WEATHER Inrrmsing cloudiness, somewhat warmer with occasional rain like ly by tonight. Iliich in 60s. STflu & HHi si if flu- VOLUME LXVNI, NO. 56 Complete vr, Wire Service I 1 fa Kfei3 1 iii I III VJ 'Campus Briefs' ,ot Here's Exam Schedule, But Don't Bite Finger Nails Yet Okay. f(lks. hero it is! Start biting your finger nails! H action of the faculty, the time of an examination may be changed after it has been fixed in the schedule. All permits to lake examinations to remove grades of "Exc. Abs." or "Cond." must be secured from the Central Office of Records prior to the exam. No .students may be excused from a scheduled examina tion except by the infirmary, in case of illness, or by his General College adviser or by his dean, in case of any other emergency com pelling his absence. 10:00 a.m. classes on TThS. Tues. Jn. 19, 8:30 a.m. 1:00 p.m. classes on MWF, Phrm. 10, P&ych 26 Tues. Jan. 19. 2:00 p.m. ll(,,it m classes on MWF Wed. Jan. 20. 8:30 a.m. l! 0O pm. classes on TThS. pharm Kc. RA 130 Wed. Jan. 20. 2:00 p.n 3 00 pm. classes. Chcm. U. I'harm. Chem. 61, MA 71. 72. 'Pol. Sci. 41. and all classes not otherwise provided for in this schedule . Thurs. Jan. 21. 8:30 a m 8 00 a m classes on TThS Thurs. Jan. 21, 2:00 pm 12:00 noon classes on MWF Fri. Jan. 22, 8:30 a.m. 2.00 pm. classes on MWF, Chem. 43, 'Pharm. 15 Econ. 31. 32. 61 Fri. Jan. 22. 2:00 p.m. j 12 00 noon classes on TThS. all Naval Science and ! CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROUNC-SUWy 67 years of dedicated service to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, whose motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community.' n " urn mihi .i. i... n - I C - fi 1 1 vr .p;-; mm- if iii ft i x4- x. it - 'K I ? S. i. 1 - . . Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUB Sat. Jan. 23. 8.30 a.m. Sat. Jan. 23, 2:00 p.m. Mon. Jan. 25, 8:30 a.m. Mon. Jan. 25. 2.00 p.m. Tue. Jan. 26, 8:30 a.m. Toe$. Jan. 26, 2:00 p.m. 2, 3. 3x Wed. Jan. 27. 8:30 a.m. W'ed. Jan. 27. 2:00 n in r Air Science 9 00 a m classes on MWF 1-00 pm. classes on TThS. Fcon. 81, M'hysics 24 9 00 am. classes on TThS 8:00 a.m. classes on MWF 10:00 a.m. claists on MWF Trench. Cerman & Spanish courses No'd 1, A 4. Kcnn. 70 11.00 am. classes on TThS In ease of any conflict, the regularly scheduled exam will take precedence over the common exam (Common exams arc indicated by an asterisk.) Parade Plans All Set Kyerything is all set for this years Beat Dock Parade, winch indicates the anual Duke-Carolina football game will be played soon -Thursday. Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity annually sponsors the parade, be ginning af 2 p.m. Toesdav. The Clien anrl k -1 t- .1 tendant, w.ll re.gn over the parade, riding on a special float. ! More than 30 floats will be entered by dormitories, fraternities and soront.es. and four trophies await the ones judged most out- "iuiujiii, AFb7JUNS Mn?w,?dCrS als Wil1 Paradc a,on with th bands of School ' Pd Hi" 1IiSh Sch01 and Lincoln Hi The parade will begin at Woollyn Gymnasium at 2 p.m. proceed I ,m nar?; ;leK,ghtSlWi l &St Fra"k,in S,reet' throu down'ownThapel H.U and back south on Columbia Street, then through the center o the campus eastward on Cameron Avenue. Parade chairman, Jim Copland announced that judging in the . comp.t,t,on will be don. by Chancellor Emeritus Robrt B. The'. V" V,"" K' C'rmich"'' Vic Huggins, merchant. The order .of the parade will be as follows- Cheerleaders. Lincoln High School band, Pi. Kappa Phi, Phi Gam- ml He J;"Cr:Mer'Ruffin- Kaa Delta Theta'chi. Alpha Gam ma Delta. Aycock. Chapel Hill High School band, Chi Phi ThMv " Alch EpSi,n- Pi BcU Phi- Parkcr. Graham.' Phi Delta . h T T f'-T- NRTC' NR0TC driU team- NROTC band. Sigma CM. Tan Kps.lon Phi. Kappa Alpha. Chi Omega, Grimes and Manley Faculty Members Address Executives Three members of the Political Science Department lectured last week o executive of the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co assembled from nine southern states at Athens. Gc.sia u"r:,r- ?.urt?"-sc Professor, delivered three lee- u-i, t 10 ftIUcn tan Wc Go 11 Alone?"; "Brinkmanship- Dr. Donald Matthews spoke on "The Peoples Voice- How Voter ' P.mon is Made." and Dr. Karle Wallace spoke on "The Grea Ar of Politics: How Decisions in Government arc Made" lionT 'onfcrtcnccf w" ihP G0rSia Cc'Ucr for Continuing Educa a rof S'thn Bell'. District-Division Management Development Conferences. " mni I UNC ACCOUNTING SCHOLARS RPrnr.MiTcn e.u..-., -tm J -wards to two students, announced thii J H,M; e br9M Hutchinson (far left) of Charlotte, representing f CPA f rm is hcln F?U,Wl,ioB grant?' - ' f PhotO bv Mnr (Tan Accounting Major, BA Student Given Haskins & Sells Grants .' A senior accounting maior and a prarimt. cf,. tlrnt m (lie School of Business Administration fiavc been presented scholarship and fellowship awards by the Haskins & Sells Foundation, Inc., it was announced by Dean Maurice VV. Lee. ' Robert Laverne Joyner is winner of the Has kins Si Sells ScholarshiD Award fnr iQ!sQ?n ai. ed at $500. He was chosen by the school's Un i . aergraauate bcholarship Committee, headed uv. ciauae Oeorge Jr., assistant dean. The $1000 graduate fellowship given by Has kins & Sells was awarded to James Robert Whit ney. He was also chosen by the .school on the basis of scholastic excellence. O. N. Hutchinson of Charlotte, representative of Haskins & Sells, Certified Public Accountants presented the awards to the two students this by week in Chapel. Hill. Joyner, a self-help student, has maintained averlage in hls ovein University studies and a higher record in accounting, his major Whitney, a vertcran i0f Army service was graduated from The Citadel in Charleston s C 11 ml lmf?! '"0rkng With the Charles: ton CPA f,rm of ;Schloeter, Monsen and Deback cr, he entered Carolina this fall to work toward TtaTSvdege ln bUSiness -mini.tr.Sn The Haskins . sells Foundation set up is sZU, "g Prgram in 1956' stimulating higher scholastic achievement amon- college students majoring in accounting anT ent 1 promising s,udents to k SflDDgjeir MBi Gens Fir $hmj Improved Negro-White Race Relations Seen For Future Your GMAB Committee To Give Talks On Ike's Tour By IIKMIY MAVtR A vries of lectures and forums cxainining President Eisenhower's forthcoming Asian tour will be presented in the near future by the NMAH Current Affairs Committee, under the chairmanship of Jerry Stokes. ' , ' ' ' v ' (; . r -: - .i JERRY STOKES . plans lectures ti.:.. ". Lommiiiec js designed to serve the student body by present ing informative panel discussion, speakers, etc. on current problems and events. In addition to the sc ries on the president, a program ha.s been planned for December dealing with the French-Algerian situation. Sponsorship of the spring po litical rally s an annual commit tee function and plans arc al ready being formulated v to in sure the sueeess of this year's rally. This convocation provides an op portunity for the candidates for major offices and the party chair men to present their views to the campus electorate, as well as an opportunity for the voters to com pare and contrast the candidates. In commenting on this year's plans Stokes said, "We've got a bigger budget to work with and should have a successful year.. However, one thing is lacking; this 'is representation from Inter ested and competent freshmen and transfers. All those who are interested are urged to apply to the GMAB office." v America's Negro-White relation ships face an optimistic future. Dr. Albert L. Turner, Law School Dean at North Carolina College, Durham, predicts. Dr. Turner spoke to a group of foreign students here Wednesday night on "The History of Segrega tion." "The situation Is being im proved." Dr. Turner said, add ing, "When I was young, we could never imagine that Ne groes could be professional base ball players." Negro slavery came into being because thc slave trade was pros perous, the students were told. ''The very first Negroes who" came into this country were not slaves," the speaker declared. Dr. Turner, in tracing segrega tion'.s history, said that even after the Emancipation Proclamation in H;.i supposedly ended slavery, Ne groes were disciplined by the "Black Codes" which prohibited them from moving their homes and which regulated punishment for "contract breaking." "The 11th Amendment of J8B8 made Negroes citizens, but in 1W0 the legislature of Louisiana enacted a statute requiring rail roads to provide equal but se parate accommodations for the White and Colored races," he said. The speaker called attention to the Plessy vs. Ferguson decision of 18 which upheld Louisiana's measure and pointed out that the amendment protected racial equal ity, but that practical regulations should be left to the state. Tryouts Monday, Tuesday For 'Christmas Garland' Tryouts for the first Carolina Haymakers studio production of the current year will be Monday. 7:30 p.m.. and Tuesdav. 4 n rr. Thet production, entitled "A Christ- The decision of the Supreme I mas Garland," will be under the Court in 1956 that equal but se parate facilities are . unequal now is being applied to public property,' Dr. Turner said. "But at present the problem still exists with pri vate concerns. I could stay in an integrated hotel but I dare not be cause of their attitude toward me." The dean declared that the best way of achieving integration will be through individual influence by personal association. "Wc need your help," he said. Jack Boswell and Marcia Klingcl, co-chairmen of the YM-YWCA For-, eign Students Committee, presided at the meeting. direction of Dr. Russell C.r associate professor of Dramatic Art. Performances are scheduled tor Saturday and Sunday, Decem ber 12 and 13, in the Haymakers Theatre. INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary Satur day were the following: Kenneth Bunting, Wayne Kerste ticr. Charles Clarke. William Shepherd, Stephen Lowder, Curtis Giles. Joseph Hord. Richard Cough enour, James Gerardi and William Shaw. Folklore Group To Meet TU M IL - ..... Seeger Plays Guitar, Banjo In GM Series A 12-string guitar, a 5-string ban jo, his repetoire and his "humane" voice are all Pete Seeger needs to present his one-man show of folk songs and spirituals. And these are what he will be using when he performs Dec. 4 in Memorial Hall for the GM Concert Series. Students will be admitted free fdr the 8 p.m. concert although 50 cent-tickets will be sold for spouses. Non-students will be admitted after 7:30 p.m. for $1. it. v. ruik. series chairman said." We're lucky to get Seeger to appear here. He is noted as the favorite folk singer of college stu dents everywhere, and he wili en tertain his audience with a wonder ful program of folk songs and spiri tuals." Seeger's single performance here was arranged because of a one day break in his tight touring schedule. His repetoire encompasses the entire scheme of American develop mnt and includes the traditional songs as well as many fresh and exciting arrangements. Seeger is famous for the unique rapport he achieves with his lis teners. "I suspect everyone in Me morial Hall will be clapping their hands to' his music and eventually singing with him," Fulk said. Speaking for his wife Toshi and himself, the songster has stated. " . . We truly love folkmusir " Evidence of this is the number of record albums and sineles he has recorded, his books on folkmusic and the educational movies he has made. V E . 4 t XxX if : ,r, . ' W 7 Winn mmiir I'itlji PETE SEEGER j(ivu)itc folkwngstn G. M. SLATE The North Carolina Folklore So ciety will have its 48th annual meeting Dec. 4, 2 p.m., in the Vir ginia Dare Ballroom of the Sjr Walter Hotel, Raleigh, according to Dr. A. P. Hudson of Chapel Hill, secretary-treasurer. Donald MacDonald of Charlotte will preside over the program, to which the public is cordially in vited. In "Making Glory," Mrs. Lu cille Turner of Forest, Va.. will present her interpretations of Ne gro secular songs, spirituals, and prayers heard on plantations near Lynchburg. Mrs. Turner has recent ly completed a film, "Songs out of me bouth," for WUNC-TV and is a widely popular entertainer. Dr. Wilton Mason, professor of music, in a paper entitled "Ballads in Transit." will show by discussion and singing how ballads change as they pass from one locale to an other. Director of the University Chorus, Dr. Mason is currently planning a series of programs and icuiuings leaiunng nis own ar rangements of Appalachian "mate rials. Douglas Franklin, director of music and education at the Cen tral Methodist Church in Con cord, who has appeared frequent ly throughout the state as a folk singer, will offer "Some North Carolina Folksong Favorites." Activities scheduled today in Gra ham Memorial include: Society of Friends, 11 a.m., Grail; Alpha Kappa Psi, 2-5 p.m., Grail, Roland Parker I & II. Monday's activities in Graham Memorial are the following: Student Party Advisory Board 2- 5 D.m.. Roland Part , tlUVUCldi Review, 4-6 p.m.. Grail; Carolina Symposium Commitee, 4:30-6 p.m.. Woodhouse; Carolina Forum, 6-6:30 p.m., Grail; Dance Committee, 7-8 p.m., Grail; Student Council, 7-10 p.m., Woodhouse; Bridge, 7-11 p.m., Roland Parker I. II & ni; and Grail. 9-11 p.m., Grail. I Rameses Typifies UNODuke Rivalry Rv UADVr Illnm,. j niviviv j eses. All of the intense rivalry between "Lasl J'car." Uogan says, "we Carolina and Duke which will cul-j came out of the house the morning minate in Thursday's football game j before the game and found several is perhaps best typified in Caro- -covered, blurry-eyed Duke boys lina's mascot, Rameses VIII. staggering out of the' woods. Evi dently fhpv'H V.!.no.l" 11 r Tu onn , . "j " nuiiLtu till lURlll IOT The 200 pound ram is housed on , Rameses and finally got lost in the farm nti-n u,. ri J " . luOL iu a rarm ownpd hv r.icnn u - VJ uiLiiii iiugdu near Chapel Hill, and Hogan has quite a list of stones which have grown up around the mascot. concerns thc mystical power Ram eses exerts over point after touch down attempts. This belief arises out of the 1957 Carolina-Duke game when Duke was ahead and the Caro lina fans were feeling pretty lov. As Hogan tells it: "The cheerleaders and I lined up Rameses in front of the Caro lina goalposts and sure enough we scored. Then we went on to kick thc extra point right over his horns. Tar Heel fans remember Rameses that day and the score which ended 21-13, Carolina. Naturally, this hasn't increased the Blue Devils' love for Caro lina mascots. Every year an at tempt is made to kidnapp Ram- dark." He also tells about thp fim j State College students thought I they'd fooled him into letting them ; have th ram on the nretext nf taking him to a pep rally in Chap el Hill. "I gave thrm another ram and they took off. stopping Ion enough in Chapel Hill to yell that Duke had stolen Rameses. By this time Carolina students wert pretty well peped up. and they hauled over to Durham" to take Duke apart. It was some time be fore we got word to them that it was all a mistake." Whatever the outcome of Thurs day's game 'meaning, of course, whatever thc number of points Carolina will win by) Rameses will be there in all his bluc-hornM glory, demonstrating that vhat's up front that counts." it . . . - ..w, V M v v a v t7 Yule Tribute, 'Star Of Bethink - f i, fM! IJ 111 , I . oiar oi tjeuuenem ," the More- Um utu . head Planetarium s traditional .r u . Christmas tribute, opened Friday w T inStaDCe' nirtht ' evPn the opening winter panorama Inspired by and taken from the SCCnC . .Pd 0lUy the per- King Jamc version of e Ho y "7 "" the ViUage Bible, the 1959 presentation is the Zr original and cherished Morehead lsa'T " m0demty'" Jen" Planetarium program. As Planetarium Manager A. F. The second portion is the tradi- Jenzano put it. "This year there li(nal and original pageant of the are no additives." birth of Jesus, told in lights, color The first portion of "Star of and music. It includes the three- BethVhem" is devoted to thc ap- dimensional scenes of the Anmin. pearance of the heavens of al most twenty centuries ago and deals particularly with astron omical events known to have oc curred iu the years about the closing scene also1 is again the great arched cathedral. "We felt obligated to repeat the original 'Star of Bethlehem' which we gave from 1949 through 1956," Jenzano said. "Patrons repeated ly attended it year after year to receive a true awakening to the meaning and significance of Christmas. Editors, clergymen and other distinguished people impulsively praised the spectacle vocally and in print." W se Menand HP'aiaC Eveni Performances begin at the NaUvitv P 8:3' 3nd matinees on Satys the Nativity , begin 11 a.m., 3 and 4 p.m. by Dr. Urban Tigner Holmes. The and 4 p.m. ? N S 0N " XxX N . I ' " ' "' .1 iy iiiiiM j. . r mm EGYPTIANS OBSERVE EXECUTIVE PROGRAM tk. . mtnt program for senior man.-.. J M,-,S?" tW ,Caders cf E "ew d.v.lop. operation. They ar. Anned N. Rizk ( ar i.ft) d irecto oZZ V muTV Pr9r4m !" Management Development; and Ahmad Alv Sh.fc. Z Z th Esyp,ian ,ni,ltut f Dr. Willard Graham: director ol 11.?.' "9?' Secre,ary " "-r is their host. which executives are now enrolled, " me mtens.ve advanced management course in ' ; - . b' windley