CAROLINA ROOM Box MO WE ATH ER Mild tod.iy uilli Me jJlumrm. :prlrd hih Mill be 82. COURT REVISION The IDC has a good proposal. See page 2. Serials Dspt VOLUME l.XVI NO. 18 r t I! I! . M ii If I I 1 1 1 7 11 NORTH CAROLINA CHAMPION Tonight's Pep Rally will feature fhf championship baton twirling of Miss Faye Carolyn Gooch, freihman from Durham. The rally will be held at 6:30 p.m. in Emer son Stadium. The cheerleaders and band will also be on hand. Conference Main Feature To ?e Dr. Waldo Beach llv P.i; TAYI.OK Dr. Waldo I'.i iu h should fi-el very i;u:t h at h me tins weekend when I i' spi.iks j: (fi.iker Lake. If the St.fe I NC YM-YWCA Fall I "olden in t- itinerary runs true Ut him. he will find himself the main ;rti action n what promises to b a lively .hscussion of Southern campus problems Mis record of public speaking s!..kes him Mln!ly equal to the task. I KOBI.K.MS EVALUATION Now I'roffssor of Christian Ethics i Duke Di unity School. Dr. Beach j .:rd Ins ue v book. "Conscienrr On Campiiv' are scheduled to provide Mine M students from State and I NC with ,i thorough evaluation of 11. e problems peculiar to college stu ('etits in the South. The overn-ht conference will be V 1 S if -w WALDO BEACH . ilt"i(l,l feel at home Di Votes Twice To Remove Interracial Marriage Bans Kr ELLEN STEIN , cal attempts (the tower of flabel) The I)n.(tic 'Senate Tuesday to account for the origin of races i H id hue,, passed a bill advocating j i'.it all state laws restricting inter- i. '.rial m;rriages be abolished. TI.e firit vote passed the bill by a two thirds majority. After added d.M-usMon .n this controversial sub. j'ct the nnate went on record as unamimoiisly favoring the abolition of all stale stipulations establishing inual cr teria for the legality of marriage, IASES OF IDEAS Ariiuments by senators favoring the present state laws were based upon ideas such as purity of race, Ihe futility of assimilating cultures, social sUnding. ethnic pride and a theory that people with different view points will not marry. Senator Rick Wolfer intiuted into ('i bate Ire topic of purity of race, saying, 'jmrity within the race is one of itr'slrongcr points." Furth ermore, he said, people who deal in the practice of miscegenation lack ethnic pride, and government is ri-spninible to hold in check those who are not able to govern them selves. Senator Gary Greer, Di president. uleired to sociological and Bibti- G. M SLATE Artivl.irs In Graham Memorial today lix-ludc: f'o'itiai Scirnre Class, 9-10 inn., Woodhouse Conference Room; Elections Committee, 2-1 I'-ni., Crail Room, I .V. - . -7 .- , ; ... .' ,,. i' 4 ' tjf l.dd ;it Quaker Lake, just south of Greensboro. Dr. Bench is scheduled to speak at 7:15 Saturday evening Mid again at 2:00 Sunday afternoon. WESLEY AN GRADUATE A native of Middletown, Conn., the 42-year old author-educator is a graduate of Wesleyan University, class of '37, and holds a B. A. from the Methodist school. By 1944. he had received his B. D. and Ph. D. from Yale Divinity School. Following his formal education. Dr. Beach taught at Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, where he was Associate Professor and College Pastor from 1942-46. He arrived on the Duke campus in 1946 and ha3 been there sinrc, .serving as Professor of Christian F thics in Duke Divinity School, j Since his arrival, he has contribut ed to numerous religious publica tions and authored and co-authored several books. A number of his articles have been printed in such widely read ecclesiastical works as "Christian ity and Crisis," "Religion in Life," and ;Thc Intcrcollegian." Dr. Beach's new book. "Conscience on Campus", is, according to YMCA President Bill Sugg, "a thorough look into many of the ethical prob lems of college students throughout the country and an attempt to out line some paths to improving sand aids of honesty and ethics on cam puses. "There are chapters devoted to tolerance, morality of the mind, the pseudo-Christian, simplicity of the See WALDO BEACH, Page 3 and the fact that this guestion has never been answered. In the amalgamation of cultures since the world began there has been the developing and mixing races and religions, Senator Greer stressed. Senator Frank Elkin said, "To me there is only one race, the hu man race." He ridiculed the idea of ' purity of race" in illustrating new classifications other than race into which people could be divided, such as classes of stature, hair coloring and eye coloring which might en courage such restrictions upon hu manity as not being allowed to min gle with people taller than oneself. He also pointed out the added chal lenge to oppose such a restriction. VIOLENCE PREVENTED Representative David Matthews of the Philanthropic society emphasized v.hat he called "the practical as pect" in that present miscegenation laws serve to prevent mob violence which would result after their re moval. He said there is no place in the South for children of mixed marriages. "They wouldn't, be Ne gro, they wouldn't be white; they would be a combination." Discussion which proceeded the first voting brought new views into focus. Senator Wolfer announced that his main argument against the removal of miscegenation laws was that "you cannot mix one culture with another." Complete UP) Wire Service UNC Was Born 165 Years Ago On Oct. Day By MARY ALICE ROVVLETTE On an October day, 165 years ago, the cornerstone of Old East was laid and the first state supported university in the United States, the University of North Carolina, came into being. The traditional celebration of the anniversary of the event will take place on the steps of South Build ing at 10:50 a.m. Saturday. Stu dents, faculty, administrative per sonnel and visitors to the campus will attend the pagaent. The Carolina Playmakers, the UNC Band and the Men's Glee Club will take part in the celebration which will end with a procession to Davie Poplar where Gen. William II. Davie is said to have designated the site of the University. Tradition, which governs events on University Day, has dictated that there will be no rain. However, if the weatherman doesn't believe in tradition, the ceremony will als0 be followed. Although the pageant is largely a rt enactment of the laying of the Old East cornerstone, several thous and things have been added to the campus since the event actually took place in 1793. It is difficult to imagine, but then there was no Y Court, no Old Well, no library, no parking problems, no traditions in fact, for two years, there were no students. Therefore, the University will not only be celebrating that which hap pened in 1793, but its growth and development of the thousands of students who have passed through its gates since that time. WILLIAM R. DAVIE . . laid the cornerstone I , .-, j I ! .''"Si' - I -n - i - ii ii i.iin - n r ui-l Turley Leads Revived Yanks To 58 Series Championship MILWAUKEE ( AP ) Strong-armed Bob Turley led the revived New Y'ork Yankees to the greatest base ball comeback in 33 years Thursday as they stormed back from a 3-1 deficit to dethrone Milwaukee in the seventh game of the World Series. First 2 Coeds In Homecoming Queen Contest Two entries in the Homecoming Contest were turned in yesterday, the first day for submitting con testants, according to Dave Jones, president of the University Club. The University Club is sponsoring the contest. The two contestants are: Kathy Fulenwider, a freshman, and Jo anne Baker, a junior. Both girls are being sponsored by Alexander Dormitory. The deadline for submitting is Wednesday. Entries may be turn ed in to the Graham Memorial In formation Desk. A court of 10 girls will be select ed by a yet unnamed panel of judg es Friday, Oct. 17. The queen's identity will be withheld until the football game Saturday, Oct. 18. Last year's homecoming queen was Gail Willingham, who was graduated last spring. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1958 Visiting Agreement For C H . jBik It m -, ,: t 'Mas 1 i ii lfi. ir. y NT nhpl: 'V IV 'i V " "i -:- ' v" i i ! 5. I . i rKUtttuiNBS-Coach Jim Tatum, thd from left, seems to be enjoying the read ng of a mock court order setting up an injunction against the University of South C.7oZ. foo7b.M" earn. Tak.ng part n the e.ent, leading up to annua. "Law Day" in Kenan Stadium Saturd La" students left to r.ght, are: Jim Kiser, Charlotte; Bruce Johnson, Conway; Tatum; Joe Chamb,L Rocky Mount; Bobbie Ne.yon, Creedmore; Dock Smith, Princeton; and Bob Lind ayhar.o I Vol shown are Ted Reynolds, Wrightsville; Larry McElory, Marchall; and Nick Miller, Chariot e IM II ILirYf Ski nrkMMMMK..... Legislature To Consider Elections Law Revision By STAN FISHER j An omnibus Election Law revision bill was introduced in the Jitu.dent Legislature last night by Dave Biren. Consideration of this bill was postponed for two weeks to give the Ways and Means Committee adequate time for changes. The Legislature also passed under special orders, a bill creating an ex offieio member of the Board of Directors of the ' Chapel Hill Mer chants Assn. The bill, introduced by Bill Porter SP, provides that the associate director be appointed by t'ie Stu dent Body President as S3on as practicable. The associate director would keep the Student Body Presi dent and the students informed as Turley, working his third straight game, dazzled the Braves with a two-hit relief job over 6 2-3 innings while the Y'anks clubbed Lew Bur dette for a 6-2 victory. It was sweet revenge for the Yanks, three-time losers to Burdett a year ago, as they ripped into their tormentor for four big runs in the eighth inning, breaking a 2-2 tie. Burdette had yielded two unearn ed runs in the second but the Braves scored first off shaky Don Larsen and tied the score on Del Crandall's homer off Turley in the sixth. Two men were out when the Yankee uprising started with a long double to right by Y'ogi Berra that just missed being a home run by about two feet. The drive bounced off a padding high on the right field barrier. Elston Howard fouled off one pitch and looked at a ball before he bounced a single . over second base. Berra hustled home with the big winning run. , Andy Carey, hitless in 11 trips, smashed a single off Eddie Ma thews' glove into short lelt before Bill Skowron hammered a 2-2 pitch far and away over the fence in left center field for a 415-foot three-run homer. Burdette bowed his head, pawed at the dirt resignedly, ami finally closed out the inning by striking rut Tony Kubek. Crandall's homer with two out ja Isl Okayed By Administration: fiNext Move Is Vote to the plans and actions of the merchant's association. Other proposed legislation Intro- ! duced last night included; (1) A bill to appropriate $620 for the purchasing of four typewriters' for the Yackety Y'ack. (2) A proposal to establish a stu dent government publication by the name of Playbill. Such a publica tion would maintain a regular ad vertising constituency, a regular format for publication, and a run: ning calender of programs open to the university population. (3) A bill to establish a definite policy for the publish ng of the Yackety Yack by student govern ment and to appropriate; the funds necessary for the enactment of this the sixth was the only hit off the Yanks' 21-game winner until Joe Adcock sliced a pinch single to left with two gone in the ninth. When Mickey Mantle gathered in Red Schoendienst's fly to center for the final out, the short reign of the Braves had ended., The Yankees, who usually take victory In stride, gathered around Turley as he walked off the mound, pounding his back, pumping his hand and yelling congratulations. The man who was yelling the most was Casey Stengel whose seventh World Series victory tit s him with Joe McCarthy among the managers of all time. It was the greatest 'comeback in baseball since the 1925 Pittsburgh Pirates, after losing three out of four to Washingon, closed with a rush to take three straight by beat ing Walter Johnson on ,i rain-soaked afternoon. No other club ever had overcome such a handicap in a best-of-seven series until the 1958 Yankees. These Yankees were given up for dead, counted out beyond recall af ter they lost the first two games in Milwaukee. Fans were saying this might have been the worst Yankee club ever to win an American League pennant. Larsen's shutout in the third game eliminated any chance o: a Milwau kee sweep but Warren Spahn's shut out put the Y'ankees down 3-1. and left them needing three straight. Offices in poliqy. (4) A proposal to establish an of- ,flCe of filing! clerk . of the 'Student Legislature. . c: 5 A bill to establish a student dining hall commission which would have full investigative power and authority to make positive recom mendations to the' Lenoir Hall ad ministration and to Student Aid. Student Body President Don Fur tado in addressing the legislators, stressed the importance of the Stu dent Legislature's position. Furtado stated that the basis of student gov ernment autonomy is currently threatened. He referred to the re cent ruling that studnt government employees qualify as university em ployees. John Brooks. Student Legislature Parliamentarian, presented a gavel tc President Furtado in recognition of his service to student government and the student legislature during the 1957-58 year. In a short address to the Legis lature, Attorney General Dick Rob inson outlined the policies and plans of his office for the year, stating that in a short time he hoped to have complete files on past legis lation available to all legislators. Ed Levy, coordinator for the Na tional Student Association, gave a brief report of the NSA congress held last summer. Levy said he saw the congress as an ' exchange of ideas" and that U. S. students are not doing as much about world af fairs as are foreign students. YACK PICTURES THROUGH today: sophomores and uniors Basement GM 1-6 p.m. MEN: ties, dark coats, white shirts WOMEN: black sweaters Planetarium Announces Saturday Show Changes The Morehead Planetarium has announced that its scheduled 3 p.m. shows on Saturdays, October 11, 18 and 25 will be cancelled but will be replaced by a 5 p.m. show. The change in hours, is to en able football fans to see home games on those dates and to at tend the Planetarium show also. Graham Memorial oeas Social Room Facilities Must Be Adequate By ANN FRYE . Coeds will soon e able to visit in social rooms of the men's dprms on weekends. Only a few tcciinicialities remain. Adm llllStratioil annrnval r amp ipctprrln- ,.-1.,.,. Lr .!.,.-;.... Carmidiael, dean of women, ot student affairs, okayed the Trustee Group Begins Annual Visit Today Student government officers will meet with the Visiting Committee of the University Board of Trustees this afternoon from 4 to 5 o'clock. The annual fall visit of this com mittee will be all day today and through tomorrow, including the UNC-South Carolina football game. When student government offic ers meet with the committee, they will bring up such issues as: hous ing, a new student union, faculty leaves and salaries. Luncheon today a 1 p.m. in the Carolina Inn Pine Room will begin the stay of the Visiting Committee. From 2:30 to 4 this afternoon, they .meet with the University adminis trative officers. In the half hour from 5 to 5:30, individual appointments with stu- dents and faculty members will be.., .scheduled. Tomorrow me uoara win again whirl, iho uin affoH Tr;.. UiliVUl' sity Day ceremonies at South build ing. At noon they will be guests at a luncheon in Morehead building. Climaxing the week-end will be the football game between UNC and the University of South Carolina. NC Capital Punishment Is Voted Down By Phi By STAN BLACK Capital punishment in North Car olina was condemned by the Phil anthropic Literary Society in a close seven to six vote Tuesday night. Dr. W. B. Sanders, professor of criminology m the UNC. Dept of 1 Sociology, was the guest critic for me evening. KULE BY LAW? Rep. Don Jacobs introduced the you first must hate him and then bill, saying "To put a man to death take satisfaction in seeing him die. Is this rule by law or justice?" He asserted that crime has in creased, rather than decreased, un der capital punishment. VThe real reason for capital punishment is death for death's sake, without rea son or logic." TOO HARDENED Rep, Carl Matheson felt that criminals who are executed are too hardened to be rehabilitated and should be removed from society. Rep. Bill Jackson stated that hu manitarian considerations make the death penalty morally unacceptable. He felt that criminals are too short sighted for the deterrent power to have much effect. The paroling of murderers was scored by Rep, David Matthews, since it allows dangerous men to mix with the rest of society. Rep. Don Gray asked if anyone could "endorse the continued existence of a man who might have killed your cwn mother or brother." The Nathan Leopold-Richard Loeb case was cited by Rep. Bob More !y as proving that murderers such as Leopold can be rehabilitated. Rep. Ron Pruitt said that killing j is justified only in self defense or i defense of another. j TEAR-JERKER FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Jorms and Sam Magill, assistant dean Coed Visiting Agreement. Earlier this, week both the Women's Residence Council and the Inter-Dormitory Council ap proved the visiting agreement. Now at least two steps remain before coeds may visit the social rooms: each dormitory must take a vote as to whether it wants to open the social room and the phys ical facilities must.be deemed ade uate. The Coed Visiting Agreement Committee, which drew up the plans for opening social rooms, will soon distribute 1.500 copies of the agreement to boys in the dorms. VOTE NEXT WEEK A meeting to discuss the agree ment will be held in the men's dorms next week and then a vote will be taken. A special committee, the Visit ing Board, will examine the facili ties of each dorm and decided whether they are adequate for opening social rooms. Those dorms ruled to have in adequate facilities, will be aided in (bettering them. I Only three men's dorms are not suitable Tor having social rooms jfor visiting coeds, according to the j Visiting Agreement Committee. These are: Battle-Vance-Pettigrew, Old East and Old West. The following days and times have been approved for opening the social rooms to coeds: Fridays from 6 p.m. to 12 midnight; Satur days from 2 .p.m. to 12 midnight and Sundays from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m Past President Jim Tolbert called the bill a "tear-jerker," saying that "we can t create a Utopia and be Christ-like in our attitude toward murderers." : President John Brooks cast the deciding vote on the bill, passing it seven to six A ma Wit v r n i j present endorsed the bill sixteen to I nine. In his criticism and comment Dr. Sanders brought out the fact th.at in the past four years only three men have been executed in North Carolina. "One of the strongest points for abolition of the death penalty is the number of men who undoubted ly have been executed for crimes they did not commit." He added that "society is partly responsible for the crimes." The Uniform Crime Reports for 1957 established that the six states without capital punishment have substantially lower murder rates. Ron Pruitt was declared speaker of ihe evening by Critic Don Grav. INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Joan Patricia DuBosc, Kay Kd erick Procter, Carol Dorsey Wendt, Bryan Grimes, George Walker Bender, Walter Monroe Brown, John Edwin Reeves, Nel son Livingston Burton, Ray Davis Fennell; Charles Thomas Davis, David Drew Tumbull, Brinkley Kent McDaniel, Carl Cecil Hcndrickson, Jon Eric Parrish, Richard Lewis Collins, Low ranee Harlan Snyder, Frances Louise Walker, Gordon Murray Phelin. James Ray Wel borne and George Thmas Strickland,