Serials Dep- Chapel -JUU, TT Called Liar en:'Bcwmn- Paxnsedi r Attacked B r Student Party candidate for Dotn axiacKea ana praisea yesterday. Robert Pace who recently more or less withdrew from the presidential race said he was throwing his support to Barton; and UP chairman Biff Roberts call the SP nominee a liar. Pace, who was forced to withdraw due to a provision in the elections law, said he would lonon uiaraes sure issues Ham Horton, UP nominee for president, yesterday charged that his opposition had obscured the issues of the campaign by "simple mud-slinging and . ... trying to divide the student body falsely along fraternity non-fraternity lines'." This was done, Jlorton said, "to divert attention from the three issues of the campaign." H6 listed the issues as' "(1) the clique and not the students rule student government, (2) the pre sent SP administration has ac complished nothing constructive for the student body, and (3) SP (See HORTON, page 2) ALL SMILES. Independent Ted Frankel yesterday was awaiiiivj hopefully ihe results of Wednesday's election. He is running for ihe vice presidency (Legislature speaker). Mud. Slung To Ob Mary Gilson ; Woman Industrial Relations Pioneeri Going To England by Jody Levey White-haired vivacious Miss MaryB.' Gilson, one , of the few women pioneers in the field of in- ; Accounte..puev'.; Candidates expense accounts for spring elections are due by 6 p. m. today. Elections r Board Chairman Erline Griffin said yesterday " " A member of ihe Elections Board will be in the Student GoVernment offices oh ihe sec ond floor of Graham Memorial from 4 until 6 o'clock today io accept the accounts. Candidates for all offices, whether opposed or not, must hand in a record of expenses. If no expenses have been in-, curred the candidates must ' band in a signed statement fa that effect before iha deadline JL y Koioetfs president Ken Barton was support Barton. He praised Bar- ton's "personal honesty and sin cerity." Barton's actions, Pace said, "show that he is interested not in Ken Barton but in a better and more wholesome self-governing student community." Pace said he made his decision to support Barton after considering the is sues in the campaign. "The campaign of the Univer sity Party," Pace asserted, is just plain disgusting and their Mc Carthy tactics have no place on this campus". I cannot condone sucn actions ana maintain my self-respect." University Party chairman Biff Roberts, meanwhile, charged Barton with making some out right lies." Roberts said it was "a shame that a person who uses such cheap tactics should be al low to run for president." Roberts objected specifically to Barton's statement to The Daily Tar Heel on Sunday. Barton said then that the recent action of (See ROBERTS, Page 6) 4 . X ; MAX - BALLINGER, running independently for ihe sopho more class presidency' promises to ."rejuvenate ihe : office and "use. it io belp re-install some of ihe lost Carolina spirit." t dustrial relations, wiUMeave this I week for an extended trip abroad. She will spend most of her eight months away from the United States visiting friends in. Eng land. Since this is her first, trip there since 1936, she is eager to observe changes and trends in the British economy she became so familiar with - while working there. . ; ; -. . . Miss Gilson will return to Am? erica in October after a trip to Finland. ; : j j Greatly interested in activities at the University, Miss Gilson pro bably is best known to the campus at large by her occasional letters to The Daily Tar Heel on a wide range of student subjects. i ! ; , r .... - ., -, , . , 1 1 -RhA rfiattediiuid smiled! during an interview and spoke warnriy of; the' present day cbUe$cutvi- (See GILSON, Page 7) r k J yopcnairy . The chairmen of tha three hon or councils and both campus pol itical parties yesterday endorsed the constitutional judiciary amendment to be voted on in to morrow's election. Larry Botto, Student council chairman; Joyce Evans, Women's council chairman; George Free man, Men's council chairman; Biff Roberts, University party chair man, and Dave Kerley, Student party chairman, endorsed the fol lowing statement (Botto goes into detail on today's editorial page): "For many years our judiciary system has been groping -around not sure exactly from whence it derives its powers or in what spheres it should use them. The main difficulty has been the re lationship of the Student council VOLUME LX CHAPEL a em J. Kenneth Lee, Negro law student here, yesterday took is sue, with a Greensboro Daily News story which said he denied the practice of racial bias in the UNC Law school. "He referred to a story in Mon day's Daily News which was an account of his talk at a meeting there Sunday opening the NAA CP's local membership drive. The Greensboro paper said in part: "J. Kenneth Lee, Negro law student at the University of North Carolina, yesterday denied reports that the law school faculty is de liberately trying to "flunk out' Negro students. '.'.. . He added that deficiencies in previous education made the course harder for Negroes. He de- AAcLeod Has 'Desire To Be O A statement from Jim McLeod, candidate for vice-president of the Student Body, was released yes terday. It follows: "These are four reasons for my candidacy for the vice-presidency of the Student Body. "First, .an humble desire to be of service to ' all the students at Carolina has prompted me to seek this office. If given this opportun ity I shall serve the student body as best I can. , - . "Secondly, the vice-president should v be more thaii merely speaker of the legislature. He should work T in ; close . harmony with " the chief executive and Ishpulder many, of the responsibil itibs of student government. This is- one ' capacity j of the office of Ice-president which has been" jSrelyii lacking 'ini ;the past. The president in recent years has been greatly overworked. "Thirdly, although the student legislature admittedly has "not per formed' the duty! it could have or should JhMre,? the situation is not without rernedyv jA, program1 can he iniiMtedi whereby the1 legisla- Stud Servi : w' - .imainig du'nCB VoiiJd Revamp Setup of : Campus Courts; Clarify AH Procedure to the whole of student govern ment, and to the other courts. Is it the 'supreme court' and if so what procedures should it fol low? "First, the amendment definite ly establishes the Student council as the supreme guardian of the student constitution; all of the agencies of student government are responsible to it for adhering to the student constitution. Sec ondly, the appeal from the lower courts is. clarified and is definite ly established on the solid ground of constitutional rights. , 'Also, the membership of the I HILL, N. C, TUESDAY, if (2S scribed the law school (UNC) as "vastly superior' to the Negro law school at North Carolina college in Durham. "Lee placed the major blame for discrimination against Negroes on the Negro himself. '. . . Lee cited the indifference and fear which prevents Negroes Dispu N AAental Wizard, Polgar, To Be Here Next Week Fabulous Dr. Franz Polgar, the J menxai wizara, returns io iviemo rial hall on Tuesday, April 15, 1952, at 8:00 p. m., with his eye opening 'Miracles of the Mind' program featuring feats of memo ry, hypnotism, and- mental tele pathy - Presented under the auspices of the Student Entertainment Committee, "America's greatest one-man show" is the fourth in a series of presentations to be brought to the campus this year. Dr. Polgar performed here to capacity audiences in 1949 and 1950, and has been brought back by popular demand. Billed as a man who can read minds, memo rize entire magazines at a single' sitting, and hypnotize many per sons simultaneously, he has done just that to amazed and delighted audiences the world over. . Polgar, Hungarian by birth, is a graduate- of the University of Budapest. A brilliant exponent of the mysteries of the human mind, he not only explains but demonstrates and illustrates in a style that is at once as enter taining as well as informing. The Doctor will leave little doubt in the minds of even the most skeptic critics as to his electrify ing abilities at the conclusion of his two hour show. In a singularly unassuming manner of speech and demeanor, Polgar brings to the stage , one of the most unusual programs ever performed any where. Student Entertainment Com mittee presentations are made possible by yearly appropriations from tiia Student Legislature and airmneo Student council is made to in clude a graduate student (since the student council has constitu tional authority-over the Law and Medical courts, they should have representation) and finally, the section of the student constitution on offenses and punishments is reworded and put into plain lan guage. ; . "The amendment is a long need ed clarification of the procedural structure of our Honor System and should merit .the close at tention of all students. It will ap- j pear on a special ballot in the general election. rT APRIL 8, 1952 NUMBER 141 ton e from using their political, econ omic, and legal power to secure equal rights . . ." . Lee-told The Daily Tar Heel in a statement: "I -did not understand that the issue of discrimination or non discrimination at UNC was in any (See STUDENT, Page 6) 1 DR. FRANZ J. POLGAR regular student block fees paid during registration. Memorial i Hall doors will open at 7:00 p. m., when all University students will be admitted free. Admission to townspeople and . all others will be at 7:40 p. m. for. $1.00, includ ing tax. ' ; ; Da ily Tar Heel The Daily Tar Heel staff wiU meet at 2 p. m. today in Roland Parker loungenumber three of ; Graham Memorial, i All persons now associated with Ihe paper are requested to attend. - . Staff members unable to be there should notify Managing Editor David Buckner, or iha . DTH, office, prior to tb.2 meet-. ing. ' , '"..'" '

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