O o i n k i T ri . h g e D H o i w I n I 1 ft-.'? -1(1 1 mmm VOL. 1, Hester. 2,677 Enrolled Here The enrollment for the second Summer Session slightly exceed ed pre-registration estimates' as Dr. A. K. King, director of Summer Sessions, announced official enrollment figures at 2,677. Previously, Dr. King estimated Second Session enrollment at approximately 2,600 or three-fourths of the number that attended summer school here during the first session. At total of 3,513 attended during the first summer session and three-fourths of that number would, be 2,659 or just 18 short of King's estimate. "This summer's second session attendance is slightly off last year's figures for the same- period but not noticably. I anticipate another successful summer sessions year and hope things run smoothly." In all,, a total of 6,190 students enrolled during one or Dotn oi the summer sessions in the oldest summer school in the country. These figures compare favorably with the enrollment of recent years. Patterson Names 18 To Fill Vacant Slots Student, government for the second session moved into gear last Thursday as Hank Patter son, acting president of the stu dent body appointed 18 students to summer student givernment positions. - Two bills, one changing the ' closing time of the polls Wed-' neaday to 2 p in., ' were passed under special orders. Dewey Sheffied introduced the bills. ' The appointments were as fol lows: Student Government Board: Bob Thompson. Tor Efird; Moyer Smith, secretary treasurer of the student body; Men's Honor Council: John Min ter, chairman Joel Fleishman. Troy Blanton, Harvey Wilkin son, Bob Bingham; Women's Honor Council: So phie Martin; Attorney General; Roy Goodman, with Jean Suth erland and Frank Elflond to serve as his staff. Other, appointments were Dewey Sheffield, Chairman of the Elections Board and Jerry ; 4 if tr r. V I, ' Li Congress shall make no laws abridging the freedom NO. 8 ase Fisher, Registrar of the Elec tions Board. Marvin Taylor will serve as Chairman of the Finance Com mittee; Don Dotson and Tom Efird were also named to this committee. Bob .Thompson was appointed . to the Ways and Means Com mittee. According to Patterson, the regular meeting of the Student Government Board will be each Tuesday at 4 p.m. A special meeting will be held Thursday, July 23, at 4 p.m. E Your Churn To Flick Out Thursday, July 23, 7-8 p.m. Free ice cream party on the lawn in front of Carroll Hall. A free flick, "Nothing Sacred" starring Carole Lombard and Frederic March, will follow the party. Music for the party will be furnished by Kemp's Record Shop. Thursday, July 23, 4:30 p.m. Meeting of the Student Activities Coun- f m - w j cil in Roland Parker Lounge III in Graham Memorial. At this meeting plans will be formulated for the remainder of summer school. Anyone interested in working on this council has been jrged to attend. r CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, Fat E Referendum: Officials Clear It; Urge Vote Two statements, both coming from high student government officials, were made Monday urging students to vote in Wed nesday's referendum and also explaining its details. Voting on the referendum, which is to decide whether juries will be used at men' and women's honor council trials during the summer session as in the regular terms, may be done in Y Court between the 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. when the polls will close. Hank Patterson, acting presi dent of the student body, and Moyer Smith, acting student body secretary-treasurer, made a joint statement. Their statement Is as follows: "When the Summer School Student Government Board passed the bill, which is gov erning procedures in Honor Council trials this summer, it was the general feeling of the members of the Board that eli mination of a jury in Summer School Honor Council trials would insure justice in summer Council proceedings. The duties' which would ordinarily be vested in the jury subsequently were given to the Honor Council. "In order that justice would further be insured, a unanimous $ OFFICIALS, P9 7) : y" wpwi Bpwiy cz ( C: of the Press" ... ... WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 asr i ensions Move Would Require Red China UN Seat A re-evaluation of American foreign policies especial ly the blocking of Red China from United Nations mem besrhip was called for by Brig. Gen. Hugh B. Hester, U. S. Army (ret.) in an address Monday night. "A third world war is almost inevitable in the Far East unless tensions are reduced soon," Gen. Hester said. UN mediation is the "only possible way to break the present impasse, and even tnis is unlikely to succeed unless and un til Red China is admitted to the . . , . "Exclusion has always proved intolerable to those against whom it was exercised, and China is no exception to this," he added. Gen. Hester, a native of Gran ville County and a 1916 graduate of UNC, served -more than 34 years' active doty in the U. S. Army. Since 1951 he has been studying advanced international relations at the University of Pennsylvania, while writing ex tensively and lecturing in this field. Speaking under YMCA-YWCA sponsorship, Gen. Hester present- ed "A Program for Survival." "For the first time in history man has the power to destroy the human specie." he said. "Our survival and avoidance of a third world war depends on the estab lishment of world law, a world court to interpret those laws and a peace force to apply those in terpretations." Disengagement of great power military forces was listed by Gen. U. S. Constitution EIGHT PAGES Hester as the first step toward successful negotiation of crucial citnatinne f hrrMicrhfMlt the world. ' o This should start in Europe, he ianv in fiermanv ' . The Berlin crisis is danger ous," he said "but the real prob lem is German unification and it should be faced up to before it explodes into war. But Ger many cannot be unified inside any great power alliance sys tem." Turning to Middle Eastern prob lems, he said that it is "complete ly irrational to expect the Arabs and Israeli to settle their disputes sn king as each can day off one great power against the other in hfster. Paee 5) UNC News Needs Staffers If the rigours of college life are getting you down and even your college paper isn't offering enough of the type of student and Univer sity activities you like to read about, there's always one re course left. Don't drown your troubles, but join the hub-hub scrambling around in the office of the UNC News. (Mainly the hub-hub is caused by the rattling sound the few staffers now around make a they rattle in that room on second Hoot. GM Don't attempt to beat the heat ignore it in the hard work you're forced to do under that whip cracking editor.