7" - cinan niu. N.c. Cloudy thrf Cl0ad Wednesday dartfe I-h mild' mountains and mosUy cos elsewhere. 275H TV Basketball The fXC-Keat State basiet fciH arae fcsnfjht win fce tekTised ea TUNCTV. Fcr details cf tie gase. see pae XY 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 68 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1957 Fcur.ded Febroarv 23. (t tl ft 2 UNC-G Sets r-":--;;; . .. i, I "1 Jlir (L 1 Mgiheims I .y . 'v . l x I III" III 1 II ! 1 5pectol To The DaUy Tar Heel GREENS EORO-Student Legislature at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro will decide tonight if "open residence halls," with no closing hours, should be set up for housing seniors or all upperclassmen. Two bills, one calling for any upperclassman with parental permission to be able to live in the open dorms, and the other specifying the residents to be 'any senior 21 or under 21 with parental permission," will be introduced. UNC-G student government officials predicted Tuesday that one of the bills would be approved, but could not say which .bill stands the best chance of adoption. If the bills pass, two of UNC G's new high-rise residence halls, each housing 700 girls, will be used as open halls. If more than 1,400 girls apply to live in open halls, additional dormitories couJd be re classified as open. The committee presenting the two bills has not yet formulated a system for main taining dormitory security if the bills are adopted, but will probably suggest that night watchmen be employed to let girls in and out of the dormitories. The funds to pay these extra night watchmen could be allocated from a fund set up by the state legislature to in crease campus security by hir ing more campus policemen and watchmen. There is a surplus in this fund. UNC-G's student body voted Tuesday night by legislative district on which of the bills each district's representative should vote for, if any, and if the representative would be free to vote differently on a second or third ballot if the district's choice is defeated in first balloting. Each district's vote is bin ding on the Student Legislature representative. UNC-G students living off campus have already been declared exempt from closing hours. Any University student, regardless of class, is allowed to liv off-campus. UA Tn "? 1 I" v""K -TV -r--N -n - -T-J -- rmttSJi mwut; They Came, They Heard, They Spoke The UNC Debate Team sponsored a Speak-out in Y court Tuesday morning, the first in a series of debates open to public participation. Yesterday's topic was Vietnam and after an opening speech by Jack McDonocgh, (above) the audience was invited to express their views on tie war, the draft or any otier topic con cerned with Southeast Asia. ffi tt mm CTrjr Daili ar l?rrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International Romney; 'No More Brainwashing9 LANSING, Mich. Gov. George Romney of Michigan Tues day said he will not be misled agout the war when he returns to Vietnam this month as a candidate for the Republican presiden tial nomination. "Nobody's going - to 'brainwash ' me, declared. Romney will arrive in Saigon on Christmas Eve on the last leg of a 25,000nmile (world tour of 13 nations in Europe, the Middle East, South Asia and Southeast 'Asia. Romney has charged that he was 1arain3ashed" by U.S.J OF ficials during a three-day visit to South Vietnam in 1965. This tme he will be on guard, Romney said at a news conference. "When you recognize you have made a mistake and the people have misled you; you are much better prepared to keep from having it happen again," be saM. -LL VLy By PAMELA HAWKINS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Anti-war protestors in the Chapel Hill area are planning to stage a marathon "Teach In" Thursday at Memorial Hall as part of the second na tional "Stop the Draft Week." The 'Teach-In" which will' focus on the draft, the war and the relation of both t o American society, is scheduled to run from 4 to around 11 p.m. At least eight University Jb'T am n ciiay six different departments plus several campus chaplains, are to address the open forum. The chaplains will begin the symposium at 4 p.m. with a panel discussion on the views of various religious denomina tions concerning the war and draft. The Chaplains' Association endorsed- the idea for the forum in a prepared statement and "encouraged all persons of what ever persuasion or views to participate and to make it a Several students from the area who have refused in duction to the armed services will speak at 9 p.m. on why they are declining to comply with the system. Films on related subjects will be shown during intervals By SXIARI WILLIS of Tha Daily Tar El XUJ Any fraternity falling below a 2.0 academic average for two consecutive semesters will be put on social probation, the Inter-Fraternity Council has decided. The Council voted 21-2 to put the resolution into effect next semester. The regulation was proposed two weeks ago, voted on in in dividual houses, and then pass ed the IPC Monday night. Social probation is the strictest penalty under the IPC. A house under social pro bation is cot allowed to have girls on the premises for that . semester. This is "the first time the IPC has set up an academic regula tion on its own. Formerly, academic regulations were im posed by the Chancellor's com mittee on fraternities and sororities. "In the past four years, only one house would have been af fected by tins regulation," said IPC President Randy Myer. "But each semester at least rush probation (a fraternity under such probation will not be allowed to hold rush for fall cr spring semesters, or both semesters. New penalties were added for individuals being tried. It was decided that a court repri mand may be given and a fine of $10, like the MRC penalty, was instituted. A court member will not be allowed to participate in a trial when his house is being tried, or when he files charges against a house. The court will hold hear ings for strict silence and rush violations, and the president and rush chairman of the house charged will be present at the hearing. 'This year there have been more flagrant violations of strict silence than ever before," said Myer. "We are seeking new methods to cor rectthem. The next two rush receptions for South Campus freshman were announced for Dec. 11 and Dec. 13, at 9:30 pjn. at Chase Cafeteria. Spaces Available For UN Trip between speakers. Included in this Dresentation will be a film academic average. This rule of the Oct 21-22 peace march will serve as a w'arning to on the Pentagon, prepared by them." Oscar Brinson and Jan Cham- The IPC judicial system was pion, both UNC graduate revamped, subject to approval A seminar on the workings of the United Nations will be held in New York over semester break, a YMCA one fraternity goes below a 2.0 spokesman announced Tues day. The trip which runs from January 24-29 is open to all University students. Students he ; .faculty members from at least - genuine dialogue,!'. DTH Appropriation Stays In Committee students in law. Anti-war poetry will be read by William Matthews, an editor of "UHabulero". Groups participating in the forum have said that discussion and questions from the audience will be welcome. The Teach-In" is open to the public free of charge. by Student Legislature, Among the changes : Districts for court representation were set up. Unclear penalties were defined. These included social probation; official reprimand (the reprimand appears on the front of the student's record for four-and-a-half months, and considering becoming members of the Model UN delegation in March should at tend this seminar. The $50 price tag on the trip discussions. The annual trip i usually held ever the. Thanksgiving holidays, but was postponed this year until semester break to allow for a; better selection of speakers. The list of speakers at the' four-day seminar was unavailable Tuesday. Applications for the trio are' available at the YMCA office and must be returned in the next few days. A total of 33 spaces were available, but i i i r it;. i i icaxiy imu uus immocr nave includes chartered bus fare up and back, accomodations, and already been filled. tour arrangements. Details of the New York end The seminar sponsored by of the seminar are being the campus YMCA, will in- handled by the Church Center elude films, briefings on the of the United Nations, working then is put on the inside); and un and its functions and panel through the Methoidst offices in the mterdenominational Marines Raid Demilitarized Zone SAIGON A U.S. Marine combat patrol Tuesday made a dar ing daylight raid into the Demilitarized Zone separating North and South (Vietnam, clashed twice with North Vietnamese soldiers and returned unscathed six hours laters. The probe by a platoon-sized unit up to 45 men was one of the rare times a sizeable 'American force had entered the sixnmile wide buffer zone since a Marine battalion was ambushed there last summer with a loss of 23 U.S. dead and 191 wounded ' The Marines penetrated the DMZ midway between the American outposts of Con Thien and Gio Linh near Hill 23, the base camp that stands guard over "McNamara's Wall," the bar rier against Red infiltration being built south of the demarcation line. GM, U AW Near Agreement DETROIT General Motors Corp. and the United Auto Workers said Tuesday they were near agreement on money mat ters and will try to wrap up all of their new conract within nine . days. Both sides agreed to a "news blackut" on the talks and pledged a "major effort" to clean up noneconomic issues stan ding in (he way of a new three-year pact for GM's 406,000 pro duction workers. GM said it offered a money package Sunday "which in its broad outlines conforms to the economic settlements reached at Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp." It said the union was "stu dying" the proposal. In a joint statement the company and the union said that a settlement by Dec. 14 'Vill require concentration on noneconomic contract matters that relate to both productin and skilled trades workers.'" Ginsberg, Spock Arrested At Protest New York City police carted 264 demonstrators away from an induction center Tuesday in the second day of "stop the draft week" protests. Protesters stormed police barricades in an at- tempt to route Dow Chemical Co. recruiters from the University r of Iowa campus. Pediatrician-author Benjamin Spock and bearded poet Allen Ginsberg were among protesters arrested in the four-hour out burst at the armed forces induction center on lower Manhattan. Police estimated that more than 1,000 demonstrators, most of them of high school and college age, participated at the height of the protest but there were no clashes between police and the crowd. No injuries ware reported. At Iowa City, 'Iowa, an estimated 300 angry protesters tried to rush through a barricade and forcibly evic Dow recruiters. They smashed the barricade in the -Memorial Union building but were turned back by police who sprayed mace, a chemical. Plainfield Mayor: TV Helped Riot WASHINGTON Th3 mayor of Plainfield, N.J., toM Congress Tuesday riots dn his city last summer were planned and that rioters were encouraged by television coverage. Mayor George P. Hetfield told a Senate investigating sub committee that the disorders "were organized, precipitated and exploited by a small, hardcore group. By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The finance committee of Student Legislature voted Tuesday to hold in committee a bill to appropriate $3,510 to the Daily Tar Heel and another to increase the salary of the circulation staff. A bill appropriating $160 to International Association for Students in Business and Economics, to set up an ex change program on campus, was voted out favorably. Both bills for the Daily Tar Heel were held in committee for further investigation on them. The bill to increase the salary of the circulation staff would transfer $650 from one category of the DTH budget to another. The pay raise would enable the Daily Tar Heel circulation staff to deliver newspapers to the suites in South Campus dormitories. The increase would be made possible by cutting down on the number of papers printed on Sunday. The $3,510 appropriation is needed because the Campus courier, a bi-weekly national magazine which was going to pay The Daily Tar Heel 4,560 to insert it in Sunday papers, cancelled its contract, leaving the newspaper $3,510 short. Both Daily Tar Heel bills were introduced by Bill Lee, UP from Morrison. The business exchange pro gram (AIESEC) bill was in troduced by Larry Richter, UP from MD in, for John Strickland, who started the chapter on campus. AIESEC finds summer jobs for students in businesses in foreign countries or for foreign students in the United States. A school may send as many of its students overseas as it can find jobs for foreign students. Poll Shows Villagers Want Center. Groc church center. em h 9 iJ r . $ L- ii mrMUm ini.ni.it I, Ltt. 'MtJHm,.- ,AHH A recent census and survey of Victory Village residents has indicated a pressing need for a community center with a laundromat and a grocery store. The survey, conducted by the Victory-Odom Village Board of Aldermen, showed other im p rovements-not ably, renovation fof the playground and assured parking places in front of apartmentsare also desired by the villagers. The poll section of the ques tionnaire was designed to reveal the . characteristics of the villagers. This poll reveal ed that 75 per cent of them are graduate students, 55 per cent of the wives work, 44 per cent of the families have at least one child, of which 80 per cent are under five years of age, and one third of the Village's population leaves at the end of each year. As a result of the survey, a winter recreation program has been started in Village under tiie direction of Max Holland. Five basketball teams have been entered in University ii tramurals and a handball team is being formed. Hocutt Fund Established Classmates and friends of a former University of North Carolina medical student are establishing a memorial fund in his honor. The fund, in honor of Dr. Edgar Jerome (Jerry) Hocutt who died in Washington, D.C., in early November, will be ad ministered by the UNC Development Office. Funds will be used specifically to procure a col lection of rare classical medical books. These will be housed in the Historical Room of the new Division of Health Affairs Library to be con structed in the near future. All volumes will be designated as being given in memory of Jer ry Hocutt. Other programs being form ed include bridge groups for all skill levels, a drawing class at the Day Care Center and a painting class at Umstead Recreation Center. Activities for children in clude a story hour on Saturday mornings and a music play group. The annual Christmas party for children will be at the Day Care Center on Dec. 9 from 3 4:40pjii. Another project suggested by the survey is a guidebook on UNC, Chapel Hill and the sur rounding area, designed, for newcomers. Koehnes Give Son's Books ; For ISC Use The parents of a UNC jun ior who was killed in a recent automobile accident have do nated his books to the Inter national Students Center's Li brary, i was learnet today. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sperry Koehne. parents of Richard Koehne Jr., donated 50 of their son's assorted textbooks and novels Tuesday. Koehne Jr. was killed in an accident Sunday when his car skidded and overturned on a wet highway in Durham. Two To Attend Meet On National Affairs Two UNC students, Earl Hadden and Bland Simpson, left Tuesday to participate in the 19th annual Student Conference on U. S. Affairs in West Point, N. Y. The two were selected in in terviews conducted by Professor Earle Wallace of the Political Science Depart ment. The discussions will center on developments in U.S. foreign policy in the decade since the launching of the Sput nik in 1957. About 200 students from 100 colleges across the country will attend the roundtable talks which begin todav and last Thev were worsened, he said, by television coverage of riots in FALL MEANS the opening of school; school means a trip to the Newark, 20 miles to the north, which showed persons looting Morehead Planetarium; and a trip to the Planetarium means a through Saturday stores while police were hespiess 10 siop inem. cnance to cum a on the Sundial. The costs of the meeting are paid by private foundations. Hadden is a senior political science major and president of the Dialectical-Philanthropic Societies. Simpson is a junior history major and sergeant-at-arms for the Di-Phi. Baxter Linney, another member of the Di-Phi, will at tend as an unofficial observer. Hadden and Simpson will give a report of the conference at a meeting of the Di-Phi when they get back. The discussions will be broken down into eight groups, with each group discussing a specific area. The groups will decide what they think U. S. policy should be for the area they discuss. - - I fc - S i L Last spring the Dili ran a picture of workmen flaishin" up work on Davie Hall Annex. Now they're done-windows have been p-t in. most of the walks have been paved and students are attending classes in the Rat Palace a