aTHER sin, .nd coo! today. E Ll CT I O V. The editors look at the begin nings of the 19S5 presidential cam paign. See pa-s 2. 1 , m N'O. 5S Compete CT) Wire Serrtct CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955 Offices In Graham Memorial fOUn PAGES THIS IZZUl . 1 n ; rws r r - v w n n ' A A I V ' 21 fml f', II j S via ILL 1 jsa .rf1 u Mir wore no'uiauw..-, on moo astir )ff ELECTIONS TODAY: me F ill vote in runoff cam y for a class officer pouncil seats. ;S ia the elections are i i class president: Oli Alphin (Independent), cslUP). cat on Men's Honor jve Connor (Selections irsed), Marion Griffin Board). re seat on Men's Honor Charles Ashford, Ned 'elections Board). seat on Men's Honor jcky Hester, Jim Long I Board). ,.ts on Women's Honor li candidates for these jbeen endorsed by the Board. They are Misses ber, Nancy Ford, Nan Jen, Pat McQueen, Mar hon and Jo Ruffin. U open at 8 a. m. and p. in. Polls will be lo ill men's and women's i Cerrard Hall, Lenoir f.ebutt, Victory Villase j big Fraternity, little Court and the Alpha i house. s of men's and women's I districts Till vote in :rtive dormitorM'.s or in fl Residents of Men's rict 2 may also vote in Utfle Fraternity Courts, of Men's Town District Thanksgiving holi-1 r foreign students, ac-1 by Mr., and Mrs. Les-j vrill vi lit western ? ma and East Tenncs- 1 1 Ul purpose of the visit j the Tennessee Valley j but the students will ac sightseeing on the ! j'edneday the group will I Ashcville where ,they ;f the Biltmorc Estate, j Vandcrbilt home. Next ! tove through the Smo- Cherokee Indian Reser- will tour the village, training center. vilIc the students will p YMCA, but on Thurs iversity of Tennessee for them to be guests .bocs for the Thanks )' dinner. '11 conduct discus- S SLATE , ig tT craham ' for dy Include: Committee, 3-4 I Room Debate Squad, i Gri' Room; Sound 4-6 Pm-r Roland 1 j " ' na ii; Chess , u-3! P.m., Roland CMAB Rec it 4-5 "p-m., Conf"'ence Room; lentil, 4-5 p.m., Section, Board, Room, Rendez- 1 and Ta..:. 'HI IWII all si rosn kyexy, nor councilor 3 and Women's Town District may also vote at the ATO house. , According to the elections law, the composition of the Men's Town Districts (men not living in Uni versity owned buildings) are as ! follows: . Men's Town District 1 is com posed of "all men students living in the southern section of Chapel Hill, bounded by Cameron Ave. and imaginary extension to the Chapel Hill city limits." It includes "stu dents living in the outlying sec tions and cities which lie in this general direction." Men's Town District 2 is com posed of "all. men students living in the rectangle bounded by West Cameron Ave., South Columbia St., West Franklin St. and Mill Road." . Men's Town District 3 is com posed of "all other men students." According to the elections law, "No campaign literature of any type shall be permitted within a ! radius of 50 feet of the ballot boxes. No person shall endeavor to advance the interest of any can didate within 50 feet of the poll ing places. No person shall station any sound mechanism for the pur pose of advancing the interest "of ! any candidate within hearing dis tance of any polling place." j The elections law also states. tion, such as the distribution of sample cigarets, pamphlets, etc., wi thin 50 feet of the polls." ign Students Will iday In i enn., N.-C' sions, show films, and take the foreign students to some of its dams on Friday. On ' the last day of the trip the group is going to Oak Ridge to visit the Atomic Mu seum. The students making the excur sion are Dr. Yong Lee, Korea; Dr. Prakarsna Chaovanap'richa, Thai land; Dr. Lakshmanan Neelakan tan. India; and Dr. Kyohide Saki, Japan. Choral Club Sets Concert At 8 Tonight Dr. Joel Carter of the Dept. of r Music will direct a program 01 vocal and instrumental music at Hill Hall tonight at C o'clock. The program is being 1 presented by the Chapel Hill Choral Club, assisted by instrumentalists Mary Gray Clarke, Donad Pease, Sue Ho nakcr and Maurine Synan. This wil be the first appearance for the choral group during the pres ent season. Sponsored by the Music Dept. as one" of the Tuesday Evening Con certs, the program will feature Handel's "Utrecht Juoilate." Vocal soloists with the chorus will in clude Betty Jo Farrington mezzo soprano, and Robert Mintser, bass. " Instrumentalists accompanying the work are Donald Pe&sc, harp sichord, Maurine Synan, piano, and Mary Gray Clarke, 'cello. Other works on Tuesday's pro gram are "God of all Nations," for double chorus by Leisring-Glarum, and "Sonata in A. Major;' for vio loncello and harpsichord by Vis conti. i - : .-: 5 f News Bureau Staffer Barry Clark, sophomore from Charlotte, has be'en named stu dent chief of the television and radio section of the UNC News Bureau. His appointment is the first of students working for the news organization on a voluntary basis. Clark plans to make a ca reer of communications. Dixie Classics Queen Gontesih Slated Here The Monogram'. Club will pick one photograph of V girl on cam pus and submit it as a candidate for Queen of the 1955 Dixie Classic, All organizations have been ask ed to submit as many girls' photos as they 'like to .Jerry Vayda at 221 Cobb Dormitory by Nov. 23 so they may be considered in the contest. The winner will be selected sole ly on the merits of her photo. The queen will present trophies to the Classics winning team and runner-up, and will receive all of her expenses to the tournament. English Club Panel Talk Is On Poet Dylan Thomas "A Refusal to Mourn the Death,-by Fire, of a Child in London" will be the sub ject of a panel discussion tonight at 7:30 in 103 Bingham Hall. The discussion is being presented by the English Club. Moderator will be John Weston, graduate student and instructor in English. The panel will consist of Samule Coval, graduate student in Philos ophy; Ralph Dennis, poetry editor of 'The Carolina Quarterly;" Ben Wilson, graduate student and in structor in English and John Ma- f honey, graduate student in com parative literature and instructor in English. The public has been- invited to attend the event, and refreshments will be served. COVERING The Campus CANTERBURY CLUB Episcopal Canterbury Club will meet tonight for supper, worship and discussion. "What the Bible Means to Our Lives" will be the topic. Prayer serviced will be held at 5:30, followed by supper. At 6:45 p.m., the students will start discussion. Meetings are held ia the chapel and parish house. DEBATE SQUAD The Debate Squad will 'meet to day for practice debate in Graham Memorial's Grail Room.! The meet ing is set for 4 p.m. Officials said yesterday an important announce ment will be made at today's meet ing, and all members; should be present. (More on Page 4.) ainiipys Sees No '.'Crisis But Finds 3 M Dean of Student Affairs Fred Weaver called some 30 stu dent leaders together yesterday and. pointed to the need for more student initiative in the administration of campus jus tice. ; Weaver made it clear that he felt no impending "crisis" In the student court operation. Butf - r at the same time he understood three trends "that make it al most justifiable to say that the self in self-government is the paid staff of the University." The trends were: 1. Introduction of the Faculty Council and Administration into the judicial process before stu dent action had been completed. 2. Tendency to take cases direct ly to the faculty rather than to student courts. ' 3. The- lagging effectiveness of student initiative in the adminis tration of campus justice. NO INDICTMENT "I'm not making an indictment of student government," the dean of student affairs declared, "but I think this problem needs our attention." Weaver called the Honor Sys tem "the heart of student govern ment" that extends beyond the classroom! to all student actvities. He said the purpose of the meet ing was to bring students and the administration together for mutual aid in the problem. He cited . the Army Man Speaks Here .Ton Business-Research Peregrine 'White,1 of the Army's: Office of Ordnance Resarch, plac ed' emphasis bn the relationship be tween business and research in a meeting here recently. Speaking to Delta Sigma Pi pro fessional business fraternity, White spoke on "The Importance of In formation in Business." BEST SELLERS Last week's Dest-sellers in the Bull's Head Bookshop were Mac Kinlay Kantor's Andersonville in the fiction field, and John Gun ther's Inside Africa in the non-fiction department. MUS1CALIST SAXON'S VOICE: P In ute By MARY ACKERMAN Coloratura soprano Jan Saxon, a UNC student singer and ac tress, did credit to herself and her University Sunday night with a fine performance. Accompani ed by her instructor Walter Golde, Miss Saxon performed the fourth Petite Musicale of the fall in the main lounge of Graham Memorial. Miss Saxon's voice was beauti fully pure in tone and sweetly expressive. Delicate, sensitive and warm, her singing captured the attention and appreciative sympathy of her audience. The singer's .performance of two Loewe selections is es pecially notable. The soprano caught the fiery spirit and gaiety of the "Canzonetta" and "Nie mand Hat's Gesehen," winning bursts of applause from her en thusiastic audience. In a selection from Donizette's "Don Fasquale," Miss Saxon dis played professional technique and skill. Combining a depth of feeling with accurate precision, she executed the high treble ca denzas and octave trills with me morable excellence. RICH LAUGHTER , Ihe coloratura soprano gave her finest performance of the even ing when she sang "Adele's j Laughing Song" from Strauss' j "Die Fledermaus." The passages vi liuu xaugnier ana tne overall vivacity and vibrance of the song were finely and sensitively por Juste ajor Trends "confusion as to jurisdiction" in student courtsrwhich, he said, "may give rise to confusion about where initiative should lie." N . Backng up his outline of recent student court trends, Weaver said no case was appealed to the facul ty for 15 years, and hat about as many have been appealed in the last two or three years as were in the first 25 or 30 years. Several student leaders suggest ed the need, for more meetings to discuss the problem. Di, Phi To Talk Rights And Religion - - -. - The Philanthropic Assembly yill debate a bill calling 'for the group to go on record as opposing any attempts to deny citizens the rights contained in the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Assembly will meet on the fourth floor of ! New East at . 8 o'clock. AH members -and guests have been invited ' to attend W Jotyn Curtis, speaker of the.Phj. RELIGION IN DI , t " - "Resolved that organized reli gion is a form of tyranny over the mind of man" will be the resolu tion for debate jri th eDialectic Senate tonight. - The group will meet at 8 o'clock on the third floor of New West. Proponents of the bill are ex pected to argue that most of the present religions do not serve the true religious nature of man, while opponents are expected to argue that the present forms of religion, though not perfect, are man's best hope for saving the world. one trayed. Recalled by generous applause for two encores, Miss Saxon sang "A Heart That's Free" and a se lection of Granados. As a whole the program did not seem chosen to effectively display the singer's technique and ability. The latter half, in cluding selections by Hahn, Liszt, and Saint-Saems, presented more opportunity for a variety of dra matic expression at which Miss Saxon is particularly adept. Though flexible in expression and well-trained, Miss Saxon's voice lacks volume and fullness. Her performance was nicely ad equate for the main lounge of GM. She possesses an informal friendliness that transmitted it self successfully to' the compact audience. Miss Saxon has been studying under Dr. Walter Golde of the UNC Music Dept. for the past three years and will conclude her courses in June, 1956. Before coming to UNC, she attended the University, of Michigan and changed her major from music to dramatic arts. "I want to go into opera," Miss Saxon says, "Though I loVe V sing anything, from pops to classical." According to the sing er, this was the second formal concert she has ever given. Last year at UNC, Miss Saxon took roles in the Music Dept. productions of the "Marriage of Figaro" and "The Telephone." T ESPECIALLY ON FOOTBALL WEEKENDS: U.rsi vrsity s Stri By CHARLES DUNN If you are one of the ; many students . at Carolina who has trouble finding a parking place for your car,"what you need is an airplane. , ' . "If I can't find a place for my car, I surely couldn't find a place big enough to park a plane," you retort. , : But you are wrong.. The Uni versity does have an airport.-It is the Horace Williams Airport and it is located at the end of the Airport Rd., to the north of Chapel Hill. And it is a large : airport, too. In fact, it is rumored to be the largest grass airport in the country.- ---v-:..-..V , At present there are 13 planes based on the airport, and all of ,- these are , owned by private pilots who' fly either for busi ness or pleasureThis year there are no student planes at the air port, but ocassionally a student Beat D'ook Include The annual "Beat -Dook Float Parade" it beginning ' ;fo take shape, according to Dan Clark, chairman of the event which Ts sponsored each year by Pi Kappa Alpha. . V . He said many entries for floats and queens have been made and Romulo I o Talk Here In March Carlos P. Romulo, former United Nations -General Assembly presi dent, h(, been invited to deliver the annual Weil Lectures in March, according to Prof. Alexander Heard of the Dept. of Political Science. Heard is chairman of the Faculty Committee on Established Lectures. Romulo at one time was in the Philipines presidential race. He " - " ran against President Ra mon Magsaysay, but later drop ped out of the race and be came Magsay say's campaign manager. Romulo is au thor of The Un OS ROMULO ited, published in 1951. He is also a statesman, poet, speaker and one time newspaperman. ' Speaking in Charlotte last week, he said he, would like to "come to deliver t h e Weil Lectures and that if he did, he would speak on Bandung, the site of the first all Asian conference. V Romulo said Bandung was a . very important meeting that almost no body fully understands. He is pre sently working on a book on the subjectl ' J Prof. Heard said Romulo had been invited, but no definite reply has yet been received,- ; -;: t ' t' ' ' AIRPLANES IN HORACE WILLIAMS AIRPORT ... attendants remember the Texas game of '48 ips:Ma'hy-PIanes will bring a plane up for a. week end ' : . ; ''." ' ' .' CUSTODIANS ; C. L. (Mr. Charlie) Martindale and Max Green are now the cus todians of the airport. They take care of the planes that are kept there and offer whatever assis tance they can to the- many planes that drop in for fuel, or for a visit to the town and Uni versity. . v - ' Green, who has been in the Air Force, is a student here and is majoring in English. He " is from - Asheville. Mr. Charlie, a first class -4nechanic in World War I, lives out on the Durham Rd., and has been working at Qie " airport for about -12 years. Mr. Charlie works in the mprnihgs, and Green takes over. when he gets out of class and works un til , sunset or until all of the planes are in. . , . ' . he airport is ' busiest on foot- , Festivities Queer?, loafs more are expected before Wed nesday, the deadline for, entries in either contest. The parade: will start through the campus and the Chapel Hill business district at 3 p.m. on Fri day, Dec. 2. The floats will be judged at 2;30 p. m. on the same day at Woollen Gym by Miss Mar tha Decker, assistant director of women's student . activities'; Cro wd! Little, president of the Chap el Hill Merchants' Asso., and Sam McGill, director of student, affairs. .A trophy ' will be awarded for the best float in each of the four divisions: Fraternities, men's dor mtories, sororities and women's dormitories. The trophies are on display beside the cashier's counter in the . YMCA building. Besides the floats, , the Chapel Hill High School Band, the Negro Chapel Hill High School Band, the University Band, the Naval Crack .Drill Team, Color Guard, Drum and Bugle Corps and many stu dent clowns will be in the parade. The queen and, her court will ride on the PiKA float, said Clark. Charman Clark urges all organi zations on campus to participate in the event and to send entries 'for either contest to him at the PiKA house by tomorrow. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the University In firmary .yesterday included: Mrs. Jewel Ferree, Miss Betty Ann Eames, Roland W. Batten, Jack F. Turner, John M. McAllis ter, Walter P. Wright, James F. Valentine, David M. Stanton, Wil liam R. King Jr.Jehn C. Smitlv James W. Lewis, James R. Ra per and Emmett J. Fulghym. Powledgc Photo ball weekends. An average of 20 out-of-town visitors fly in for some of the home football games. For the Oklahoma game there were 24 visiting planes, including six from Oklahoma. BIGGEST - But the big game, at least from the standpoint of the staff at the airport, was the Carolina-Texas game in 1948. There were 97 visiting planes on the field for that game, and many of them were from Texas. Mr. Charlie re calls that he was "putting them away on the average of two a minute, and then they were eight deep in the landing pal tern at times." Most of these planes contained Texans complete with "thoe big hats, and tailored cowboy suits." And, as Mr. 'Charlie re calls, the Texans were in a bet ting mood, often betting at 10 to 1 odds. "If I had known Caro lina was going to win that game, I wouldn't be here now," Mr. Charlie said. 14 YEARS OLD The airport was built in 1511 on around 600 acres of land, most of which was donated by the late Horace Williams, profes sor at the University. It was built by the Work Projects Adminis tration (WPA). During the war around 22 planes were housed on the field, many of which were used in training programs here and at Duke University. No matter how much air travel picks up in the next several years, the University airport is well fixed for space. The three runways are all over 4,300 feet in length, (one is 5,000 feet long), and there is plenty of space to park aircraft. But if business gets too good, there is going to be a great need for hangers. The present hanger holds about nine planes, and there is a small hanger that can hold one plane. Fire Dept. Had Point To Hazard Electricians were checking and repairing the wiring system of the Pi Beta Phi Sorority house on the day it caught fire, it was learned yesterday. A small fire started in the house, located on the corner of Hills boro and Rosemary Streets, last Friday night. According to Fire Chief J. S. Boone, all the outlets had bcci cleared by electricians except the one which allegedly started Ihe blaze. It was to be removed whm the new annex to the house is finished, he added. Electricians were called after a lire Dept. inspection resulted ia a letter from the fire chief on Oct. 24, informing the sorority there was a possible fire hazard.