Bryan Wilson lluberu, IlilUboro, a junior. Vcathcr REPORTS Mostly fair and somewhat warmer today. High in the 80's. Low tonight in the 60's. Tom morrow, partly cloudy and rath er warm, with only a chance of showers. High in the 80's. High Low Rainfall Monday 79 b"2 .13 Tuesday 84 61 .00 Wednesday 82 49 .00 FORMOSA ROUNDUP Warsaw Talks May Stall; Dulles Says No Retreat By THE ASSOCTATER PRESS WARSAW U.S. and Red Chinese ambassadors hld their fourth meet ing on the Formosa crisis Thurs day and announced only that they agreed o resume talks next Tues day. Concern grew over gloomy re ports of deadlock. Helmut Moteka Speaks Tonight On Literature A specialist in German philosophy, history and folklore from the Uni versity of Munich will give a pub lic lecture at the University of North Carolina tonight at 8 o'clock in the Wilson Library Assembly Room. Prof. Helmut Motekat, who is spending several months in the U.S. giving university lectures and at tending ronferences, will speak on "Experiment and Tradition Within 20th Century Euiopcan Literature." All interested persons have been invited to join UNC faculty jand stu dents for the lecture. ., Motekat has scheduled another lec ture' at UNC on Friday night, Oct. 3, when he' will discuss "Recent Trends in Contemporary German Literature a945-1353." The UNC Department of Germanic Languages and, Literature, headed tv prf- John. Kunstmann, is spon-. soring Professor Motekat' lectures h re i uk oeis or Dorm General dormitory elections will be held next Tuesday, according to a statement by IDC President Rudy Edwards yesterday. The IDC set the date for the spe cial election in its t first regular meeting Wednesday night All of fices vacated since last spring and those offices not filled at that time will be filled by the election. The polls will be open from 9 a,m. to 5 p.m., it was announced. The IDC also heard a report on the results of the limited visiting privileges allowed coeds in some men's dorms last Saturday. It is possible that this policy will be con tinued in the future, although no ac tion has been taken. Charlie Gray announced that each dorm will be allow ed an indefinite sum of money for television repairs and parts this year. Any dorm wish- t Legal Points Stymie Request To Aldermen Ky ANN FRYE A legal point apparently is the reason the Chapel Hill Board of Al dermen has not acted on a request made this summer by acting Stu dent Body President'Curtis Gares. In a letter this summer to Mayor O. K. Cornwell, Cans urged that a member of the student body be appointed as ex-officio member to the Planning Board. Cans said that the board's recommendations to the city council affects student life in such matters as parking meters; thus the need for a student on the board. .Mayor Cornwell said yesterday that the Planning Board members ship, provided for in a town ordin ance, includes five members from Chapel Hill City Council and five members from the Orange County Commissioners. UNITED NATIONS British and French foreign ministers in General Assembly policy speeches supported U.S. efforts to get a Formosa strait cease-fire as a first step toward resolving the Far East crisis. NEW YORK Secretary of State Dulles said the United States will make no retreat in the face of a threat of force. He asserted that the Soviet Union is aiding Red China in a threat of war by arms and moral support, and could make a peace ful solution possible if it wanted to. QUEMOY-Red China mainland batteries hammered Ihe Quemoy Is lands with some of the heaviest bar rages of the offshore island war Thursday after . a brief , lull. Red M1G planes were spotted . after the shelling. Speculation was that the Reds were trying to . knock out an? other supply convoy. TAIPEI The Nationalist China de fense ministry said Nationalist counterfire from Quemoy Wednes oay knocked out 16 Communist guns, 6 artillery emplacements, an am munition depot, a gasoline store and a radar station. LONDON Prime Minister Mac Millan told -British Labor leaders who fear, U.S. policies in the Far East that Britain will not play into the Communists' hands by making any public statement critical of U.S. activities. MacMillan said Britain is ready to take any step to help ne gotiate peace, i L'uesaav Elections Ing ;.o buy a new set may have $50 towird the purchase price. Jerry Chichester made a report for the dorm improvement committee stating that his committee will in spect all dorms within the next few weeks for external and internal im provements needed. The object is to improve the general appearance of th men's dorms. President Rudy Edwards reviewed the goals of the IDC for the cur rent year, and set Oct. 3 as the next meeting date for the body. Longer Infirmary List Not Due To Bad Food "There is no epidemic of food poisoning on campus," Dr. Edward Hedgepeth, University physician, reported yesterday. He said there was a rumor being circulated that the increased num- Kenan Dorm Elects Negro TVCouncil Bernadine Booker, graduate stu dent in education, was elected to Inan's dormitory council Wednes day night. " " Miss Booker, who is oae of the first Negro coeds at the University, holds the distinction of being the fu-st Negro to be elected to a cam pus office. As a member of the council, she will work to keep order in her par ticular section of the dorm, and also work with the house president con cerning dormitory problems, A Greensboro resident, Miss Book er entered the" University this fall as a transfer from Fiske University, where she received her degree in music. She plays the piano, organ, violin and clarinet. At Fiske she was also active on her dormitory council. Asked about her opinions of women's governing bodies on cam puses, she said, "I thin's it is an excellent way for the women stu dents to communicate Deir wants and even 'their grievances and make themselves heard through rep resentatives. There are too many to all be heard separately." Miss Booker is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Hodges of Rt. 10, Greensboro. Mrs. Hoiges is an elementary school teacher and her husband is principal of New Hope. School in Sanford. Cosmopolitans' First Meeting Set For Sunday The Cosmopolitan Club of UNC will hold the first meeting of the year on Sunday, Septemler 28. As it has been in the past, all students are invited to participate . The mem bership is composed o::"- American and foreign students, jesidents of Chapel Hill and faculty members of the University. There are about 45 new foreign students representing countries such as Germany, Bolivia, Italy, Guatemala, Puerto Rico, Pak istan, Japan, Hawaii, and India. The club offers various social events as well as cultural and in formative programs on various countries and subjects of interest to the members. An international din ner and open house are given for the club members and people of the community. ' ' ' ' The meeting will, be held in the Library Assembly Room at 4 p.m. Immediately following the meeting the Cosmopolitan Club will have a dutch dinner in the south dining room of -Lenoir HaJI, f - - - v i iV m 1 j ALBERT FUNDERBUNK . . . committee chairman ber of cases in the infirmary was the result of food served in a pub lic eating place. Yesterday 18 students reported to the infirmary with upset stom achs. The source of the illnes was de scribed by Dr. Hedgepeth as viral gastro-enteritis. "This is' nothing serious," the physician said. He added that the infirmary receives complaints of it continually. Viral gastro-enteritis is an in flammation of the intestine caused by a virus. r.xo v, way cui the body in food, Dr Hedgepeth said. The food poisoning diagnosis was dismissed when it was discov ered that the patients had eaten at several different places. Some of the patients were -released yesterday afternoon and most of the others wil be released today, Dr. Hedgepeth said. Justic Dept. Integration WASHINGTON UP The Jus tice Dept. served notice Thursday j it will oppose any plan to let pri-l vate corporations use public schools and teachers as a way to bypass integration. Its opposition, laid down by Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers, applied specifically to Little Rock. How ever, it was evident that this was administration policy for anywrher? the lease idea might be tried. Just what might happen to, the private corporation plan in Little Rock will ' have to await develop ments, since District Judge John E. Miller refused Thursday to pass on its legality. It said it was a mat ter for a three-judge court. In any event, the government position as laid down by Rogers in a memorandum to Miller was clear: The Justice Dept. will fight any such device as a sham and artifice to keep Negroes out of whit schools in defiance of court ordersy One major point in Rogers' memo: "The status or a school' as a pub lic institution is not changed bv projecting into its operation a pri vate corporation of this nature. ''Unequivocally the courts have held that the superimposition of such a corporation does not excuse Two Chairmen Needed For GMAB Committees Two Graham Memorial Activi ties Board committees are current ly without chairmen, GMAB Presi dent Bob Carter said yesterday. Carter is seeking applications for chairmanships of the publicity and drama committees. In addition, openings on other GMAB commit tees are available ' for interested students. Applications for positions on the committees may bet secured at the GMAB office or at the Information Desk in Graham Memorial, istrict Courts eing Considere By STAN BLACK House Councils, or a disrict court system, may be installed in the men's dormitories sometime in the near future, according to IDC Court Revision Committee Chairman Otto Funderburk. It is expected that a report will be presented to the IDC at its "next regular meeting on Oct. 8. Chaiman Funderburk emphasized that as yet no definite decision haw been reached on the details of the plans. The decision as to which plan might be feasible is up to the In-1 terdormitory Council itself. A system similar to the one now in force in the women's dorms is one of the ideas now . being studied by the committee. The house councils would have jurisdiction over minor offenses such x as noise or disorder in the dorms. All appeals and serious of fenses would be referred to the IDC j Court, which would retain much ot its present character. The members of the house coun cils would probably be composed of the dorm president, IDC represen tative, and possibly other officers of the dormitory. A second system that has been under consideration is a district j plan with the men's dorms divided into districts such as upper quad, lower quad, new dorms, etc. Each district would have a Tire siding Judge, who would be a stn. dent sel-ected from the IDC The judge would not under any circum stances be a resident of the district ever which he might preside. Again, under this system appeals nd serious offenses would be refer red to the IDC Court. j Membes of the revisions commit- i tee in addition to Chairman Fun- ! To Oppose Methods a state institution frpm non-compliance with the 14th Amendment or with orders establishing 14th Amendment rights." Three Rush Parties Scheduled Tonight Three rush parties are schedul ed for tonight to complete the second round of rush activities. These parties are scheduled for 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Invitations for the fourth round on Saturday will be available Sat urday morning o'clock. from l:15 to 1 WUNC Radio Begins Shows This Evening "This is WUNC, the high fideli ty voice of the University of North ; Carolina ..." 1 WUNC Radio, the University's' educational FM station, returns to the air tonight at 6 p.m., operating from recently remodeled studios in ; Swain Kali. j On the air each evening between ! the hours of 6 and 11:30 p.m.,! WUNC w ill be broadcasting a wide range of educational and cultural programs in the fields of classical' music and cultural events on the i University community. j The station will also broadcast,; selections from such sources as! Canadian Broadcasting Corpora-! tion, the French Broadcasting Sys- i tern, the National Association of f Educational Broadcasters, U.N. Ra-j dip nad Radio Netherlands. ! The student staff of WUNC has; extended a general invitation to! students to tune to 91.5 FM for an other year of educational broad- i casting. i derburk , include: IDC Vice Presi dent Doug Bayliff, Phil Edwards, Walt Poole and II. E. Holland. They will hold their first meeting of the year Friday at 5:30 p.m. , IDC President Rudy Edward? commented on the poposed revisions, spying ' "We feel that the present system is really too cumbrous to deal effectively with the situations. "If a more localized system is set up. much unnecessary detail will be ; t limina,ed from the present IDC Court- t will be ersier to establish ; ar atmosphere of qjiet and study 1 with the administration of IDC rules ! brought so much closer to the in : dividual dormitory." Student Body President Don Fur tado said he thought the council or district idea may be the best ap proach to the matter of maintaining an atmosphere for study. The district or council would "bring the problems of dormitory life closer to each individual involv ed." hp saiH Art Center Announces Evening Sketch Class The Ackland Art Center has an nounced an evening sketch class for people who like to draw for pleasure. The class will cover var ious approaches to drawing from life and from imagination. J ''The class is under John AllieoU of ' the Art Department of the Uni vresity. It will meet Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m.; the first meet ing is October 1. Monday Meet Announced For Magazine Staff The Carolina Quarterly will have its organizational meeting Monday j at 4:15 p.m. The editor has invited j anyone interested in working eilh I er on the business staff or on the I fiction or poetry boards to come j by the Quarterly office Monday. Recent appointments to th? ' Quarterly staff include: Robert i Hall Demaree a student in the j Classics Dept., business manager; ! Arthur Lessing, graduate student ' in philosophy, poetry editor: Paul I Warren Heeman, graduate student j in the English Department, fic tion editor, and Jerah Johnson, re view editor. The Editor also encouraged any students interested in submitting manuscripts of poetry, short fic tion or scholarly articles, to do so before "the middle of October for consideration for the fall issue. INFIRMARY Students in the terday included: Infirmary yrs- Grace Eugenie Robertson, Bet sy Field Harris, Mary Blarkman Roberts, Fern Elizabeth Uliyne. Jo Ann Simmons, Mary Rosalind Srel!, Lois Lorir.e Gault, Joan Bertha Gibson, Charles Henry Howell, Jesse Robert Peel, Thom as Mitchell Tull, Richard Ear! Quick, James Howard Gibbs, Law rence Christmas, George Wine cof, Carl Cecil Ilendrickson. Rob ert Campbell Walker, Karl Eu gene Bostian, Charles Randal Shelton, Maurice Yictor Barohill, John Rainey Parker, Harvey Hel ton Henry, Wendell James Har per, Freddie Donald Hickman. Benny Lee Rogers, Robert Wind sor Dixon, Josef Henry Perry, Clarence Simpson, Bryan Grimes. James Lee Kerr, Bruce Francis Caldwell, Donald Brown Fogleman, Charles David Purnell, Myron hush Enids and Peter Beeken Young,

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