Todays Tar Heel For Editorial Comments On Duke Chronicle 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." WEATHER Sunny and not quilt us .IJ this VOLUME LXVIII. NO.'ff Complete JFi Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE See Page 2 USS A Memorsa Be Dedic WASHINGTON (AD The USS Anzrna memorial to the war dead j at Pearl Harbor will be dedicated I next I'earl Harbor Day. one year i fnm Mon.iy. The construction contract will In awarded about next May 10, a navy spokesman y;U Of the 1.551 aboard the battle hip Arizona at the time of the Japanese air attack 18 cars ao tixlay. only 2J!f Mirvivel the as sault The Arizona sank in 50 Ire! of water and is still on tin- bottom with the bodies of 1.102 nun o.'ked in -.hie its hull Women's Honor Council Runoff Slated Today Ilun-offn for Women's Honor Council will bp held today Iroin 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Residents of Kenan Dorm will vot? in Mclver and residents of Sndih will vote In Grrrard Hall. All women are rliKible to vote In lhir respective dorms. All tU'denlM who live In town wom en's district will vote in Gcr rard Hall. This applies also to ro-ed4 living in soroiity houses and building that are not l.'ni-erKity-ow ned. Those in the run-off are: Mary Stuart Il.iker. Heverly Foard. Joan Jordan and Jackie Suber. Antique Sale Proceeds To Go For Meeting House China. I'lussware and Hat silver not sold at last week's fund rais ing antique sale .sponsored by the Chapel Hill members cf Friend's meeting will be on display at re duced prices Unlay, 10::) a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Today's proceeds, as well as the $2800 taken in last week, will go to ward building a Meeting Hou.se in Chapel Hill. Whitehall Antique Shop on the Durham Hoad will be the site of today's sale, Mrs. Claude Shotts. recording secretary of the Friends, announced Saturday. tr it V lienor Hit- .!!mis amoni; t!..- tn..re! Tin- N;iv v s.o.l I Ik.I so many of ' V ' ' vi' VhVU ' V ' , r than 2:i(H) persons killed in tlio I tl.cm were hoM(l identification ' 'Xlt &VVT2H 1 ""J' Pearl Harbor attack, will consist ; or recognition that it was decided' VyCAV - tiV ' 1 ' 5 V';: of a rectangular concrete facade ! preferably to leave them in the fVV V1' AVyir iW 1 ' 1J - ,'. v -Mending lfJ fee. fro., the out-i ruins of thir ship. , LVi; 1 ft . Al-Jf& JW V ' " ' . l.o..d sid. ..f the sunken battle. : ' V' V V'b!$&X ' ' -- -Ai V, ship to n.-.-uby rord Island ! To queries as 1, W',y the dead, , H r " V? Sl " 'V,..' .t i ? Spanning the piesei,! exposed ! w,,,v l,'n 11,',K', a,ul ,he shl l ' 4 "f tV-l - 'H-s'V). '',rJ main deekl,o.,s, . it will contain :. was "ot rai',l. th Njv' sakl th" "T fXV'.'.J t . - -.L t ' ; , urgent business at I he time was J& .T., . , " ":' ' ' i . v ' i' ; . . . ! . .to ,e. 1 1 s fl,,.. back into iiucra- I KTS N f ,?WJ : -. ! Pi -- " - A x ? ell , i n i 1 '"' 1 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT The Ralph Homer Dramatic Chorus presents a program of musical scenes and songs tonight at I p.m. in Memorial Hall under the auspices of the Chapel Hill Con cert Series. The 19 voice chorti, which has received acclaim throughout the country, will present Act Two of Stravinsky's opera oratorio, "Oedi jws Rex," and other works. Featured soloist for this portion of the nzona -m museum and a ceremonial bridge accommodating" more than 200 persons. For that reaon it worked only i on the ships that could be repair ed quickly the Maryland, Ten nessee and Pennsylvania. By the time men and equipment were available for work on the Arizona salt water had added its i damage and the ship was bejond repair. 'We sent divers down to inspect the wreckage," a spokesman said. 'We lost one of these divers. The Navy saw that it would be im possible to raise the ship so let ters were written to the next-of-kin of men still aboard, telling them of the circumstances." G. M. SLATE Activities scheduled in Graham Memorial today include: Flections, t-7 p.m., Koland Park er II; Ways & Means Committee, 2-3:30 p.m., Woodhouse; Audit Board. 4-6 p.m., Woodhouse; Sen ior Class Empty Stocking Fund, 4:30 p.m.. Roland Parker I. P. I. F. C. 5 p.m. Grail; Women's Residence Council, 7 p.m., Grail: Student Party, 7 p.m., Roland Parker I & II; Traffic Council, 7:30 p.m., Woodhouse; Y.R.C., 8 p.m., Koland Parker III; Class room and Dept. Seminar Carolina Symposium, 5 p.m., Roland Park er III. o -i l if Hawaiian it-yisiuun r iru r V. ; I .. : J . . I $127,000 for the memorial. Other 1 , fN I y-? . f V I sums aro being raised by the Pa- j I ' , Wt- I " J rif'i U'.ir Mimori:il commission of! ' s& I hi II ! Honolulu, the Arizona Memorial - ?i " L n - ' 5 v Committee of Phoenix, the Fleet f -1" X : Romtvc Assn., and other groups. ill I jlJJ iir 1 XJ ;" t I The :i2,(i(M)-ton. COH-fool long I v i i ioiui was hit and destroyed by ' i - f". - - -,v, ...ml - . Mh,,.li- ',KSS?CT,- :- ' tVt:,. J For that reaon it worked only i ' . " i . s . . I I ! km. mm mi U licsiwei MISS JANE NEWS0M,'a senior from San Joan, Puerto Rico, is our tenth Tar Heel Beauty of the year. She is also Miss Chapel Hill for 1959 and was second runner-up in the Miss North Carolina con test this year. Photo by Hrinkhous Senate Investigators Charge Major Drug Firms With Estimated Markup Of 7,079 WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 UP) Sen- atc investigators said today a ma- jor drug firm bought a medicine for 11.7 cents a batch and then resold it to druggists lor $8.40 an estimated markup of 7,079 per cent. At the same time, the Senate anti trust SulKommittee produced fig ures it said showed that Schering Corp. of Bloomfield, N. J., jacked up the wholesale price of another drug by 2,757 per cent from 28 cents to $8. Staff data on the two drugs both used against female disor derswas brought up after Francis C. Brown. Schering's president, had described a previous charge by the subcommittee as "misleading and valueless." Brown challenged an estimate by it .iw.iw.te,;w,.vAovf.oWi!!,); program will be contralto Lillian Mernik, 1958 winner of the Met ropolitan Opera Regional Auditions. Hunter has been choral director of Radio City Music Hall for the past six years, and the conductor of New York's Collegiate Chorale. He is a former faculty member of the Julliard School of Music. Students will be admitted free in the balcony. Subcommittee Chairman Estesthe arthritis-asthma drug predni- Kefauver (D-Tenn) that Schering applied a 1,118 per cent markup over production costs for predniso lone, an arthritis-asthma medicine derived from cortisone. Developed by Schering, this drug is marketed under the name neticortelone. Staff specialists said Schering made that medicine for 1.6 cents a tablet and set a wholesale price of 17.9 cents and a suggested retail price of 29.8 per cent. Included were costs of preparing and bottl ing the tablets, but not of market ing them. Kefauver and his aides produced charts they said showed Schering ani three major competitors Merck, Upjohn and Pfizer handled . ,Ji.N . ,V, -. " .-rwimii-B J Miss Nancy Garland Brown House, was announced as 1959-60 Chanticleer Beauty Queen at Social Standards Coed Ball Friday night. Miss .Garland, chosen by actor Paul Newman from a list of nine finalists, is a senior majoring in philosophy. She transferred from Goucher College in Maryland, at the end of her scphrncre year, and new ma;kes her home in Gastonia, N. C. (Krupp Photo) solone at identical prices $17.90 lor a bottle of 100 tablets. The charts listed a smaller firm, Physicians Drug and Supply Co., as selling the preparation for $4.85 a hundred. Testimony about Schering's pric ing practices developed as the Sen- ate subcommittee opened public hearings on whether drug houses were charging too much at the wholesale level and, if so, whether Congress should do something about it. Defending his firm's pricing po licies. Brown declared: "The Best indication that Scher ing's prices were not excessive and Di-Phi Set To Debate Question Of Overthrowing Castro Regime A resolution "that the govern ment of Fidel Castro in Cuba should be overthrown" will be debated to night by the Di-Phi Society. The de bate will begin at 8 p.m. in New West. Rep. Dave Matthews will intro duce the resolution, asserting that Premier Castro is deliberately de stroying traditional Cuban U. S. iriendship. Shortly after coming to power Dr. Castro stated that Cuba would oe neutral In any future war be tween the United States and Rus- j I sia. His policies have brought pro- j tests from the U. S. State Depart-' ment that "a deiiLerale and con- j cent rated effort is being made in j Cuba to replace the tradiiional iriendsh'.p .between the two conn-! tries wuh distrust and hostility." The Agrarian Reform Law is be coming viewed with alarm by Cuba's middle and upper classes. Premier Castro's avowed purpose is eventually to have only "one class" in Cuba. The fact that conservatives andChene and Wayne King. that its products were good is found in the ready acceptance given them by the medical profession." In challenging Kefauver's 1,118 per cent markup estimate for pre disolone. Brown said his company's recent profits amounted to 16 per cent of sales. It was then that the subcommit- u,e comronted Brown with figures jjuiuiuiio iu siiuw a i,utn per cem markup or a drug marketed as progynon and 2.757 per cent for an other drug sold as estinyl. both used in treatment of female dis orders. These markups did not in clude costs of tableting, bottling, or sehing. Government Is one of the primary points advanced for the resolution. Recently Maj. Lrntoio Guevara, an extreme leiti.-.t, was appointed pres ident of Hie National Rank of Cuba. His appointment caustd large-scale withdiawais ot money irom locai banks for fear that the government might establish restrictive controls over accounts. ALhough the resolution does noi accuse Premier Castro of being a Communist, it does assort that his anti-U. S. policy and nis detrimen tal economic policies in Cuba' are aJcquate grounds to justify thj overthrow of the Revolutionary Gov ernment. INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yester day were the following: Marian Hayes, Richard Kepley, Margaret Holland, Sandra Dean. Ellen Smith, Frances Pearson, James Rouse, James Resi.cn, Richarj Clark, Wil liam Bevin, Thomas Lawson, Anna Defendant Pleads Innocent To Charge The trial of Joe Friedberg on the charge of violating the Honor Code by seeing a Business A.!, n.iu.: at. ri qui prior to its being given will be reconvened Werinesd?y evening a! 7 p.m. The case was heard before the Honor Council lait Thursday but was postponed on the grounds of insufficient evidence Friedberg, a senior from Great Neck, N. Y., pleac.vd not guilty t.o t..e charge. The charges against Fiiedo g were brought about as the result o a tip being called in tli.it th- prac tical exam in question h;d b.-t-n I stolen and was in circulation to ; n iatructor in the BA Sch.io! two j weeks ago. Thf instructor checked with his supervisor and was told to conduct an investigation. i This was done by questioning ! each person in turn, promising net i to turn in the informants. Th's i progression continued until a pr- ; son refused to give lurther inior- i mation. Friedberg, who was present at ; the questioning, said: "I'll .save you ! the trouble. I'll turn myself in. 1 1 gave it to him." Friedberg statrs ! that the professor gave the impre : sion that he had se?n befh the quiz i Friedberg had passed on. and the j quiz wh:ch was to be given; there fore, he turned himself in, thinking the instructor had seen the quiz to be given. The accused then went to Attorney-General Jack Spain, and Hugh Patterson, chairman of the Men's Honor Council, and said that he : had possessed and passed on a quiz which was alleged to have been . stolen. ! Testimony rear! bv the defend at tlie trial, from the instructor who had conducted the investigatien. brought to light the fact that there was no assurance by anj-onc In the department that a quiz had be; n stolen since no papers were, miss- ing or disarranged and no office showed signs of having been en tered. The instructor stated that dur ing the investigation he had never seen the quiz in question in the possession of any student. He al so pcinfed out that on past oc casions, students had been known to have sold eld quizzes on the basis that they were the quizzes to be given, since out of neces sity the BA 71 praetieals all bear striking similarities. Friedberg refused to divulge the ui Lnc Jiuucms io Wiiym IiC n nni7 .-r f , , U i. c. c ulu However. that no mqney had changed hands Union Leader Payfon To Speak Here Tonight Boyd Paytcn, Carolina Director of the Textile Workers Union of America, will .speak tonight at 3 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Ills tcpie will be "Orangized Labor's Posi tion in Regard to the Limilation of the Power and Growth of the Un ions." Payton has been active in unions since 1936 when he helped 'to form a unicn at a Maryland eelane.se plant. He has served a.s Upper South Director, Southern DLeclor, 'Senior Saver Sab' Set In Y-Court Dec. 10, 11 'Senior Saver Sale", Dec. 10 and 11, 'will feature booths in Y-court selling life savers, cookies, and brownies. Prtceois from the sjU will go to the Empty Siockmg Fund. This project is the -first of its kini sponscrei by the Senior Class. Chapel Hill reside: ts v.il. supply the cookies and brownies ."or the sale. Cookies will ba sold tomorrow night in fraternity end sorori y houses. Commi'tee chairmen for this event include: publicity. Martha Morgan; residence contact, Kay Boortz; men's dorms. O.tn Fun.v r burke: fraternities Ashe L:um: and booths, Jack Cuairulng an! Bob Shupin. a7 T M U I cr nan ijcen .-;u;;en , on euner oi I the.-e occas.ion'3. j H.- K.-ki rh:t tie told the person to '.ll :i h. paiseil the quiz las recoil.-;; uctrd tor the court) that he thought' i: was an old quiz that .someone had a lip that it might be given i:g.Jn I-'i iedbcrg wan.ej the pe; son to study mere than just the quiz and ''net to put all his eggs in one basket." Friedberg followed this proce dure, tes'.ify?itg thai he studied Cci:'u!y himself acquiring a gia 'e ef 3. A d.ffertnt quiz was S'i-. eti by die deparlment as a preeautlrnjiy measure, after hear ing the runiur that the oher was cut. "Ncbu-iy m tne BA department or on can:pjj judiciary body has tvei se:. .he BA prac.ical ibleni h .'. 1 hai in my posses sion. I've never e-:n die exam :hat it's supo?ed to be a copy of. Therefore, ncbody in the world has scon ihern bodi and nebedy has any way of l.nowi.;g it they're the same, ihe C;.uneil has yvi snowu me ihe exam and allowed me to make" a ccmparlicn," Friedberg told the Daily Tar Heel. Nv.n; j;t lv Smidi. defence coun- ! c;" li lh ':uil A"h Paaerson i U Fr'er i l,J'":,is u; J:e-tn irom v;hcm he l me tiaiz ana to wnc-m ne gave it. :ht trial will never be closed and he v..l i.ever graduate. i oUc" r.i; has ueniei this state lii" ii t, sayir.g only that "the trial v. h b ccnir.ued Wednesday Siiii.ii contends that the reason Frledbe.g hs not divulged their names is because he is convinced thai he, and there.ore they, have net viclatej the Honor Code, so he has no tbligalion to turn them in. He is detet mined not turn them in, according to Smith, because fie wants to rpare them "the unpleas anir.esa arA jcrpardy cf going through an Honor Council trial." Smith al'n statPfl that Vruhora'c -;rcfe3S( r ;'d him last week that he he had not chal(J in any conrec.ticn with com be. ; :ii bir.c 1S.8, Carolin's Director. He has bc?n elected vice-president ci th. International Union every .v; y va-rs si) ce 1313. Tbe labor leader is sponsored by Uif Public Affairs Committee of the V.Mr A VWCA. This cemmittee has ee ii studying various aspects of g-vt.rmer.t and current affairs, and In recent months has heard Dn Gordon Cleveland, Dr. Paul Guthrie and Jesse Fisher. Pa on also has served on the War LiVir Kc-arl and Jie War Man power Cc mnrisrion. A q;e tion-and-answer period will follow tl s f -.Ik. The public is invited to atu n i the lecture. I-AST LECTURE ; Dr. fJfuarl P. yd. of the Relig i icn Dep-i-tme':. vvi!I s-eak on "Be- vend th;- Woild's Curve" tomorrow i ri-rr, at Memorial Hall at 8:30 p.m. This is The firtt of the Last Lec ture Serl ?, sponsored by Student Gv. eriinr- irt. JUL EL GllD GROUP ! "Ex:s:e; ti.-.l P'syche.herayp" will be the t(oic cf a talk by Harley ' i hands, I XC Dept. cf Psychiatry, Dec. 13. 8 p.m. at the Presbyterian S ai t' -;iur on r-i. ,-rt n St. ' 'i -.- ii r; jw ri in -ri-' jniie . ii v ; Si ll,:.. I'i vs b;. tct'i ait S'.U l dcL Group.