CAR0U ROOM U.TI.C. Library Serlal3 Dopt APR 1 3 1959 THE UNIVERSITY A look back before the editor's last issue. See page 2. VOLUME LXVII, NO. 136 Complete LSI Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Srattrrrd fchowrrs and warm. Z. SS I II 11 i . 1 '. if 4. ft V 1 It Sillii V ' 1 . . - v V 1 W i 'i - I 'Vt . ! . . : ' ;. ' ' h );' -i -r r-j' l - '.X 1 'WW.'.- cc YWCA OFFICERS Seven riling senior coeds will be in charge of YWCA activities next year. The newly elected officers are as follows: (left to right) Mary Sue Hannah, treasurer; Lou Johnson, membership chairman; Julie Redhead, program chairman; Nan Rob inson, vice president; Harriette Dwelle, recording secretary; Margaret Ray executive secretary, and Sophie Martin, president. Photo by Peter Ness Kappa Alpha Fraternity Old South Ball Held In Charlotte This Week Glee Club To Present Concert Eisenhower Names Morton GOP National Chairman Hoarded KA's and "Southern inq. and Jean Ksval, whose escort' ed member, belle Are in Charlotte today for is Jasper Reynolds. The two girls' Other activities later this after- the annual Kappa Alpha South Weekend Around r0 INC KA's and thnr dates art among the f00 fra- Old , will he presented during the figure at the Old South Ball. Another feature of Old South Weekend is a Heard Contest, with trrnity hoys and dates for the KA roses judging which chapter traditional parade and secession ceremony, reception, dinner and Old South Hall. Tor the parade and secession reremony at noon today. KA's will don Confederate uniforms or other ante helium attire and the girls will he clothed in Old South dresses and hats. At the secession ceremony in front of Mecklenburg County Court House, the document of se cession will be read and then signed. The highlight of the Old South Weekend will come tonight with the Old South Ball and the crown in the province has the hest beard- noon include a reception and din per at Park Center in Charlotte. Music for the Old South Week end is being furnished by the Bill Knaiuf Orchestra and Combo, j Several other bands will also be used. In addition to the UNC chapter, KA's in Charlotte today will be representing chapters at Wake For est, N. C. State College, East Car olina College and Duke. U NC String Quartet Will Present HaydnQuartetOnTuesdayEvening The UNC String Quartet will be these groups and other orchestras. as soloist and in various chamber groups. The second violinist, Mrs. Heard, studied with Ottakar Cadek of the University of Alabama and with featured in the fifth concert of J Mrs. Alden. violist and teacher the Tuesday Evening Series in Hill, of Strings in Chapel Hill, has held Hall April 14 at 8 p.m. j first chair position in the N. C. Quartet members Edgar and Symphony and the University Dorothy Alden, Jean Heard a n d ! Symphony. With Dr .Alden she has Mischa Mischakoff at the Juilliard Marv Grav Clarke will Derf orm i periormea inrougn iorin uaronna i scnooi oi music in iew xorK cuy Haydn's Quartet in D Major, Op. 64, No. 5; Bartok's Quartet No. 6: By BEN TAYLOR The Men's Glee Club will join the Woman's College Chorus of WCUNC in presenting Villa Lobos' Mass In Honor of Saint Sebastian on two occasions Sunday, April 12, in another of their annual joint concerts. The combined chorus of some 120 voices will perform at Aycock Auditorium on the campus of WC UNC in Greensboro at 4:00 Sunday afternoon. Following the evening meal both clubs will return to Chapel Hill and perform an identi cal program in Hill Hall at 8:00 p.m. Each club will also present a number of folk and semi-classical selections as part of both pro grams. At least one joint concert by the two Consolidated University ?lee clubs is held each year and the performances are usually of well-known classical or oratio com positions. This year's selection, Mass In Honor of Saint Sebastian, was set to music by Heitor Villa Lobos and is sung a capella in three-part harmony. It is written ;n Latin and is divided into six parts: "Kyrie," "Gloria," "Credo," "Sanctus," and "Agnus Dei." The singing of Mass In Honor of Saint Sebastian by the Men's Glee Club follows on the heels of their weekend journey to Wilmington's Azalea Festival where they pro vided the basic choral background for the two-day pageant shows held on" Friday and Saturday nights, April 3 and 4. There will be no admission for either of the two Sunday concerts. Student Party Majority In Legislature Is 30-20 ing of a regional KA Rose to rep- and Quartet in A Minor, Op. 51, resent the five chapters of this No. 2 by Brahms area in the national finals. The local KA's Rose is coed Mary Bntton, who was selected earlier this year. Her escort in the pre sentation of roses at the dance will Dr. Alden, first violinist and as sistant conductor of the UNC Sym phony, teaches violin, theory and graduate courses in musicology in the UNC Music Department. Form er concert master of the N. C. be Urrv Carter of UNC. The other two UNC Kappa Al-; Symphony and of the Mozart Festi rha sponsors are Judy King, whojval Orchestra in Asheville, he has will be escorted by Henry Mann-: appeared as soloist with both of hoard are John Kerr, Floyd Am- YDC Elects Futrelle President Bob Futrelle, law student, was mons, Bob Farmer, Carol Cope elected president of the UNC Young Democrat Club this week. The two vice-presidents are Henry Smith and Paul Pulley. James Caldwell is secretary and John Barnhardt is treasurer. The members of the executive land, Dewey Sheffield, Charlie Mc Girt and Tim Smith. Meetings of the Young Demo cratic Club will be held every first and third Monday night in the month, starting April 20 in the Courtroom on the second floor of the Law School. STAFF MEETING There will be a meeting of the staff of The Daily Tar Heel at 4 p.m. Monday, according to newly elected Editor Davis B. Young. Young will take over as editor Monday. The meeting will include column ists, reporters, feature writers, business, and sports. Young has en couraged any students interested in writing for the paper to be present at this time. The Student Legislature will meet next Thursday night to be gin its 27th session with 30 Stu dent Party representatives and 20 from the University Party. David Grigg, vice-president of the student body, will assume his new duties as the Speaker of the Legislature. In the campus elections held last Tuesday, SP won 17 of the Legislature seats open, while UP copped 15. All six months seats have become year seats due to the referendum for a single annual spring Legislature election approv ed by the student body Tuesday. In Dorm Men's I, Swag Grimsley (SP) easily captured the one seat open with 175 votes as compared with David Rubenstein's (UP) 48. Taylor McMillan (SP) is the other new representative from DM I. His UP opponent, Bill Craig, was disqualified. McMillan received 154 votes, while Craig came through with 66. Legislator from DM II is Bill Norton, who won over Allen Simp son (UP) with 244 votes. Simpson received 131. Victors for the year seats in DM HI were Dan Brown (SF) 155, and Roy Goodman (SP) 175. They won over Phil Edwards (Ind.) 153; Ron Millican (UP) 99, and Vincent Mu- lieri (UP) 140. Pope Shuford (UP) and Bob Smith (SP) copped the two six months seats, which are now one year, in that district with 202 and 283 votes, respectively. Gary Arzt (SP) received 184. Ed Cox (SP), 217, and Bill Lamm (SF), 157, won the two-year seats in DM IV. Also running were Bill Bates (UP), 115, and Ward Purrington (UP), 96. In DM V, Charles Carroll (SP) bested Carl Ragsdale (UP) with 112 votes to Ragsdale's 84. Sherman Kennedy (SP), 262 votes, and Bob Thompson (SP), 242 votes, beat UP candidates Al Cron- enburg, 100, and Darden Eure 114, for the two seats in DM VI. UP dominated the Town Men's districts by gaining 10 of the 1L seats open in those districts. Fred Lavery and Rick Over street, both UP, ran uncontested in TM I. Lavery had 155 votes and Overstreet 143. In TM II, Peyton Hawes, 398, and Jack Lawing, 406, also both UP. won over Roy H. Park, Jr., (Ind.) 67, for the two scats open in that district. Gordon Street, Frank Eagles and Al Walters, all UP, are the three representatives from TM III, receiv ing 108, 107 and 93 votes, respect ively. SP candidates were Barry Zaslav, 73, Stan Black, 65, anc' Frank Elkins, 53. For the six months seat, now one year, in this district Neal Boder (UP) beat Bob Ney (SP) by 107 to 83. The eight seats in TM EV, for which there were only eight candi dates, went to Jim Blue (SP), 99: Don Dotson (SP), 81; John Lyon (UP), 73; Bill Mallory (SP), 86; Bob Pierce (SP), 86; Billy Woodard (SP), 90; Bill Young UP), 82, and Hugh Ragsdale (UP), 87. The University Party carried three of the four seats open in the women's districts Linda Biser (SP) copped the seat in DW I over Anne Terry by 176 to 128. In DW II, Nancy Baker (UP), 16.', votes, bested Betty Jean Baxter (SP), 151 votes. Maxine Greenfield and Dixie Jackson, both UP, were uncontest ed in Town Women with 113 and 119 votes, respectively. Striker-Police Incident Clarified lly RON SHI MATE (The following U the firth in a M-rlr on the Henderson strike compiled by Ron Shumate, Mary Allrr Kowlette. and Peter NcsO "Officers said there was no dis turbance ;it the 'police station " This b an excerpt from a .state r w.spaper. The statement concerns ,.n incident thit occurred Thursday r Henderson after two "lady" strik er were arrested following an al- irM rock -thro lng incident. The women, a 42-ycar old woman rd her 20-year old daughter, were i nested during an otherwise calm ,t tt rnofin of picketing. The .strikers appeared at the Hen- d-rson police station shortly after tie arrests were made. Apparently t'" won! spread quickly through the rn!l area. Six women -and one little girl wre the first to arrive at the sta t " n , a red brick building that 1ii,i s. in addition to the police sta t.'in. various municipal offices of tl'e city and county. M ile strikers arrived later, but still Mt mast of the harrassment r the officers to the "ladies." The r n asked the women which troop- r h.td arrested the two women. They pointed the trooper out to the men .strikers. One man corn rented that he had "gotten the li rrpse number of the patrol car." Soon, someone accused the troop er of "grabbing her by her breast." (nhers soon took up the cry, and the hall way was filled with vile, vulgar language. The women were, to use an old expression, "mad as wet hens." They curs(d, harrassed law enforce rr.rnt officers and just generally created a disturbance. A Henderson policeman, after sev cral minutes of the noisy ihow, told tri" women they could stay in the station "as long as they were re spectable." "We're respectable," one said. "I ain't spoke," another said. "We're ladies," another reported. But they went outside. The darkened hall-way of the po lar .station was filled with raucous voices uttering such statements as: "Some gentlemen," (Speaking of thr troopers who had made the ar rets). The little girl, who was about eight years old. shook her fist in the f.ce of one of the policemen and sid. "Manhandler." The policeman turned around and said, "Isn't it a shame for a little girl this young to be here in the midst of all this." The women asked each Which one did it?" "That one right there," another said. "He's scared to death." other, .crowd of about 75 created quite a disturbance while there, though only through verbal means. A rather large-size woman was walking around showing everyone who would look, a large tear in the side of her dress. She claimed a trooper had grabbed her and torn her dress. "He's going to buy me a new dress," .she declared. "In fact, Gov. I Hodges is going to buy me a new dress." She needed a new dress. After the confusion and commo tion died down, the strikers gathered en masse in front of the station. The They yelled at a photographer from the Daily Tar Heel. He was across the .street from the station, when several strikers began to yell at him: "Put that camera down," "You won't have it much longer if you don't put it in your pocket," "Don't take any pictures around here,' and "Go home!" The photographer went home. The scene on the picket line was much the same as in the past.' The strikers heckled the 289 workers who came out of the South Henderson (See HENDERSON page 3) U. N. Model Assembly Will Elect Officers - I -iV , ' . .' k - v The third plenary session, elec- tion of CCUN officers and a United Nations movie will be included to day as the final day of the U. N. Model Assembly. The plenary session will be in Gerrard Hall from 9 a.m. through I p.m. There will be a 15-minute coffee break at 10:45 a.m. Lunch is scheduled at 1 p.m. and it will be followed by election of CCUN officers in Gerrard Hall. The U. N. movie will be in Carroll Hall after the elections. Cynthia Grant, Model Assembly chairman, released the names of UNC students aiding with the as sembly. They are as follows: Bruce Beveridge, Belinda Foy, L;.z Howell, Judy King, Joanne Bcker, Jack Doeg, Kathryn Fox, Salley Lewis, Thelma Howell, Nancy Smathers and Joyce Farris. Molly Wiley, Jayne Gardner, Mar garet Ray, Kathy Ross, Ann Hols wade, Ed Levy, Joe Oppenheimer. Vince Mulieri, Jack Carter, Edith Dalton, Melissa Osborne and Sipra Bose. Ann McRorie, Nola Hatten, Roger Foushee, Jose Lopez, Nell Wiggins, Jo Ann Gibson, Ann Ballanger, Gin- ny Aldige, Betsy May, Curtis Gans, Kathleen Samsot and Pete Marks. Bob Silliman, Rudy Paquette, John Brooks, Gary Greer and Rosemary Roberts. CORRECTION The results of the election for Men's Honor Council were incor rectly reported in Friday's Daily Tar Heel. The three new members of the Council are George Campbell, who received 1,193 votes, Bill Crutchfield, 1,418 votes, and Jim Thompson, 1,100 votes. The number of write-in votes which Henry Snow received for editor of The Daily Tar Heel was 540. Davis Young, the new edi- AUGUSTA, Ga. tin Sen. Thurs ton Morton of Kentucky was of ficially tapped by President Eisen hower today lo be the new Repub lican national chairman. Tradition assures Morton the job. The President's choice no sur prise was announced by the chief of a 10-member delegation of GOP leaders after they had met for about two hours with the vacation ing Eisenhower at the Augusta Na tional Golf Club. The delegation then flew back to Washington to report to the full Republican National Commit tee. That unit will vote there to morrow on a successor to retiring Meade Alcorn, and there is no doubt Morton will be installed. After today's session at the golf club, Ray C. Bliss, Ohio's GOP chairman, told a sidewalk news conference that Eisenhower had "indicated he would be pleased if the (Republican National) Com mittee elected Sen. Thurston Mor ton as our new national chairman.'' The fact that Morton, 51-year-old first termer in the Senate, was Eisenhower's preference has been widely known since shortly after Alcorn announced his resignation to return to his Connecticut law practice. But custom is for the national committee to go through the for mality of sending a delegation to get the President's views on rec ord. Morton, who served in the House for three terms starting in 1947, has announced he would not give up his Senate scat as chairman. That declaration brought objec 'iens from some GOP quarters that the chairmanship ought to go to a man who could devote full time to the job of rebuilding the party. But Eisenhower stood fast and 'nsisted on Morton. Asked whether there was any talk at today's' conference on strengthening the party in the wake of defeat of many Republi cans at the polls last November, Bliss "I can't believe there would pressed pleasure over the work of rebuilding" already started by Alcorn. And after the meeting newsmen overheard the President telling Bliss "I can't' believe there would be anything better than rebuild ing all around." Alcorn several weeks ago named a committee to reassess party ob jectives and to draft a new state ment of GOP principles. That hap pened shortly after some Republi cans in Congress had proposed that tor, received 2.350 votes. The total Eisenhower take a more active role number of write-in votes was ov-in GOP politics; and state the par er 600. ty's objectives. G. M. SLATE n VI it- ' V h i i PICKET LINE . . taunts, threats, and jeers Activities scheduled In Graham Memorial today include: GMAB, 1:30-3 p.m., Grail Room; Women's Handbook staff, 2-3 p.m. Roland Parker I; I.F.C., 3-4 p.m., Grail Room; Campus Christian Council, 4-5 p.m., Woodhouse Con ference Room; Dance, 8-12 p.m.. Rendezvous Room; U. N. Tea, 9-11 p.m., Main Lounge; U. N. Com mittee of YMCA, 9-11 p.m., Roland Parker I & II. Only one activity is scheduled to day in Graham Memorial: Elec tions Board, all day, Roland Park er ni. ; . - ; 4 Mi r i - - t , - w' -s V'1 A 7 5 i x f GERMAN'S CONCERT The Four Freshmen will be presented in concert this afternoon in Memorial Hall from 3-5 p.m. They are sponsored by the Germans Club as part of the Spring Germans Week end which started last night with a dance in Woollen Gym, Stan Kenton, who performed at the dance, will appear with the Freshmen at the concert.

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