tULC. Library Serials Dept. JLpx C70 0 JA)S flnal HfH ?T f WEATHER r rZY TRUMAN The former president lacked the candor he sometimes has shown. See page 2. Increasing ctoudintss and con tlnutd cold. VOLUME LXVI NO. 61 Complete iS) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1958 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE fv, off .' y UNC Gets $146,620 For Education The National Science Foundation lias awarded grants totaling $146,620 to UNC to conduct 1959 summer in stitutes for high school teachers of mathematics and science and for college chemistry teachers. Chancellor William B. Aycock an nounced the grants for the pro grams, which are conducted by the University Institute of Natural Science. Eighty teachers will be selected fcr the third annual math-science Institute, scheduled for June 8 through July 17, and made possible by an $33,050 grant. Co-directors v ill be Prof. V. A. Greulach of the Tetany Department and Prof. E. A. Cameron of the Mathematics De partment. A grant of $52,800 has been given to conduct for the second time at UNC the Summer Institute for Jun ior College and College Teachers of ( Ministry, also on June 8-July 17. Directing it will be Prof. II. 1). Crock ford and Kenan Prof. Arthur Hoe, chairman of the Chemistry De partment. Another special grant of $10,770 l.sr been given by the National Sci- nee Foundation to enable 40 parti cipants In the 1939 or the two pre ious math -science summer insti tutes to take additional academic work during the second half of the UNC summer session. These three grants bring to a to- tal of 99.820 the funds which the as well as a pcet he is working National Science Foundation has on his master's degree in music awarded to the University during the at UNC. past to years for summer and aca- pcrd has assembled one of the drmic-yecr institutes, (world's wierdest assortments of Dr. Crockford and Dr. Greulach sound effects. He's got them all were In Washington. D. C. this week in formation and in rhythm, for a planning conference attended' Hcre are some of tne SOUnds: cy representatives or tne various . NSF-ponsored summer institutes. Approximately 50 chemistry teach eis from Junior and senior colleges v ill be selected to attend the college , tric razor, diabolical laughs, wo teachers Institute. A similar pro- men's screams. cofbell. -snare tram was held at UNC in 18S7, di- drums, duck calls, timpani, whist-' tected by Dr. S. Young Tyree Jr., les, cap pistol, castenets, maracas, prolessor In tho Chemhtry Depart- piano, triangles, gong, glocken meot. J spiel. School Integration Crisis Costing U. S. Dearly Abroad By ED GOODMAN The southern school Integration crisis has cost America dearly in It. propaganda battle with the Reds. This was the opinion expressed by Alan Costa, of Recife, Brazil, a graduate student at Carolina. "Orval Faubus has done more for Communism outside this coun try," he said, "than Lenin and Stalin' All over the world, he said, the Communists are displaying a pic ture of a negro girl being guarded by troops as she passes Jeering whites on her way to school. Along with the picture goes the caption, "If Americans do this to Americans, what will they do to us?" Everyone In foreign countries has Ms eyes on the American integra tion problem, Costa said. They still realize the United States is a demo cracy, he maintained, but they re tard thl3 situation as undemocra tic "They understand America's problem, but don't agree with the way it was handled." In Rrazil, Costa said, there is no such problem. White and negroes Intermarry there frequently. "Bra zilians think marriage Is a conse quence of love," he said, "not a consequence of the skin." But despite Its recent loss of pres- G. M. SLATE Activities for Graham Memorial today Include: Petite Musicale, f p.m.. Main Loonse; Friends, 11-12:30 p.m., Williams-Wolfe; Cosm. Club, 11:30 11:30 p.m., Roland Parker 1 and 2; Ct'SC, 3 p.m., Roland Parker 2; Weslmlrvster Fellowship, 9:43-11 n.nv, Rindezvous. Artlvltiea for Graham Memorial Monday include: Elections Roard, 2-5 p.m., Grail; .Student Party, 7-9 p.m. Roland Parker 1 and 2; Audit Board, 2-4 p.m. Woodhoue Conference Room; Italr Com., 4-3 p.m., Woodhouse C'dnffrem Room; Bridge, 7-11 p.m.. Rendezvous Room; KKG, 7 9 p.m., 203 Alumni. hi; i! 0 ', PETER I i c c I Long-Haired Spike Jones, hays In What Henry Ford did for the an-. tomobile business Peter Ford is trying to do for music.' Pete Ford is a long-haired Spike Jones. His music is serious. A graduate of Yale and a prac tioner on percussion instruments Ia hreakinz. a bottle beini thrown into a garbage can, grease fryin in fat. alarm clock, the twang of an arrow into a bucket, an elec- Hi . A y ALAN COSTA . . . Faubus Aids Communism tige, the United States is still "ap predated'' by Brazilians, he said Much of this, he maintained, is due to the two nations' common opposi tion to Russia. In Brazil, the Com munist party is also outlawed. Costa said Brazil also feels close 'o the United States because of its location in the Western Hemisphere "Citizens of the United States call themselves 'Americans,' " he said. "but all of us call ourselves 'Amer icans.' We feel a conciousness of be ing together as Americans." Among important factors causing this conciousness, Costa said, was the Monroe Doctrine. Brazil con siders this document so great, he said, that its Senate building is called "Monroe Palace." Asked if America's assertion of leadership in Western affairs had caused resentment in Brazil, Costa replied that "we agree America is the leader of the Western Hemis phcre, but the leader doesn't have to do all the work." Questioned concerning which way this country might best Improve its prestige, he said that "a better way of achieving understanding would be the use of more student exchang and similar programs, rather than by foreign aid." FORD Petite Musicale Some of Ford's music accompan- ics p.ietry by e. e. cummings. Ot- jher is Shakespearean. Some of it is written by Ford himself. At a Petite Musical concert at Graham Memorial ai 8 p.m. to day, Ford will present his version of Fugue in D by Johann Sebastian Bach, "transmuted for percussion." Fashioned after the New York Percussion Ensemble which plays Bach, Ford will use the cowbell, cymbals, snare drums, timpani and both bird and police whistles. "Four Poems from '(!)' " is the title of the next series of presenta tions, with the audience furnish ing poems to read while the music is being played. - Ford and his group also will play Fusion Number Four" which will be followed by a curtain talk, The New Esthetic" by the com poser and conductor. Ford is a native of Meriden, Connecticut, received his bachelor of music degree at Yale Univer sity in 1954, and his master of music degree at Converse College in Spartanburg, S. C. He has taught at Brevard College and is present- y studying in the University to ward his M. A. degree in music. Ford believes he has achieved something here which may be sim ilar to but is by no means identi cal with anything that has ever been done before in the art of mu sic. Student Party To Elect Chairman, Other Officers A new chairman for Student Par ty will be elected, along with other party officers, at a meeting Mon day at 7 p.m. in Roland Parker I and II. The meeing is being held at 7 p.m., Party Chairman Leon lioit said, so that members may attend the basketball game at 8 p.m. In addition to a new chairman, these officers will be elected: vice chairman, secretary, file clerk, ser geant at arms and three members to the advisory board. The new officers will hold their posi tions until after the spring elections Zeta Beta Tau Fire Causes No Damage No damage occurred in yester day's fire at the Zeta Beta Tau house, according to Ed Levy, house president. Chapel Hill firemen extinguished the blaze which occurred in the gar bage disposal area about 7:50 p.m. Mike Fleischer reportedly suf fered minor hand burns when he attempted to put out the blaze with a fire extinguisher. , According to the fire department the blaze might have originated from either ashes or a cigarette left in a trash can. . IN ATLANTA BOMBING TRIAL Bright Takes In Acquittal Attempt ATLANTA W George Allen Bright began talking for his free dom yesterday to a Fulton superior court Jury trying him for the Oct. 12 dynamiting of the tlanta Jew ish temple, and he was prepared to go pn for three days if his at torneys so advise. The charge against him is a capi tal offense, and he was talking to an all-male Jury qualified to return a death penalty verdict as he made an unsworn statement as author ized by Georgia law. He declared the charge against him is completely false and that he is being persecuted for "my politi cal and segregation beliefs, my un divided loyalty to my country and for my Christian beliefs." Bright is the first of five persons accused in the temple dynamiting to be placed on trial, and he took the stand shortly after the sixth day of the trial got under way. Georgia law permits a defendant to make an unsworn statement to the Jury and he cannot be cross-examined. Wide latitude is permitted. particularly in capital cases, and so long as the defendant speaks to his own defense and does not go off on too much of a tangent, there is no limit on the time he may speak. No records were available as to the longest such statement made, but Solicitor General Paul Webb said that in a case here some years ago a defendant used eight hours in making his unsworn statement. Defense attorneys James Venable and Essley Burdine said Bright is prepared to talk as long as they advise maybe three days and would confine his remarks to the evidence and documents and logi cal deductions to be made from them. The balding, bespectacled 31-year- old bachelor, a mechanical engineer, launched his statement by outlining his family background. He said he is descended "from the Brights of Pennsylvania who settled there un der William Penn" and is a native of Kingsport, Tenn. He said he has many southern connections that his mother came from South Carolina Home Church, Campus Tied By Baptist Student Union By LARRY ENLEY "The role of the Baptist Student Union is that of a tie between the home church and the campus," said James O. Cansler, BSU direc- or for Carolina students. The BSU, as similar organiza ions for other denominations, has a well organized program of week- y activities to encourage students to participate in some phase of BSU and, of course, to become a member of one of the local Bap tist churches. In commenting on the broad pur pose of the BSU, Cansler said re cently that the Baptist Student Union's two-fold function is to con front students with Jesus Christ as Saviour and Lord and to en courage and facilitate their grow th in an emotional and intellecual committment to Christ. Cansler said the BSU is a stu dent Christian organization with a Baptist orientation and sponsor ship. It is a mission work of the Baptist . denomination among col lege students in the South, but he believes it should be classified as in educational work. The student. with whom the BSU works, is al ready committed to the Baptist faith when he arrives on the camp as, Cansler said. The BSU's regular weekly pro gram consists of worship, study, service and recreation. The BSU sponsors noon-day meditation at Gerrard Hall five lays a week. On Tuesday after noon at 5:30 there is a vesper ser vice at the Student Center. The lunday evening service at the Uni- ersity Baptist Church is conduct id by the BSU students. This ser nee was started about three years igo, Cansler said, to fill the need if an evening worship service. A study program is manifested hrough the Sunday school of the 'Jniversity Baptist Church and the Olin Binkley Memorial Church. The i iupper ' Forum, which takes the Stand and that his great grandfather was hanged by the union army in the Civil War. He attended Virginia Polytechnic Institute, University of Georgia and North Carolina State college and has an engineering degree. j A ' "V, X MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Shown is a portion of the world famed Melachrino Orchestra which will perform here Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Specializing in 'relaxed rrusic', the group's program Tuesday evening will consist of novelty numbers, popular music and semi-classical. Tuesday Melachrino Concert Will Feature Two Soloists Two soloists will be featured whpn Georee Melachrino and his Orchestra perform here Tuesday at 8 p m in Memorial Hall. ' Herman Arminski, pianist, will play a "starlight fantasy," includ ing music by Chopin and Rachman inoff, and the Warsaw Concerto . i Two unidentified selections will be rendered by Walter Pfeil, harpist with the Melachrino Orchestra. . Tuesday's concert is being spon sored free to all students by the Studnt Entertainment Committers of the Graham Memorial Activities Board. Tickets for student wives are $1, and tickets for townspeople will be available for $2 after 7:45 p.m. Tuesday. place of Training Union, is the activity that draws the 1 largest number of students. During the week small groups meet regularly to study specific subjects of Bible, theology, Bap tist doctrine, social problems and courtship and marriage. Cansler said the weekly study groups meet or one hour a week. Some of the studies may last the whole year, but the average is about four weeks. Cansler described the BSU also as a service organization through which the student attempts to put into practice what he learns in a "laboratory of experience. He emphasized the work that the BSU is doing with youthful iirst offenders from county prisons at the Umstead Youth Center. These orisoners are brought to the cen ter for rehabilitative work, anr given the opportunity of learning a trade. A Sunday afternoon wor shiD service is held at the center and once a month "youthful of fenders" are invited to the Supper Forum. The BSU often plays basketball game with them. Other students, he said, teach Sunday school at McDuffy Baptist Church and at Gravely Sanitorium Some students serve as choir di rector and pianists at ether churches. Cansler remarked that each year the students plan several projects The projects may be to give Bible to each one of the boys at the Umstead Youth Center, or it may be a work activity. The work activity for a needy family in the community may consist of painting the house, house cleaning or clean ing up the yard. "Recreation is a problem on a campus like Carolina. You can not dan a social without it conflict ing with something else. You can get more people for a work activi ty than you can for a social, Can sler said, emphasizing such pro jects. Moraan: McG Here For y F.o 'Rights Discussions Run Through Tuesday n ":r:. .- A k it fcijrv'f Si The Orchestra, in addition to the solo pieces, will present the follow ing program: "Italian fantasy" with such music I as Santa Lucia, Catari! Catari!; Autumn Leaves, a Strauss waltz, Lisbon at Twilight, selections from South Pacific and My Fair Lady; Oranges and Lemons, London Bridge (written by George Mela chrino); a musical switch of well known ballet melodies, Colorado River, San Francisco, Greensleeves and a fantasy of Tchaikowsky melo dies. The world famed British music group was formed after World War I by George Melachrino. From the beginning, the orchestra included a epertoire of novelty numbers, pop- ular music and .'semi-classics. It f j -4 Carolina's 'Golden Girl' Career By RON SHUMATE Carolina's own version of Pur- rue's "Golden Girl" started her ba ton-twirling cartr holding a bor rowed baton upside down. Faye Gooch, who has been Miss Just-About-Every thing, entered her school's first majorette contest "as a joke" when she was in the ninth grade. Some friends dared her to enter the contest because she was, at that time, head cheerleader. She took the dare, fortunately, and was the first majorette select ed. Since then she has won 28 tro phies, 30 medals, and numerous titles. She was Miss Majorette of N. C. C57-'58), Miss Majorette of Dixie ('58), first runner-up to Miss "Majorette of America ('58), Miss Majorette of America (September 1957), Majorette Queen of Ameri ca May 1958) and N. C. State Twirling and Strutting. Champion C57-58). Presently she is a candidate for America's most beautiful major ette and for Miss Majorette of 1959. Miss Gooch said her biggest thrill in her baton-twirling was be ing first runner-up to Miss Major ette of America. "There were so -nany girls to compete with," she said. The girls were first screened 'hrough their pictures by a Holly wood producer. Later they had to nerform with their batons. "The biggest surprise," she said, "was having to' do show routines." Her talents aren't confined to strutting and twirling, however. e has won numerous beauty con tests, including Miss Press Photo grapher, Miss Durham in the Az alea Festival and Miss Dollar Day. he was also Miss Personality, ISA in 1957. Miss Gooch began her majorette carrer as co-heacl majorette in the Two outstanding national figures are on campus today for the begin ning of a series of discussions on "Human Rights in a World of Ten sion." ABC commentator Edward P. Morgan and civil rights attorney Williams L. McGovern will be speak ing for the annual forum of the Y's Public Affairs Committee. The speeches start today and con tinue through Tuesday. Today at 6:15 Morgan will address j the Westminster Fellowship of the Presbyterian Church. At 6:30 p.m. today McGovern will f;peak to the Canterbury Club of the Episcopal Church. The public may attend these sessions. Monday's schedule for the pair includes classroom visits and a ma jor discussion Monday , night. . .Monday, at 8 p.m. in the Library Assembly Room, the two men will be concerned with . "Domestic Is sues and Their Influence on U. S. Foreign Policy." Human rights will be treated as a feature of domestic issue in this discussion. ' After visiting various classrooms from 9 to 12 noon, Morgan will; speak, at a Radio-TV School lunch-1 , : eon at 12:30 Monday and McGovern ! will speak at a luncheon in the Rath skeller. . , Again Tuesday the men will be visiting classrooms from 9 to 12 noon: At 1 p.m. Morgan will speak at a public luncheon at the Rath skeller. Both speakers will attend a YM-YWCA dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m. and speak on "Human Rights A Challenge to the Cam pus." A partner of Arnold, Fortas and Porter law firm, McGovern is well known for his defense of cases in volving civil liberties. Morgan is vice president of the Radio-Television Correspondents As- sociation. His broadcast is heard Monday through Friday at 7 n.m. With Borrowed Baton if '.-r-:' r-. 1 1 L t . FAYE GOOCH , ... 'golden girl' ninth grade. When she was a jun ior she was the co-head majorette of. the senior group, and was head majorette ' when she was a senior. ver n rum UNC Cagers Get Real Test Hera Monday By RUSTY HAMMOND Carolina's basketball Tar Heels, with one victory safely tucked away, meet their first real test of the sea son here Monday night when they take on the Virginia Cavaliers at 8 o'clock in Woollen Gym. Carolina's record now stands at 1-0, having beaten Clemson 83-67 in the season opener last week. Tho Tar Heels were impressive in the second half against a fine Tiger five which beat Duke Friday night. Virginia sorts a 1-1 season slate. The Cavaliers opened with an 85-74 win over William & Mary, but were turned back &5-T3 by Virginia Tech. HAVE HOT SOPH One of the brighter spots in this year's Virginia lineup has been hot shot sophomore forward Jay Mc Kenzie. McKenzie tallied 26 against the Indians and 17 against the Gooblers, earning him high scoring honors both nights. ATTACK WELL-BALANCED The Cavaliers feature an experi enced, well-balanced attack which I figures to hold its own without help from the sorhs. ITprh Ruch nf ton. ... mT, . T , . tr- BlJ Metzger and John Siewers at guards, and Paul Adkins and John Haner at forwards are all back from last year. KEPLEY WAS SURPRISE Carolina, after cooling off Gem son's red-hct first half shooting average, put on their own show in totally outclassing the game Tigers. Dick Kepley proved the biggest sur prise, of the young season. by pour ing in 24 points and leading in re bounds. The Carolina starting lineup will probably feature the same five who rolled up the big margin over Clem scn. Harvey Salz and York Larese at guards, Kepley at center, and Doug Moe and Lee Shaffer at for- wards will rrobablv ert th ctarf ino n3n fmm nnn tc: J C ' vvuvu JL & QUA. iltJUiI C Started Miss Gooch's "hottest" number. t and the most embarrassing iv-x- ;n -.0y WW lit the finals of the Miss Majorette cf Dixie contest. She was twirling two flaming batons and jumping a - fire rope all at the same time, and as she came out from under the rope here hair caught fire. A friendly South Carolina policeman i played Sir Galahad and put the fire out. In addition to her own twirling j she teaches others. One of her pu I pils, a 12-year-old girl, has won j nine trophies and eight medals since last Christmas. Miss Gooch's only formal twi-l-in? schoolins was two weeks at a West Virginia summer camp in l 1954, and about two years in a school in Poanoke Ranids. N. C. i She also had special instructions I frTn the ead maiorette in Coral i Gables. Florida, prior to the na- tioral maiorette contest. Currently she is maioring in physical therapy but is thinking of chanoin? to an art major. These lovers of blonde beauties may be interested to know she may appear in a TV series m G-eer sboo this summer. She also pi?ns to start teaching again this summer. t Mavbe her "struttin' " 'hadn't I enr-eai arror.s the country. h"t she's still Carolina's "Golden Girl." INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Doris Biackwell Braxton, Mary Moore Pulliin, Charlie Howard Brown, Ivan Vick WH, Laurence David Warlick Jr., Edward Neal River, Sidney George Sowers, Har old Franklin Lusk, John Chalmers Eagle, Marjorie Rawis Moore and Margaret Kennington Edison,