Un-Ame Prob A A mean ers rgneir prov. Myers END i The editors look at the "quiet end" of a Carolina custom. See page 2. Rather . Complete ) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956 Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE pmsosi Has J -4 rulUy LvLUl; ii VNJ-aXi l IV IV IS' Iv 1 Ft V , : n't ' Been- MckmowBed aed: BrmmHeid ;ideor u 1 i for him would also jelling my soul to the titieians who currently is campus. if, i junior from Ral sd forking on The Daily ii-ee days before he ;;isan classes. He was biging editor for his ye3r, and was again lit position last year. .-itor of a weekly news ier of his freshman i now Chapel Hill cor- for The Raleigh Times xlo'.te News. He work er for the Chapel i Leader. ::i statement folows: i Brumfield is elected The Daily Tar Heel in .i2j recall election, I :sy position of manag- '.Brumfield, who has -al experience on the ! i ao newspaper exper- "er, would only serve sjthing that has been sjrove the newspaper iears. it continue to hold the -8 my soul to the cor :ar,s who currently campus." onight fity party will meet :"30 in Roland Parker 1 8 d 2, according to '4 Sabiston. -Sr Heel Editors Loins f u Yoder and Lewis -who will oppose the j ;l3rs in the recall elec I at the meeting to pre f nes concerning The I ad, he said. Changed ; for tonight's GM wvc been changed, . spokesman for the "Hi-. sponsor of the . 4 .r4 11! be shown in Car !. .P-m. this afternoon V!:ght at 10 p.m. "Pickup on I J starring Richard Peters. No ad i " charged !rfst from McGill i 5BiM: . "ua, will tures here on auspices of the ogy. 52iUTE "wt for G ra- 36.U wuy include:' .r Round Par- " Room; Student W,rn pm-' Wood H i7 Room'' Elec- W.. l"ni- Roland ,Hs 330, 1;GMAB i Unl 4t of Religion italic 1 Hebh. Recoil Movem Managing f. f . IVouc 'SeV Jot' He Stayed sing Editor Fred Powledge said yesterday lie would 5 "job if I-ewis Hrumfield is elected editor of The i Heel next Tuesday. tiijc told the paper's news staff he "could not con ydthe position of managing editor, or any other on the newspaper, under Ikinnfield. j-would be impossible," he said, "because the very ean Says Conformity Isn't Good By DON SEAVER . Dean of Student Affairs Fred H. Weaver declared in a written state ment 'yesterday that for The Daily Tar Heel editors to try to conform to student opinion would "remove a constructive influence in the Un- s iversity." ' "I certainly do not think the ed itors should be expected , to- con form to some abstraction called 'student opinion' , in their editori als," he said.. . :.. v.. He added, "This student body has managed for a long time to contain its differences while main taining the freedom to enjoy them and benefit from them in a most fundamental way." D ."sanaging editor, or any j a oa the newspaper, 1 "The Daily Tar Heel affair S a Seld. That would be student affair and it should be set- because the very act of tied in accordance with their own i him would also con-' procedures. However, in order to comply with the request of a Daily Tar Heel Reporter, I make this statement for whatever it is worth," he said. "In a lively student- body there are always students who espouse widely disparate points of view some popular, some unpopular." Green Says Age Of One World' Playwright Paul Green told the! sixth. annual Conference on World Affairs here yesterday that "mod ern man is living in what is indeed the age of one world and one co operative humanity." Green presented the closing ad dress for the day-long conference, which drew more than 450 persons to Carroll Hall. Included were re presentatives of all major women's organizations in the state, high school students and foreign stu dents who are studying in North Carolina colleges and universities. The morning's keynote address was given by Dr. Martha Brans combe, United Nations official, who discussed the importance of social and economic development in achi eving world peace. As the world shrinks itself into a neighborhood size, "we face the . .. . :,iotvtv ahead of. cnanenge iuucu.vvV learning to live as neighbors, ne said. The playwrtight, who recently returned from Asia on a world tour for the Rockefeller Foundation, de clared that this revolutionary age "is the time of jubilation and joy ous work. The opportunities for an abundant and inspiring living are ahead-there is no reason or room for pessimism and slothful dismay." ' , .. A Green warned that in the United States -some political and educa tional leaders are unable or un niin to see the meaning and mpmpnt of this revolutionary .. inrM back pro- Main Lounge. gress and continue Uieir wayward age, "iney wuu.u -A men Termed Nt Crusade, But 'Conspiracy )g Ed If or PowBedge To Quit Of Brumfield Wins Probers Call On Myers By FRED POWLEDGE A former UNC professor of ro mance languages says he has been subpoenaed to . appear at House Un-American Activities hearings next month. And, said Prof. John V. Myers now . a romance languages in structor at Campbell College "I shall reveal before this commi ttee neither my own political be liefs and associations nor those of anyone else." Prof. Myers, who won the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart i in World War II, in 1949 refused ' to sisn a faculty statement here denying communist affiliations. In 1949, Prof. Myers said he could not "offer under duress in formation concerning my affilia- tion with the state civic and other organizations. I cannot cooperate with the administration and its employment of the principle of 'guilt by association' to intimi- date" teachers holding Views con- trary to those of the trustees and attention to a state of lack of the legislature." ' energy and accomplishment . on The- committee hearings he' the part of the student govern said last night, will be held in Pent' said the statement. Charlotte on March 12. Purpose1 Four days later, says the state of the hearings is to consider al-' ment- President Fowler, in his leged Communistic activities in stale of tne Campus Address, North Carolina. 1 said' "If the editors continue to News of Prof. Myers subpoena fail in their responsibilities, then , to intimidate the Daily Tar Heel came in a letter from him,deliv- j they should be removed from reporters from reporting what ered yesterday to The Daily Tar office." goes on . . . ..Reid and Fowler Heel , 1 The speech, according to yes are gravely implicated in this re- He said in the letter; I today's release, is generally held call question in which they have "Political beliefs belong in the to have been written by Reid. j professed 'neutrality.' This issue realm of personal conviction and "Tnus. y the middle of Novem- concerns only their personal re conscience, and no governmental ber Reid and Fowler were venge against the editors," closed i!00 vnTiMFR. naaf 4 ) This Is adherence to old local shibboleths of superstition and prejudice," he said. Green stated "they, in their con fusion, are playing into the handa of Russian communism, by deny ing the very basic principle of our democratic philosophy to the ef fect that all men have a right to liberty and full opportunity of ci tizenship as becomes all human be ings." IN FIRE PREVENtlON: mage Charlie Sloan Following the. oil heater fire in Victory Village last month, the Fire Dept. was asked to conduct an inspection of the project, Fire Chief J.S. Boone has reported. ' ' . The final report of the in spection has not been released, but Boone and P.L. " Burch, Victory Village rental officer, have listed a few of their find ings. . . When asked if the nrs found many fire inspect hazards, Chief Boone said, "We found a few things. Stovepipes were the biggest problem." He ex plained that some of the flues leaked. Last month's fire was caused by soot which had collected in Four Student Leaders Present Recall Facts "The editor recall isn't a crusade; it is a political con spiracy," said a statement issued yesterday by four students who. have been active in campus activities for several years. Signing the statement were Bill Wolf, a history graduate student and former chairman of the Student Party; Ken Pruitt, a graduate student in the band president,; Miss Susan Fink, a senior majoring in History and chairman of the Woman's Resi dence Council, and Dick Baker, a senior and Rhodes Scholar. NECESSARY The ..statement was 'released since the signers thought it nec essary that the student body know certain facts about "this editor recall business." - "These facts speak for them selves, but we think that they say, specifically, that many stu- dents, sincerely interested in the problems oi general, and the University in in The Daily Tar Heel in particular, have been made dupes of." Listed in the two-page docu ment is a series of events in Lcnronoiicat order, showing .the incfcfents "leading to the election ' Tuesday. On Nov. 6,. in "A reporter ixi Dreamland , with President Don Fowler," one of the editors called mreaiening me eauors. Party Chairman Says SP For Yoder, Kraar The Student Party has an nounced its support for present Co-editors Louis Kraar" and Ed Yoder. In an official statement released by Chairman Norwood Bryan yes terday, the party disavowed itself from actions taken by "certain students, loosely identified with the SP, to oust the present edi tors." Bryan's statement in full reads: Kessaersts the flue and was ignited by the fire in the heater. According to Neill K. McMillan, tenant of the apartment in which the fire occured, the blazing soot then ignited a covering which had been built around the heat er by an earlier tenant. Boone commented that sev eral of the hazards found were constructed by tenants who had not asked the rental office's permission to make changes. In "many cases, said Boone, clotheslines were hung too close to the heaters. Another widespread condi tion found by the inspectors was the presence of extra wir ing or overloaded circuits. According to Boone, the in Chemistry Dept. and former rtn Tsn in TtQirM PuiI qclroH Stan Shaw about a candidate to run for editorship, in case a re call petition should happen to be presented," said the statement. The release next cited a story appearing in the . Jan. 10 Daily Tar Heel subheaded,' 'Attorney General Gives Coed Hotfoot,' in which an incident involving Reid at a Student Party meeting was reported. 'Within ive days the recall pe- tition was Mimeographed." Also mentioned in the paper is the fact that E.L. (Junior) Nance, who started the petition, lives in close proximity- to Reid and Lewis Brumfield in Cobb Dormitory. yhen Johnathan Daniels, Ra- leigh News and Observer editor, wrote an editorial strongly con- demning the recall, "Reid and Brumfield (not Nance, please note,) dnove over to Raleigh to straighten out the News and Ob- server," according to the state ment. "No other conclusions are pos sible except that the editors' re call is a political conspiracy to shut up the editors who have ob serveu Reid and Fowler fall, and tne statement "Last spring, after serious con sideration, the Student Party nom inated Louis Kraar and Ed Yoder for editors of The Daily Tar Heel Since that time, the SP has seen no reason to desert its candidates of last spring and does not pro pose to do so now. Until the Student Party finds some reason to withdraw its sup port and cooperation from the edi tors, , spectors started off by check ing every apartment, but,-since they found a large number of duplicate conditions, part of the inspection was carried out by simply spot-checking different apartments. A few fire escapes were blocked by oil drums, said Boone. Burch said the oil drums were placed there when tenants converted from coal to oil heat. He said the conversions were made at the expense of the ten ants, adding that the present tenants will not be charged for any alterations mavde to clear "the fire escapes. Burch said that Victory Vil-, lage employees followed the in spectors and made notes of con Cooperative District Four Set-Up HUHBBaaBMaMiia By NEIL BASS The Student. Legislature last night stamped approval on a bill making Victory Village a sepa rate electoral district. The measure was passed by an 11-vote majority 25 to 14. All of the negative ballots were cast by members of the University Party. The Village will become town men's IV and will have two Legis lature representatives. It was formerly a part jof town men's I.J Thus town men's I will lose two student legislators. Debate on the bill, introduced by Student Party Legislator Miss Pat McBane, went on for nearly an hour. - Other measures passed by the body were: CIX A bill appropriating $65 to the Women's Residence Council for printing purposes. , (2) A bill to insure order and stability in student government finances. . The principal protest the UP had against the Victory Village ii jf viimgc reapportionment bill seemed to be expressed by Floorleader Har-1 ry Braxton. Braxton said, "Only 60 out of 30O (residents from Vic- tory Village voted in the last election." Then Braxton asked the Legislature if it thought such "in- terest"- merited two legislative seats. Bob Homick (UP) said, "If they're 352 strong, they could elect a representative as the dis- tricts stand now if they wanted to." Miss McBane, intrdoucer, and the chairman of Victory Village's Board of Directors argued that the Village was a "distinct area" with "problems" not similar to the campus proper. Decision On Alcohol Is Individual' One A Presbyterian minister told Me thodist students here this week the question of alcohol "is an individ ual decision" which they must make "against the background" of their Christian experience. The Rev. Reid Montgomery, Pres byterian minister from Greensboro, ditions which could become fire hazards. He explained the ten ants will be notified, if they haven't been already, of dan gerous situations. Boone spoke favorably of the safety from fire in Victory Vil lage, commenting that the buil dings are "pretty well equip ped with fire extinguishers." He said the extinguishers lo cated in the buildings play a big part in putting out fires, adding that there were occas ions where fires were out when the Fire Dept. arrived, i "I think we've had mighty fine cooperation from the ten ants. Looking back over a per iod of time we find little dam age done by fire," said Burch. Last-Minute Candidate Tells Why He Entered The editors of The Daily Tar Heel "have not acknowl edged student opinion in a manner that would put it on an equal plane with their own opinions," said Lewis Brumfield yesterday. Brumfield, last-minute candidate for editorship of the pa per in Tuesday's reca-U election, yesterday released a state ment explaining why he is run ning for editor "Every time anyone criticizes the press," he says, "all the news papers rise up and cry, 'They're trying to take away freedom of the press.' I ask the students to please remember this: nobody says that the editors cannot say what they want to say. The ob jection I have is that they have j not acknowledged student opinion in a manner that would put it on an equal plane with their own opinions." Brumfield said "I am running for editor because I believe that the editor should do his best to try to give student views as prom inent a place in the newspaper as his own. Student opinion has been pulverized, rather than .stimulated,- by the vindictiveness of the present editors, "If the students themselves do not , represent student opinion, who will? Is . there any use for. us to gloss over student feelings to suit the faculty and adminis-1 ' , , ; m "My experience in newspaper work is limited, but I know that can do the job if the students .g've me their sanction. I will stay down there from noon to midnight to get out a good paper if I have . to. j "Chuck Hauser will really have a good time criticizing me. The i last night before election he can sneak around the campus putting : out leaflets saying l am uave Reid s stooge. . "I like a good fight, especially when my opponents are as respec table as Kraar and Yoder are. "Maybe this race will inject a little spirit into student affairs," he concluded. spoke to the "over 21" group at the University Methodist Church. He spoke on "The Christian's Re sponsibility Towards Alcohol." j Rev. Montgomery is a religious consultant at the Glenwood Park Sanatarium for Alcoholics. He told the student group alco hol constitutes "an individual de cision which he must make against the background of his Christian experience." He considered the problem of college students in relation to drinking a matter of the individu al's own ideals. "The body in which he lives is a temple of purification," Mont gomery continued. He discussed the ill effects of excessive alcohol as a drug upon the coordination and vision of a person who is un der its influence. A person who is insecure and "not rightly related to God" is apt to turn to alcohol, he said. Ten to 15 percent of all drinkers become alcoholics, and "when you cross the line you never know." Sixty to 65 percent of the cases are cured through the AAA be cause they are taught to live with out this harmful drug. "We must have a .new moral ity," he went on to say. "The only solution will be for people to drink in moderation or .be wise enough to leave it alone." CANDIDATE BRUMFIELD . . can do the job' Riggins Crowned Sweetheart Miss Eleanor Riggins, graduate student from Knoxville, Ky., was crowned the "Sweetheart of UNC Dorms" at the Interdormitory Council meeting Wednesday night. Miss Riggins, who edged o u t candidates nominated by most of the men's dormitories on campus, wa presented a dozen red roses and a loving cup by IDC Social Chairman Sonny Hallford. She was sponsored by Aycock Dormitory. The primary item of business settled by the council concerned the appropriation 'of IDC funds. Last semester, the council, in ac cord with an inauguration proposal by President Lewis Brumfield, ap propriated all of its $4,000 social fund to the individual dormitories. Two officials of the group pro posed to abolish this plan and re vert back to last year's apportion ment proposal which allocated the dormitories $2,000 and retained $2,000 for discretionary distribu tion by the central IDC social com mittee. The council killed the new pro posal and voted to retain last se mester's proposal by an overwhel ming majority. Thus the individual dormitories wjll again receive the full $4,000. According to President Brum field, the Council's Executive Com mittee is now working on revisions for dormitory regulations. Sucn revisions are to be announced sometime in the near future. IN tHE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Mrs. Ruby T. F. Batten, Miss Linda L. Blaney, Miss Caroline F. Hune, Miss Sallie S. Robeson, Miss Anne'F. Mehon, Miss Jane T. Stainback, Jasper H. Cheffon, Christopher M. Douty, Dell P. Lindley, Walter M. Hopper, Har ry H. Summerlin, Robert O. Boy ette, Aaron D. Graff, Robert A. Brand III. Paul R. Winslow, James G. Goad, Barney L. Rick enbacker Jr., Thomas B. Jackson Jr., Roland L. Mayberry, DonalJ L. Patterson and Andrew J. Pl lard.