atHer fjj fUv1nV'-- orf ' Ai-, rr -
Ii ' V I B B I 3 I T.y EB S 1 9 f t E S 8 3 i a 4 i ri Ein i a f 1
y, NO- y w
TESTS
The editors view the Univer
sity's new admission tests policy
on page 2.
Complete VP) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956
Offices In Graham Memorial
FOUR PACES THIS ItZVZ
fl TO 932: "
yusLiUW L-m.jJ bLAAb b a Li 4 U bJ LLU U TOt)j .....
i! UNC s rirst Recall Vote (IC -. .., - v i
. . ' III Fails; . Write-in Ballots . - 'HSWr !.-
Editors Louis Kraar and Ed Yoder of The Daily Tar I Icel were reelected in yester
day's recall election. ;
The two editors yere. victorious over their opponent, Lewis Brumlieldby over 8oo
votes. The final tabulation was 1,777 for Kraar arK Yoder, ggs for Brumfield. Bob Rat
cliff received 122 write-in votes, f
Kraar and Yoder received a &84-504 margin from the men's dormitories with Rat
cliff getting 69. They received anf I ' ' .,
Police Asked To
K
V;
5-
Iw-wiMfr
COEDS VOTE IN YESTERDAY'S RECALL ELECTION
. . . editorial election brought out votes.
Henley Photo
1 fj
3 RECALL MOVEMENT:
UdExpI
oins Any
i!
Emoo
rrassmen
i J CHARLIE JOHNSON
: J "a Dave Reid gave an
l i - "for any embarrass
j U may have caused the
! I j'irty in the recall issue
J I J of SP members Mon-
; f i. -
s
' 12 old SP member and
"legislator for the party.
wished to "make his
ear" as to his "alledged
sn" in The Daily Tar
I recall election yes-
ither Ballentine, mem
I Rinnan, addressed the
-e importance of per
, & in securing member-
'Mress was part of the
scheduled program.
y reports were also
j ! e resignation of Miss
! P'erce as secretary was
A new secretary will
in the next meeting, ac
; Chairman Norwood
er was elected to re
4?Laughinghouse in the
3slature from Dorm
zi Roy Taylor was elect-
publicans Open
-ship Drive Today
il?cpublican club wil1
1 ;--bership drive starting
nd Publicity Chair
j'' agleton.
V"p cards can be pur
tm Thursday from 9
jfPN., he said.
,7hs will be located at
.j 10 LcnoLr Hall,
bcrship cards may
J? at haf Price for a
SaiH c: i-
SLATE
cd to replace Dob Harrington
frojn Dorm Men's II. Roy Long
was named by acclamation to re
place G. C. Pridgen from Dorm
Men's III. I
Reid supported Don Fowler for
the SP nomination for student
body president last spring. The
SP, however, gave the nomination
to Manning Muntzing.. Reid then
supported Fowler on an indepen
dent ticket. Fowler was . elected in
a run-off election and appointed
Reid as his attorney general.
Reid said he helped E. L. (Jun
ior) Nance draw up the recall peti
tions, but he denied influencing
Nance to start them. He also said
he did sign the recall petitions.
Reid said he helped Nance draw
I up the petitions because he felt
"it was his duty as attorney gen
eral." He said he would do .the
same thing if someone asked hinj
to help draw up a petition to re
call President Fowler.
"If the charges (that he in
fluenced the starting of the recall
petitions) have embarrassed the
party, I'm sorry " he said. He told
party members the charges didn't
bother him. He said the charges
indicate that something was be
ing done, and that was a "good
sign" to him.
"The charges are based on false
conclusions," he said. '
Reid then discussed the charges
against kirn of signing the petition
nominating Lewis Brumfeld for
the recall election. "I have never
refused to sign a petition for any
one
Morse 1 o
.',...' ' ' ;
Talk On
"Th'ursoay''
Wayne M or s e, Democratic
Senator from Oregon, will ipeak
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Hall Hall.
He will be introduced by Bob
Young, president of; GMAB. His
appearance is sponsored by The
Carolina Forum.
Morse, who left the Republi
can Party and joined the Demo
cratic Party in 1954, was dean
of the law school at the Univer
sity of Oregon in the 1930's.
From 1942 to 1944 he served on
the War Labor Board with for
mer UNC President Frank Gra
ham. When he resigned he was
praised by President Franklin
Roosevelt for his valuable serv
(See MORSE, page 4.)
overwhelming majority from the
women's dormitories, 342-50, with
10 for Ratcliff.
Victory Village returns showed
63 for Kraar and Yoder, 43 for
Brumfield, and 13 for Ratcliff.
Big fraternity court gave their
vote to Brumfield, 42-29, with 3
for Ratcliff. Little fraternity
court did likewise, . giving Brum
field a margin of 30-10, with Rat
cliff receiving 7.
Voters in Alpha Tau Omega
turned in a smashing 74-15 'vote
in favor of Kraar and Yoder with
Ratcliff polling 5.
Gerrard Hall voters favored
Kraar and Yoder, 199-42, with
Ratcliff receiving 2. Lenoir Hall
turned in a vote of 200-76 for
the two editors, with Ratcliff get
ting 9. i.; '
The Scuttlebutt vote favored
the editors, 166-127, with 3 for
Ratcliff.
Concerning the ; election, both
editors isued statements.
Kraar ,aid: .
"The students have reaffirmed
the Carolina tradition for free
dom from conformity of thought.
Those demagogues who would use
this paper for a political tool have
been crushed. And I am proud
the students themselves did it.
We will go on writing to the
best of our convictions and con
tinue inviting the campus to dis
agree with us."
Yoder said:
"I guess it has been proved
that you can't fool all the stu
dents all the time. Two factions
have been repudiated by the stu
dents: the political tail-twisters
and the alarmists who thought
the students wanted a colorless
Daily Tar Heel.'
Brumfield could not be reached
for comment."
Search For Papers
Town police were searching for eographed statement appeared
approximately 2,500 missing, awig students to "Write In Rat-
newspapers last night as the
smoke cleared from a last-minute
recall election move.
The newspapers, Tuesday morn
ing 1 editions of The Daily Tar
Heel, were reported missing or
stolen after delivery men ended
their early-morning routes yester
day.: The Daily Tar Heel, however,
put out 2,500 copies in a noon-hour
extra edition yesterday.
Here's how the missing papers
fit into the election picture:
Monday evening the eve of the
recall election an unsigned, mim-
Women's
ositions
Now Open
cliff" vote for Bob Ratcliff as
the newspaper's editor. Ratcliff
had previously dropped out . of
the editorial race, leaving present
Editors Louis Kraar and Ed Yoder
and candidate Lewis Brumfield in
the running.
The statement charged the pres
ent editors "have attacked every
thing on campus," and called
Brumfield "an obvious last-minute
desperation candidate who is con
sidered to be unqualified by many
of the students."
Joseph Crews, senior from Wil
mington, ordered the mimeograph
ing job done, according to the Uni
versity Duplication Dept.
- Late Monday night, after the
mimeographed statement had been
circulated, Bob Ratcliff ;' issued a
statement j that he was in no way
connected with the movement. His
remarks were published in1 The
Daily Tar Heel for Tuesday morn
ing's paper. - .. '
EDITORS YODER AND KRAAR
students expressed their opinions yesterday
SUCCESSOR TO GRAY:
P
1
idenf iai G
M
TB
vv r-
RALEIGH, Feb. 14 (JP) A Bryant, meanwhile, said his
statement issued by the Univer- committee would meet in the next
Executive Committee yesterday few days to begin its job of nar-
Phi
T0ay include:
A,Ph ReceDtion.
3; PanVilll. r
uoom; UP Member-
j. j" "1" Roland Parker
Vh. h'8 Witnesses,
Sod,, r rKer Lounge
Comni'"ee, 4:30-6
R
eston, Bunche, Mays
Added To March List
Students reported Tuesday
The positions of 'chairman o(mormnS at meir papers ma not .
f A 1 1 1. 1 A. t 1 it- I iftV
women's ' orientation and the ' arrive" clHX& sn-owea mey naa
chairman of leadership training been delivered, and they were evi
have not been filled yet, accord- denly renioved rom their distri
ing to Miss Susan Fink, chairman butl0n points,
of the women's residence council. I The extra edition. which reach'
Any coed interested in either ed students eating lunch yester
job may look at the files in the day, told the story of the missing
Council Room of Graham Memor- papers and explained Ratcliff's
ioi f o statement that was not a write-in
to 4 p.m. Application blanks may
be filled out there.
sity of North Carolina Trustees'
was "intended to lay at rest talk"
of deconsolidating the Univer-
The chairman of women's
candidate.
Ratcliff's
statement was also
mimeographed late Monday night
i Six speakers of an "all-star"
cast of eleven prominent figures in
human relationships were an
nounced here yesterday as ar
rangements for the Carolina Sym
posium on Public Affairs, March
11-16, were revealed.
The six are: James B. (Scotty)
Reston of the New' York Times;
Carlos P. Romulo, Ambassador to
the U. 'S. from the Philippines; Dr. ;
orientation must be a junior. She and early Tuesday morning, and
will plan the orientation of all distributed around the campus. Its
new women students in the fall, distributors reported many copies
This is a position where imagi- of the statement were also mysten-
nation and ability to organize and ouy missmg-
get work done is needed, accord- J Dai Tar "fel has askfed
! ing to Miss Fink. ! Lne naPei "U1 ruilte ue- w
The chairman of leadership an investigation ot tne missing
training must be a senior coed, newspapers, and has announced it
will prosecute the offender if he
(See JOBS, page 4.) is found.
Gov. Hodges said this today
when asked for comment on the
Executive Committee's statement.
The statement "meant to say"
that the State Board of Higher
Education "will correlate activi
ties" of the state's higher educa
tion institutions "as now consti
tuted,' the Governor said.
Meanwhile, it was learned the
Trustees' Executive Committee re
quested the Governor, to name a
rowing down a long list of can
didates for University president.
He said suggestions had been re
ceived from University trustees
and other sources.
Billiards
Finals Set
At 4 P.M.
The finals of the Assn. of Col
cnoni'il fnmmittpp whirh ' would
"F'-""' - , - TT T. n;i
confer both with the Board of , lege unions, m-ou, " "
Higher Education and a commit- Hards Tournament will be held
tee named to recommend a new j today at 4 p.m. in the Graham
University president. Memorial Billiaras Room.
a r.nofnnr M virtnr Rrv-I Three finalists remain for the
ant, chairman of the nominating final round after preliminary play
committee, wanted "a clear de
lineation" of the relationship be-
Ralph Bunche of the United Na
tions; Maj. L. P. McLendon, a
member of the N. C. Board of
to get their name on a ballot Higner Education; Dr. Frank P.
Graham oi tne unuea ixauuns, aim
" ax -
"ans com-
IS au
y. 111. W
Room; S.K.E.,
Woodhouse Confer-
l Ceramcs Class,
,nd 7;30.9:30 p.m.,
for any office," he said
Reid was then asked who ap
proached him to sign the petition
nominating Brumfield. He said he
wasn't sure who handed him the
petition, but he signed it and re
quested other students to sign it.
"because he felt Brumfield had
a right xto run for editor."
UNC Scientist To Speak
On Solar Eclipse Trip
Dr. Morris Davis, UNC profes
sor, will speak tonight upon his
trip to Thailand this past Decem
ber for obserVing the solar eclipse.
Dr. Davis' talk will be held at
8 p m. in the Faculty Loung e of
the Morehead Planetarium. It wU
be sponsored jointly by the Chapel
Hill Astronomy Club and the UNC
Benjamin Mays, president of More
house College in Atlanta, Ga.
The other five members of the
symposium will be announced
within a few days, it was announc
ed by Manning . Muntzing, chair
man. ,
Romulo, who will deliver the
Weil - Lectures (which are com
bined with the Symposium) has as
his central topic, "American Citi
zenship." Reston, who heads the Washing
ton Bureau of the New York
Times and is an authority on in
ternational diplomacy, will spe3k
on the general area of world prob
lems. '
Dr. Ralph Bunche, UN mediator,
will discuss 'Colonialism."
Dr. Mays will devote his speech
to "Old Problems in the New
South."
- (See SYMPOSWMf VQe 4 )
s I
- s - r - i
i J '
- " 'J
Kit I ' ' . ;
- ; " ' - !
. . - .,. 1 ..... . ........
' I
tween the University president
and the Board of Higher Educa
tion. -
In its statement yesterday, the
Trustees Executive Committee
said the University has problems
which the Board of Higher Edu
cation "is not familiar with nor
is it able to handle such prob
lems." The Executive Committee also
urged Bryant's nominating com
mittee to make its recommenda
tions on a new University presi
dent "as expeditiously as seems
offs Friday and Monday after
noons. These players will receive
personalized cue sticks. The three
finalists are Bob Cashion, Don
Miller and Jay Collie.
Out of a possible score of 100,
Cashion scored 76, Miller scored
66 and Collie scored 66. Close be
hind the three finalists was Ralph
Foster with a score of 65-
The tournament is being held
under the direction of Dan Turner,
director of the GM Billiards Room.
The official judge is Bob Teague,
graduate student majoring in
. ! physical education'.
The' scores of the three finalists
will be sent to National Head-
, tt j . . t, . toU quarters to compete with 300 other
Gov. Hodges said Bryant felt H , j- 1 1 u- u
uu. o ; , , . college teams. The individual high
the nominating committee needed 1 to . , ,.
uu s scorer is eligible for one of five
10 Dc dUIc iu leu tauuiuan-s
A Real, Live Valentine
This is Miss Mary Hobbs Valentine, pretty Carolina namesake for the day when sweethearts ex-
changed token? of affection.
University president clearly just
what the relation between the
president and .the Board of High
er Education would be. -
Delta Upsilon Wins
Scholarship Award
North Carolina's chapter of
Delta Upsilon social fraternity has
been awarded the Philadelphia
Delta Upsilon Scholarship Cup for
the third successive time.
The cup is awarded on the basis
of the chapter's scholastic rating,
as. compared with other chapters
in the province. There are 12
chapters in the fraternity's third
province.
Carolina Alumni Tony Houghton
and Ed Vogel received the cup at
a banquet in Philadelphia Feb. 9.
The chapter here now has
(Henley Photo) permanent possession of the cup.
final positions throughout the
country, and, if selected, will be
awarded an expense paid trip to
East Lansing, Mich., to compete in
the face-to-face play-off for a na
tional collegiate billiards cham
pionship.
IN THE INFIRMARY
Students in the Infirmary yes
terday included:
Miss Mary G. Clarke, Miss
Frankie M. Junker, Miss Shirley
B. Collins, Christopher M. Douty,
William B. Akin Jr., James C.
McMahan, Benson R. Mangum,
Thomas B. Jackson Jr.. Jerry H.
Morriss, Ben G. Williams, Dawey
E. Johnson Jr., Lloyd M. Walter,
James W. Rose Jr., Richard V.
Jennings, William T. Rsece, An
drew J. Pollard and James
McCartney III.
Physics Club.