1 1 0 WEATHER Mostly funny and continued warm today with an expect high it 83. VOL. LVII NO. 141 L I Sal ronsra Calls College-Age Manpower 'Asset' "The tension on Quemoy, Matsu and Formosa," said Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R-Mass.) here last night, "reminds ns sharply that the military and reserve policies which we have been following are completely inadequate for our "present needs." The Republican Senator from to the University by the Carolina Forum, non - partisan Student Government agency. Joel Fleish man, Forum president, presided .Senator Saltonstall was intro duced by Dr. James King, asso ciate professor of history and so cial science. The veteran politician, who served 14 years in the Massachu setts House and as Commonwealth governor for three consecutiv terms, said in his opinion, th present military program must b. drastically overhauled at toj speed. IKE'S PLAN SOUND "The plan President Eisenhow er has recommended is sound in its fundamentals. Our job is U put it into effect," Saltonstall tolc his audience. "The Federal Gov ernment must do everything in its power to establish a crystal-clear sound" manpower policy . . . on that will meet our military serv ice and reserve needs while at the same time giving the country's young men a program on which they can rely as they try to plan their own future." Saltonstall's experience in the political realm places him on firm ground to discuss the military problems that face the United States today. His committee as signments include the chairman ship of the Appropriations, Re- j Dublican Policy, bman .Business and Armed Forces Committees. He is a veteran of World War I, four of his children have served in the Armed Forces, and one of his sons, Peter, was killed in ac tion while serving with the Ma rine Corps. -"Simultaneously, we must be as fair as possible to these young men whom we call upon to serve. Only a clear-cut military and re serve policy and program will . make it possible for them to plan their high school, college or working years in a way that makes sense for them personally while serving the nation's needs. A strong well-trained reserve is absolutely essential to our coun try's defense. Congress must see to its establishment and our peo ple throughout the United States must give us their full support in this endeavor." COLLEGE RESEARCH Senator Saltonstall emphasized the significance of the' research that is now being conducted in colleges under the auspices of both government and private business firms. He explained that while many of these programs were being carried out for our greater defense in time of emer gency. They also were being con ducted to help us in times of peace to improve our standard of living and the health and eco nomic security of all people, he said. ' "President Eisenhower's great speech before the United Nations in December of 1953, which has been since entitled his 'Atoms for Peace' plan, is a magnificent il lustration of just this objective. It is our job now to devote our selves and our resources to these ends: Maximum defense against potential aggressors at the least possible cost in blood and treas ure for ourselves, and a great of fensive through modern science toward greater security and im proved living standards for all our people." . Complete (JP) Wire Service it Term Massachusetts wa s brought Y Leaders Leave For Meeting Three student delegates and Irs. Kirs'ten Milbrath, director of he UNC YWCA, left Chapel Hill yesterday afternoon to spend four lays at the National Centennial Jonvention of Community and Student' YWCAs in New York 3ity. The convention, 20th of its kind, Segins today and will continue through next Wednesday. , Misses Marietta Everett, Nancy Whisnant and Joan Palmer will jrrive today, after an overnight ;tay in Washington, D. C, and will return to Chapel Hill on Sunday. During the convention, dele gates will hear addresses by well known speakers, and will wittness a dramatic presentation of YWCA history. They will also partici pate in discussion groups, wor ship services and group singing. Thp aririrpss at the nnpninff afternoon will be de- livered by Dr. Henry Steele Com mager, historian of Columbia University. Other speakers will Phi Wins Debate On Merits Of Mistresses By EBBA FREUND The Phi, speaking for the "na tural order" of the American wife system, won out over the Di, arguing for the continental wife mistress combination, in Tuesday night's annual Di-Phi debate. The Di claimed the combination system, in which a man has both wife and mistress, is "valuable to the liberal spirit." Senator Stan Shaw, speaking for the Dialectic combination wife-mistress system, said, "The continental wives like the wife mistress system," and the system is "valuable to the liberal spirit." Speaking for the Philanthropic Assembly, Roy Taylor upheld the "natural order" of the American system because "marriage is more than an erotic union." Jim Turner Di explaining the wife-mistress system, said "the mistress assumes the role of sex partner and confidante while the wife is the mother and official escort." Turner emphasized that the Di was not advocating free love or adultery. The wife-mistress system, asserted Turner, will alleviate " the frustration which grips the American people." Miss Pat McBane, arguing the negative for the Phi, based her argument on "social norms." Citing from sociolgy and marriage books, she brought out the fact that nearly every society has strict marriage regulations. FAMOUS MEN Larry McElroy (Di) listed Abra ham, Jacob, Solomon, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Thomas Jef en in 1 Tm !' M,k 'te i o r? 5DlfM s C.S ""X ' k ' - I ill : llSSllilf p WSetm A . X- ' f n - ' f ll 1 - V.r... I. ' Inn -mil m ,liilliii..n.iil...l i , .I.m,..i .. hi..,i. Valll,ii,iinlil.r,,ii.iMMiJ Show above are the students tapped last Monday into th" Order of the Golden Fleece and some of the Order's officers for the past year. Left to right, front row, are Walter Guriey, Goldsboro, Hy parches for the past year; Edwin Osborne Ayscue Jr., lHonroe; Ed ward Lex Potter, Wilmington; Raymond Mason Taylor, Washington; Gordon Forester Jr., Wilkesboro, and Charles Hill Yarborcugh Jr., Louisburg. Back row, left to right, are Richard Beverly Raney Webb, Greensboro; Ralph Martin Jordan II, Concord; Kollie Tillman Panty Raiders Face Trial In UNC Courts; Coeds Not Yet By DELAINE BRADSHER As a result of the panty raid Tuesday night eight boys have been booked by Chapel Hill po lice for unlawful assembly and in- ferson, Thaddeus Stevens, Grover Cleveland and Warren Harding as men who had mistresses. Emphasizing the "Golden Rule," Charlie Katzenstein (Phi) said the wife-mistress system in America could not support a mistress, He asked what would .become of either morally or economically, the "injured" parties illegiti mate children. . Citing the Kinsey report, Di member Bob Harrington said a "lot of women are cold." Bill Moore said the Di wanted to change the American wife system into "a stud-farm system." Harold Downing, also speaking for the Phi, asked, considering the almost even ration of men to women in this country, "where would we go for our mistresses? Import them from the Scandana vian countries?" GRAY WILL SPEAK: A week of celebration, includ ing a speech by President Gordon Gray, a blanket party and the second presentation by Sound and Fury, will mark the 23rd birth day of Graham Memorial Student Union next week. A blanket party at 8 p.m. Mon day on the lawn in front of GM will begin the week's activities. The party will feature a Negro combo playing v Dixieland and jazz. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, Students Tapped Into stigation of riot and will be tried by civil authorities. The boys will also be tried by Interdormitory Council Court or M.en's Honor Council. Girls who threw panties to the boys are not known but the mat ter is being turned over to the student government. The panty raid started in Lower Quad shortly before 11 p.m. Mc Iver women's dorm was the first stop for the mob of around 1,200. From Mclver the group went to Carr. ..Under The J ail house' We must stay calm" about f pantie raids," Brumfield, Inter- dormitory council president, told a gathering of dormitory presi dents yesterday. Brumfield stressed that he thought the raid might not have happened if the dormitories had not been experiencing a "lax" period in their social program. Brumfield attributed the lax period to the change of IDC ad ministrations, and to the lack of time for the new officials to get started in their work. The IDC is now starting an ex celerated social program, the president assured the group. GM Anniversary Next President Gordon Gray will speak on "The University and Its Responsibilities" at 8 p.m. Tues day in the main lounge of Gra ham Memorial. An informal dis cussion and reception will be held following President Gray's speech. At 9 p. m. Tuesday, Harvey, staring James Stewart and Peggy Dow, will be shown free of charge in Carroll Hall. A "wear-your-Bermuda-shorts- THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1955 Mm : if ifmy Golden Fleece Pol Jr., Lake Wales, Fla.; William Woodard McLendon, Greensboro; Richard Henry Baker Jr., Greensboro; Lewis Manning Muntzing, Moorefield, W. Va.; Ed win. Milton, Yoder, Mebane; Joei Fleishman, Fayetteville; Kenneth Melvin Pruitt, Winston-Salem; Carl Vernon Venters Jr., Jacksonville, and Paul R. Likins, Elkhart, Ind., Chry stopher for the past year. Also present, but not shown, were Horace E. Stacy, Lumberton, Jason for the past year, and L. R. Jordan, Smilhileld, Grammateus for the past year. The Police Dept. said yesterday names of the students booked would be released in a "day or two." Student Jim Turner said he, Don Fowler and Norwood Bryan went to the police station to get police to turn the students over to the Honor Council. Then the three went to Carr and got As sistant to the Dean of Student Affairs Ray Jefferies to help them, Turner said. Police turned the eight boys over to Jefferies after booking them. Brumfield said Tuesday night's raid started in the vicinity of Mangum Dormitory. As a possible solution to the raid rash, Brumfield suggested dormitory presidents break up any "congregations" and see that "no damage is done." "If any person is found pre meditating a raid, he will be put under the jailhouse," Brumfield assured the group. Regarding the eight dormitory residents who were arrested Tuesday night for "participating in mob violence," Brumfield said they faced possible expulsion from University residences for the rest of their college career. or - old - clothes - and - bring a - blanket" party and community sing are scheduled for 8 o'clock Wednesday night on the GM lawn. Music nd refreshments will be provided. In case of rain, the party will be held in the Student Un ion building. Sound and Fury's second pres entation of the year, Satan's Saints, will be sponsored by Graham Memorial on Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m. The presen Offices In Graham - iL-,1 v, J LJ LJ LJ n i ICIGS Town, Known Wednesday morning a meeting j was held with the following peo- pie present: Chief W. T. Sloan, Capt. W. D. Blake and Sgt. C. E. Durham of the city police; Roy Holsteon and Jefferies of the ad ministration; Manning Muntzing, Lewis Brumfield, Shelton Alex ander, Herb Browne and Don Fowler of student government. Muntzing issued the following statement about the meeting: "Representatives of student (See PANTIES, page 4) Profs To Talk About Lippmann Book Here WCUNC-TV's first round table discussion, t0 be televised Mon day at 9 p.m., will feature four University professors discussing Walter Lippmann's latest book, The Public Philosophy. The program will be sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha, national honorary political science fra ternity. The panel . will consist of Doc tors Alexander Heard (modera tor), William H. Poteat, James L. Godfrey and Lt. Col. Mark T. Orr. Dr. Heard said, "Mr. Lipp- Week tation will be in Memorial Hall, and admission will be 50 cents. The Eternal Mask, a GMAB Film Series movie, will be shown on Thursday at 9 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. The final event of Graham Memorial's "Birthday Week" will be an informal dance from 9 until midnight on Saturday. Jim Crisp and his 12 piece combo will play. The place will be announced later, said the GM spokesman. Memorial L V LJ lJ LJ n GDf Inade qu Smith Act Trial In Second Week GREENSBORO, April 20 Two UNC professors and a Chapel Hill pastor today pictured Junius Scales as "sincere but misguided" in his convictions as a Communist. - Professors Fletcher M. Green, chairman of the UNC His tory Dept., and Raymond W. Adams, acting head of the Eng lish s Dept., joined . Rev. Charles M. Jones, pastor of the Chapel Hill Community Church, in tab bing Scales as sincere but mis guided. Scales, 35-year-old confessed Communist, is on trial in Federal Court here for allegedly violat ing the Smith Act. . Professor Green said Scale? was one of his former students adding that he and his colleague.' at Carolina regarded him as 1 "sincere, honest, , but misguider young man." Professor Adam? and Reverend Jones echoed the same feelings. All three said they knew Scales casually from his studen days at Carolina. They said the; had never discussed Communis doctrines with Scales. GOVERNMENT RESTS CASE The trial, now nearing the half way ; point of its second week yesterday saw the governmen' rest its case after a week's testi mony by three witnesses, one be ing Charles B. Childs, UNC stu dent who joined the Communist' as an undercover agent for th FBI. . ' The defense also has issued subpoena for a Duke Universit' law professor, Dr. Douglas E Maggs. Maggs first came up ii the trial when a government wit ness said the Duke professor har expressed a willingness to help with the defense of Scales if he was ever arrested. Maggs later denied making such an offer of aid. In other testimony today, a Connecticut philosophy and physics professor gave the Scales jury a classroom' lecture on Marx ism and Leninism. Scales mother, Mrs. A. M. Scales, also testified today. mann's writings have been wide ly used for several decades by political scientists. Many students of contemporary American poli tics will disagree deeply, how ever, with the thesis of his latest book, The Public Philosophy, and with the assumptions that seem to. underlie it." Dr. Poteat, of the Dept. of Philosphy, was born and raised in China and has recently returned from two conferences abroad. Dr. Godfrey, Dept. of History is a specialist on the British Labor party movement and the .govern ment of Clement Atlee. He has published numerous articles in this country and abroad. Lt. Col. Orr, professor of Air Science, AFROTC, is a native of North Carolina. He received his Ph.D. degree from the University in political science. He was chief of the educational program in Japan under MacArthur. Dr. Heard, author of Two Party South, served with the State De partment in Ecuador and is on the faculty of the Dept. of Polit ical Science. At. present his is doing research on money in poli tics under & grant from the Edgar Stern Family Fund. The Round Table will be tele vised live from the studios, of WUNC-TV. BLOOMERS The . editors strip the panty problem and find an answer. See P. 2. FOUR PAGES TODAY r DR. RAYMOND ADAMS . acting English Dept. head DR. FLETCHER GREEN . . . History Dept. chairman Two Win Quarterly Recognition Ralph Dennis, freshman, an Miss Claire Russell, senior, have been announced as first and sec ond prize winners respectively in the Carolina Quarterly Fiction Contest. The winners were announced by Mrs. Doris Betts and John Ehle, judges. Dennis won first prize for his story entitled "Region of Inno cence." He has had poetry pub lished in the Virginia Quarterly Review and in Poetry Awards. Miss Russell, senior in radio and television, won second prize for her "Josie," a psychological portrayal of a little girl. She is at present working on a series of radio dramas for the State Board of Health. Honorable mention was award ed to Alexander Blackburn, Durham, for his story "Pale Arms and The Lover." Applications for the editorship of next year's Carolina Quarter ly are now being accepted by Miss Jessie Rehder, chairman of the Quarterly's Faculty Advisory Board, in Bingham Hall. Dunn also said that all those subscribers who have not paid their Quarterly bill within two week of today will not receive a copy of the third issue. 1 7Yf7 o n nu m rzn n n n rx i r ic ic a ... rrr 1 "' i-"l.'-4. ? " - f i , mX:l v. - ,. , t 11 -WW ' f I 1

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