tMf.C. Library Serials Copt Bex 870 Cfcapal Hill, II. C. OCT 7 1958 WEATHER Partly cloudy and warmer, with expected high In mid-70's. PRESS' ROLE It has not assumed the proper one. See page 2. VOLUME LXVI NO. IS Fraternities Hear Young Score DTH D.ivis Young last night asserted tlut Editor Curtis Guns used the recent series on fraternities to slam"' fraternities for " his own ( personal satifaction." 'Voting, a statf member of The Daily Tar Heel, urged the IFC to e to it letters are written to the editor so that the editor's views may he contradicted. Youn pointed out that he was "tremendously" disappointed in the present paper, and added that "many member of the staff will luck me up when I say that I am nt satisfied with the paper." He said that columns by Anthony - .... Miscegenation Is Di's Topic This Evening The abolition of all state laws prohibiting intor-marriages of the race will he debated at tonight's nutting of the Dialectic Literary S.k ify at 8 o'clock on third floor, New West, The bill to be debated states that legislation of this nature Is incon Mstent with the democratic princi I !ei of the United States and the uvil liberties of the citizenry of North Carolina. t)i President Gary Greer said yes teday that anyone interested in the topic for discussion or in parliamen tary debating U invited to attend. The topic of adolishing laws which prohibit inter-racial marriages evok. eo much comment last spring when the state student legislature took this up. Organizational Meeting Called By Cardboard "Being one of the largest card board sections in the eastern United State, the LTC Cardboard needs a larce staff." Pat Dooley, presi-tU-nt of the Cardboard, has announc id "For this reason," he continued, ' we are having a second organiza tional meeting this fall for those who could not attend the first meeting in September." The meet ing will be tonight at the office in F.merson Stadium at 7 p.m. Lawrence Wilson, Art Director, will explain his department which thinks of the stunts and draws them. The Office Department and the Usher Department will be ex llainetl by Cotton Hale and Thai KJliott respectively. For work in all departments there are awards based on year and a peiiU system. The first year award Is a certificate of merit, and the second award is a UNC Cardboard Jacket. A Cardboard monogramed sweater is given the third year in n cognition of work; fourth year members receive gold keys. Dooley extended an invitation to idl freshmen, upper classmen, and coed. He said that refreshments will be served. G. M. SLATE Activities in Graham Memorial today include: Kappa Kappa Gamma recep tion, 7-9 p.m.. Main Lounge; Women's Residence Council, 7-9 p.m., Grail Room; Coed Visiting Agreement Committee, 3:X)-5 p.m., Grail Room; National Students Association, 4-6 p.m., Roland Parker 1; Traffic Council, 7:30 10 p.m., Roland Parker 1; Young epublicans Club, 7:30-8:30 p.m., Roland Parker II; Debate Squad, 4-5:30 p.m.; Roland Parker II; University Party Executive Com mittee, 2-3 p.m., Woodhouse Con ference Room; Traffic Council, 8:30-1! p.m., Woodhouse Confer ence Room; University Club, 7 8:39 p.m., Woodhouse Conference Room. . Wolff, Cort Edwards, and the controversy on contraception had lowered the quality of the paper. He further exclaimed The Daily Tar Heel was not read, and "any paper that is not read, is not a good paper." ' I hope that students will rally behind this challenge and "will speak out in the form of letters and columns to yhow thicr distaste for the present paper," Young con cluded. The IFC voted last night to al low Pringle Pipkin. Daily Tar Heel reporter, to cover the meeting of thc Council. Also approved was the IFC week end scheduled for December. IFC President Tucker Yates thanked Youn for presenting the fraternity point of view in his let ter to the editor of last week, and also complimented the job Jamie Holmes and Young did in compil ing the fraternity scries which ran on the front pnge of the newspa per last week. Class Ring Orders To Ee Taken Thursday Senior class ring orders will be taken Thursday in Y Court from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lee II. niackwell. representative for the Ralfour Company, will as sist members of the Grail In taking orders for rings. The class of '59 or any pre vious class is eligible to order now. Kings ordered on Thursday will be delivered in about eight weeks. Danny Lotz, class ring chair man, stated that the Balfour ring in Ui only official Carolina class ring. Report Due Tonight On Caravan Progress Don Furtado. the principle speak er at tonight's meeting of the Uni vrsity Club, will report progress in the arrangements for the Caravan Weekend to University of Virginia. The University Club, working with student government, will try to arrange an activities weekend at II. Va. the weekend of the game. "With Germans over with here and a big dance planned there, it seems like a good idea." said, Uni versity Club President Dave Jones. Furtado has written U. Va.'s Jazz Club to investigate the possibiliiy of getting tickets'to the game and concert and to check on possible conflicts. . Since this weekend will be Band day at U. Va., housing dif Audit Board Plans SAF Info Campaign The Student Audit Board yes terday dedicJed to give campus organizations a more adequate un derstanding of the services of the Student Activities Fund. To clarify the purposes of the Fund and its facilities on the Board is preparing a letter to be sent to (rganizatlons having large enough rteasury to be handled by the Fund Office. The Fund Office is designed to provide means for student organiza tfons to handle banking and ac counting on a systematic basis. The Fund cooperates with treasuries by maintaining central accounts us ing accepted procedures and tech' niques as well as modern business machines. The office has trained and ex perienced personnel to assist in the many problems the treasuries of campus organizations. In further action by the Audit Board the hours of the Student Activities Fund Office were modi fied to prevent last minute block ing up in the Fund Office. Be ginning Nov. 1, office hours will be open for public business from 8:30 a.m. until 4 p.m.' Monday being handled at 4 p.m. will be through Friday and from 8 a.m. continued until finished. This ten tJUvte mdJrU;.ion, awa.; final Complete UP) Wire ? J 'I , I i i i h - ! v . 1 .' r '' I - I CONFERENCES COMING UP YM-YWCA Conference Commit tee Co-Chairmen Suzanne Mosteller and Larry Anderson are plan ning a full season of events. Many Committee Meets Mark Ys 'Kick Off Week The YMCA-YWCA "Kick-Off Week,'' which began Monday and conttnues through next Monday, has four meetings scheduled for today. "Kick Off Week" is designed to get the many committees and func tions of the Y underway in their various projects. Today's workshops lead off with a discussion group on "Campus Social Problems" at 4 p.m. in the Y building. The discussion leader will be Doug Se'ssoms. ficulties may arise from the num erous high school bands on the Virginia campus. Also, no football holiday has yet l)een declared by the administra tion here an improtant considera tion. The cheerleaders and representa tives from the cardboard, the band, Athletic Association, all dormitories, fraternities and sororities will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in Di Hall, New West, to hear Furtado's report and to discuss and make further plans for this Caravan. Inaddition plans will be discussed for various homecoming weekend events, such as judges, displays and the dance. evaluation and decision by the Audit Board around Jan. 1. The Student Audit Board also announced the approval of Harold Langenderfer as one of their facuy advisers. A iseqond ad viser has not yet been named. Cobb Phones Are Disconnect Due To Damage The two telephones on second floor, Cobb, have been cut off temporarily because one of the phones was damaged. Rudy Edwards, IDC president, said yesterday ta,t the phones were cut .off this past weekend and will remain off for around a week. Edwards said neither phone on second floor had been working well. But before repairmen were able to work on the phones, the wires of cne had ben cut and the box ripped from the wall. In case of an emergency, the telephones on Cobb's other floors re working, Edwards said. Edwards, who is also an adviser in the dorm, saw to it that the phones were cut off temporarily. Service CHAPEL H!LL, Scheduled for 4:15 p.m. is a meet ing of the Human Relations Com mittee, headed by Mary Church. This will also be in the Y build ing. Other meetings set for today are the Publications Board at 5 p.m. in the Y and the Freshman Program slated at 5:45 p.m. in Lenoir Hall. Weekend Mee& Features Beach On Conscience By BEN TAYLOR Are you apathetic . . . interested only in future security; or a con formist . . . lacking in strong in dividualism? Is this a picture of the typical Carolina student, in cludnig yourself? These and many other questions on contemporary campus life will come in for discussion when the UNC YMCA-YWCA and the N. C. State YMCA co-sponsor a weekend conference on Oct. 11-12 at Quaker Lake. Dr. Waldo Beach's important new book, "Conscience On Campus," will serve as the basis for discussion. Dr. Beach is Professor of Chistian Ethics at Duke University and a renowned speaker on college cam pus problems and ethics. Conference co-chairman Larry Anderson said the joint confer ence will serve to "provide an op portunity to examine realistically contemporary campus life and the motivation behind it, and to search for the answers to the problems involved. "It will be a week-end confer ence planned with the new stu dents especially in mind." Plans for the conference call for talks by Dr. Beach on Saturday night and Sunday afternoon, as well as study groups, panel discussions and a vesper talk by Jack Lewis. Regular Sunday morning worship services will also be held at the conference site. ' 'Conscience On Campus," accord ing to Anderson has won praise from many sources in the months since its publication because of the "honesty, wit, and insight with w hich Dr. Beach examines college life." "It is a realistic, conslse inter-, pretation of Christian ethics for college life; also, it is being used as the basis for study groups and conferences on campuses through out the country this fall," Anderson said. ' The conference will begin at 6 o'clock Saturday afernoon, Oct. 11, and will end around 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon. It will begin late so as to avoid conflicting with the football game that afternoon. Transportation to and- from the conference site will be provided, Anderson said. Y officials have urged anyone interested in the weekend conference to register at the Y office today. -' . - . $ . 1 - -s . - - ' : ' 1 ' NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, By CURTIS GANS A special bond issue mty be floated in order to pay far capital improvements to the Univei-sity lrrin-friftil I President Furtado Urges SP To Improve Campus Student Body President Den Fur tado, speaking last night before the Student Party, admonished the body not to compromise itself, that a party is not a thing to exist for itself. t Furtado, in addressing the par ty, stressed the role of Student Party in student government, say ing, that.it is easy at timeu for a party to try and maintain itself. Ife expressed the opinion that the party should express it's beliefs with the idea of making the camp us better. In his opening remarks Furtado apologized to the. gathering for his failure to attend the party's first meeting last week because of a previous engagement. "This is my party," he -said, "and in the past lour years it has carried me a long way." "The problems on campus are rather evident," he said it, outlin ing points he would like; to see the party carry out. Furtado urg ed the group to look around and see' things that are wrong, and sec odly to find people w-ho are willing to work to improve the world and the campus. At the conclusion "of Furtado's Civil Service Exams The Civil Service Commission began accepting applications from college juniors, seniors, and grad uate students Wednesday for the first written test under this year's Federal Service Entrance Examina tion. , s The test is scheduled for Novem ber 15 and applications will be ac cepted through October 30, the Com. mission said, i The examination is designed to help fill the Government's yearly need for more young people of col lege calibre who have the potential to levelop into the top managers, technicians, andV specialist s of the future. Positions filled through this examination are in a variety of occupational fields and are located throughout the United States. University Party Will Meet Next Week The University Party will hold a general meeting next week for old members as well as new ones. At a meeting of the Executive Board this afternoon, the date and time will be determined, ac cording to Jack Lawir.g, party chairman. Carolina Sports Crowds To Be Rated On Conduct At each home basketball and football game, Carolina crowds will be rated by -visiting ball teams in a race with other conference schools for the Atlantic Coast Conference Sports Writers Association award. "The award, which is presented each spring, was won last year by Duke University and the year before by Maryland. "We are vitally concerned over the ' sportsmanship question and YACK PICTURES THROUGH Wednesday: juniors THROUGH Friday: sophomores Biisement GM 16 p.m. MEN:; ties, dark coats, white shirts WOMiEN: black sweaters NEXT WEEK: frtshmen OCTOBER 7, 1958 lYipf.ovements. ke pea a including a new student union Chanlellor W. B. Aycock explained at the first Chancellor's Cabinet meeting of the year yesterday. speech, Student Party Chairman Leon Holt called for announce ments. Erwin Fuller pointed out that SP began a series on present campus problems last year and that at the present there were several areas of concern. Fuller called attention particular ly to the question of proposed re visions in the present election laws. According to Chairman Holt these proposed election law revis ions, will be probably discussed at the next meeting along with a sug gestion by Don Furtado to change the regular meeting night to Tues day. Courts Uphold Prison Term Of UNC Grad RICHMOND,' Va. UPi A stat ute permitting the government to disclose only those parts of classi fied investiagtive documents rel ative to testimony was upheld here Mpnday by the U. S. 4th Cir cuit. Qpbrtof Appeals-,. . . In upholding the statute the court affirmed a six-year prison sentence for Junius Orving Scales, a Greesboro native, Scales was convicted in 1955 of knowingly be longing to an organization Com munist party which advocated vio lent overthrow of the government. The Supreme Court reversed Scales, first conviction in the East ern District of North Carolina be cause the government declined to produce FBI reports from their in formers. The high court held the defense must be entitled initially to see the reports to determine what use would be made of them. Since the first conviction, a sta tute was passed allowing the gov ernment to expose only those parts of documents considered pertinent to a case. Scales, a UNC graduate, contend ed through counse that his con stitutional rights were being vio lated on a charge of mere associa tion unaccompanied by unlawful conduct. On this point the appellate court said: "The activities of such a group constitute a clear and present danger to the state and he who joins, with open eyes becomes a part of all that he sees." ference area," the association's exe cutive secretary, Bill Hensley, wrote in a letter to Student Body Presi dent Don Furtado. During football sason, visiting ball players are rating the Carolina crowds. Both the teams and the officials will rate the crowds dur ing the basketball season. Votes wrill be tabulated and the trophy will be awarded in the spring, hope that this trophy will be the most sought after honor in the con- Charles B. Deane Speaks To BSU A former North Carolina Con gressman Charles B. Deane -spoke to the Baptist Student Union Sunday night on race relations. Deane, who represented the 8th in 1956, said Christians should re District for five terms until losing direct the thinking of misguided Southerners on the race issue. Deane lost in the 1956 primary election because he had refused to sign the Southern Manifesto, a states' right document. Offices in Graham Memorial I Bond The Chancellor discussed UNC proposals at the request of Stu dent Boly President Don Furtadd, who brought forward some tenta tive proposals for bettering student, faculty elations which will be dis cussed at the next Cabinet meet ing. Aycock pointed out that the Uni versity was reqi&sting over 11 million dollars, and that this was divided into three budgets. The first budget, the "A" budg et, covers the operating expenses at the present level of education with increments only according to predicted growth of the -University. This budget is currently before the Advisory Budget Committee for ap proval or suggested final changes. The "B" budget contains expan sion, increase in salary, research facilities, and other items indicative of the growth of the University. A new feature of the "B" budget is that across the board increases on faculty salaries are not present. There is a lump sum to be given for salary increases to be appro priated by the administration and department heads as they see fit. The Chancellor pointed out that the main emphasis in the' "B" budget is on faculty benefits. The "B" budget is under consid eration at the present time and a report from the Advisory Budget Commission will be forthcoming soon. The third facet of the budget is permanent improvements. Heading thet list of permanent improvements is additions to existing buildings and building repair. In the original budget request, the School of Public Health's request for buildings was placed separately from the request of the University for additional buildings. In the University's request, a building for geology and geography came first, followed by a new student union, and the botany build ing. These capital improvements are usually made from surplus monies, and this year there probably will be no surplus, according to the Chan cellor. Hence, the necessity of a bond issue. In order to formulate the bond issue it was necessary to con solidate the request from the School of Public Health and the general University request. After formulation, the new student union Law Alumni Reunion Set Tfiis Weekend Law alumni will return to the University next weekend for their annual reunion complete with al dinner, business session and re-1 ception. Attorney General Malcolm Sea well will address the annual Law Review dinner, to be held Friday night, at 6:30 p.m. at Howard Johnson's Restaurant on the Dur ham Boulevard. Presiding will be Paul Johnston, director of the N. C. Department of Administration, and chairman of the Law Review Committee of the UNC Law rilumni Association. Election of officers and direc tors, presentation of a yearly budget and other business will con cern the Association in its annual meeting at 11 a.m. Saturday in Manning Hall Courtroom. President Harry L.' Riddle of Morganton will preside. Other of ficers are Vice-Presidents Howard Manning of Raleigh and Francis Fairley of Charlotte, and the secretary-treasurer, Miss Mary Oliver of Chapel Hill. The Law Alumni Day festivities will continue Saturday afternoon with attendance at the UNC-South Carolina footbail "ame in Kenan Stadium. Law students will sport canes and top hats and attend the game as al?roiip in their annual day of recognition. Following' the game a reception for all law alumni and members of the bar will be held in the main reading room of the Law Library in Manning Hall. FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE AWNC Issue was after the botany building, and behind the School of Public Health and geology and geography build ings. The Chancellor said that the' Board of Higher Education will issue its recommendations shortly to the Advisory Budget Commission concerning the bond issue, and if tiiey approve of it and the Advisory Budget Commission approves of it, the bond issue may stand a good chance of passing the General As sembly when it convenes this win ter. If so, the State will vote on it in the November elections. Library Phones Will Go Out; Abuse Is Cause Unreasonable abuse of the pay telephones in the Library will re sult in the elimination of pay tele phone service there, according to a report from the Student Library Committee yesterday. , This abuse specifically involved the use of the telephone booths as latrines, according to Pringle Pipkin, a member of the commit tee. "Availability of telephone serv ice in the University Library is a privilage, not a right," the report said, and the student committe? has assumed the responsibility for "reasonable and proper respect for use of the telephones." "The Library would like to con tinue to make this privilege avail able to the student body," the re port continued. "However, when a privilege is abused, it is no longer a privilege, it is an abuse." Included on the committee are Larry Taylor, chairman; Don Fur tado, Jon Mazuy, Bill Lam, Tom Blumenfeld, Jim Purks and Pip kin. Phi To Debate Death Sentence Tonight At 8 Is capital punishment just? This is the question the Philan thropic Literary Society will debate in its second meeting tonight at 8. Dr. W. B. Sanders, professor of criminology in the Dept. of Soci ology will be the guest critic for the evening. The bill of the evening is a resolu tion favoring the abolition of capital punishment in the state of North Carolina. Arguments supporting abolition will center on the practical failures of the policy. Rep. Don Jacobs, the author of the bill, believes that capital punish ment has outlived its usefulness to society, that the infliction of the death penalty seems to have little continues to be one of the world's effect on the crime rate which highest. As recently as the 19th Century the death penatly was given for a variety of minor crimes. The bill before the Phi would abolish such practices, substituting rehabilitation as the primary goal of law enforcement. Studemts and faculty members who are interested in the debate, particularly freshmen, have been invited to attend. The society will meet at 8 p.m. in Phi Hall in New East. INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Joan Patricia DuBose, Gail Gwen Grimes, Judith Hope Rhodes, Easel Monroe Odonu Byran Grimes, George Walker Bender, Lewis. John Brown Jr., Ray Davis Fennell, John Leroy Sossman, ChCarles Thomas Davis. Robert Edward Ketler, Wallace Hamiltob Kara It. Stewart James Larimer, David Drew Turnbull, Brinkley, Kent MacDaniel, Karl Cecil Hendrickson, Baxter Hocutt Miller Jr., John Edwin Reeves Jr. and Charles Robert Lee Jr.

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