EATHER AUTOS ' The editors' re-evaluation of th student Legislature's traffic law. Se pas 2. Lti hish of 55. a r :.-s.- CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 Office In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS JSSUS : " l lorn in V Q IT Of v, ... A - n r r uheare, author and , V'j speak to members Alpha, honorary jSace fraternity, to- v,are, who is Gladstone I J government and pub f.,;r!tion at the Univer- ' M will speak on the i -Is the British Common Bering Away?" : speak at 8 p.m. in the nib!y Room. attended Oxford iJtiUC t -jcs Scholar from Vic i -alia. Since then he has fa colonial history, ser La of University Col 'd, and has been con il advisor to the National a of Newfoundland. He f- a Rhodes trustee, a i tie British Broadcast advisory council and a i the Oxford city coun- i iithor of several books ' -sent Presently, Dr. I j a visiting professor at livcrsity, in connection onwealth studies. is March (7 Rosenbluth And DiNardo Fight For Rebound Lennie Rosenbluth (10) of North Carolina and Phil DiNardo (80) of N. C. State go up for a rebound in fast night's Carolina-State game. The Wolfpack came back from a 9-point deficit to defeat the Tar Heels, 79-73. (Henley Photo) - .urn Tells dents Of i d Program Football Coach Jim Tatutn I assistants met with stu :s South Building offi :sLnpus newsmen yester doicheon in Lenoir Hall, pose of the meeting was stain students get ac i with the coaching staff i something of the foot ;raa being planned for JTatum. j iljtunr introduced his as Ibmett Cheek, Pat Pres !: Kecsler, Eddie Teague, iey and Fred Tullal, and , Jfdthe planned football j cd answered questions. 'A at the meeting were. 5r Heel. Editors Louis. . :iEdYoder, other mem j ie newspaper staff, stu ? President Don Fowler, ,i i the University admin ,&e sports publicity staff Sew Bureau and Chapel respondents for other Roll To D ies In Final Minutes ump C a mli no , 79 I o 73 By WAYNE BISHOP and broke a 33-33 halftime tie to RALEIGH, Feb. 21 A "blitz- run up a. nine-point lead. The kreig" hit William Neal Reynolds Wolfpack went into their famed Coliseum last night in "the form full-court press at that stage. With of the North Carolina State Wolf pack. who roared !back from a 66 57 deficit in the last five minutes to dump Carolina 79-73 and drop the Tar Heels into a four-way tie for first in the Atlantic Coast Con ference flag race., ' Carolina had shown unbeatable 'accuracy at the foul line in 1 the first portion of the second half; THE BOX:M 1 ? h f N. C. State Molodet, g 9 Maglio, g 1Z 8 Stepanovich, c 1 0 Shavlik, c . 3 Seitz, c 0 fg ft pf tp 2:15 left Lou Dlckman pumped in two consecutive field goals, to put iBoth Parties Planning Nominations Next Wee 5 p By CHARLIE JOHNSON than usual if the bill passes. Both Th.e student Legislature will the UP and the SP have already vjbte tomorrow night on a bill to made plans to begin nominatiois sit March 27 as the date for spring ' next week. elections, and runoffs will be held ' Legislators say two bills will be April 10. J introduced at the session. Jim The elections laws set the date Holmes (SP) said he will introduce of spring elections on the first a bill to set up a committee to Tuesday in April. Since the first ! look into the possibility and feasi Tuesdav of April this year comes bility of ' acquiring benches to during spring vacation, the Legis lature must change the date. Any authority to change the date of elections rests with the Legisla ture. The bill, co-sponsored by Stu dent Party Floorleader John Cur tis and University Party Floor leader Harry. Braxton, is the only till on tomorrows legislature cal endar. Nominations of candidates for History Political Prof Gives Definitions " acquiring place in front of each dormitory. The committee would report to the Legislature after looking into the matter, he said. Holmes said he would introduce another bill to have the Elections Board report election returns by each individual ballot box, - in stead of by each district. He said this would "prevent such a big vote toeing tabulated at one time and would prevent errors in re- i By SHERWOOD CANADA the elections must be made earlier ' porting election results." Abolished the Pack ahead at 71-69. From there on the Tar Heels did not have a chance against their arch rivals. Lennie Rosenbluth paced the Tar Heels with another of .his ' Ail-American performances, scoring 28 points and proving a valuable as set under the backboards. The first half was a nip and Integration Is to destroy schools. JACKSON, Miss., Feb. 21. (P) -Gov. J. P. Coleman said today any Mississippi white public school, including colleges, forced to accept a Negro student would be abolished immediately. 'The people would not sup port integrated schools," he told his press conference. "To allow 6 3 24 7' -23 3 Hopper, f 0 DiNardo, f 4 Pond, f 0 Dickman, f 3 0 0 5 1 5 0 11 0 "0 10 iui& audi! aa LKjiu teams . iuum point for point. Vic Molodet,. State all-conference, guard, was red-hot and scored 14 points to pace the Pack. . , -, , The score was tied eleven times in the first half. Rosenbluth had 12 points and Tony Radovich , 10 in the first stanza. SECOND HALF Right after the intermission the Draft Test To Be Givn On April 19 UNC has been designated as an area' test center for the Selective Service College Qualification Test, to be given April 19 for those seeking student deferments. Dr. W. D. Perry, director of Tar Heels pulled away. At one for the summer school terms and the University Testing Service, stretch Carolina hit 20 consecutive the 'fall semester -are now being Coeds7 Room Applications Being Taken v Applications of women students for dormitory room reservations 11 :dule For on Money is Today jdule for tuition pay M start today, according woodard, supervisor of ) founts. edule is for students who i Pay at registration; The ,j alphabetical list, which Pink slip with the class fj been established for "the Cashier's Office, ,5toilding: with their last names ;VA and B, today: C and fi E, F, G, Tuesday; February 29; K and L, JN, Mar. 6; O, P, Q, ,nd S, Mar. 8; T, U, V, :,w,x. Y, Z Mar. 14 fnts for installment ,4 r deferred payments rjfte at the Cashier's 7latcr than the day I 0r Payment above. Ac i Pair or arranged for If are sub;ectf to a late . 4 lee nt s "4 J. Totals 29 21 24 Carolina fg ft pf Kearns, g 0 0 0 Cunningham, g 0 0 1 Vayda, g '. 3 2 3 Radovich, g 4 6 2 Quigg, c 4 2 3 Rosenbluth, f 8 12 4 Brennan, f 2 11 3 Rosemond, f 0 0 2 Totals 20 33 18 79 .will be supervisor for the test, foul shots and that made the dif I which will be civen in Carroll ference. Coach Frank McCuire's must be submitted by midnight, j onto that nine-point margin until Monday, March 5. j the Wolfpack began to make their This will be one of 875 test , move. tp 0 0 8 14 10 26 15 0 73 Molodet, John Maglio and Dick- man proved the difference in the centers throughout the United States, Alaska, the Canal Zone, Hawaii and Puerto Rico where last half stretch. Dickman's impor the tests will be administered tant goals sent the Pack into their April 19. To be eligible to apply, a stu dent must intend to request de fetment as a student, fartorv Diirsuing a first lead in the second half. The Tar Heels never led again. Brennan, with 15, Radovich, with be satis- 14, and Quigg, with 10, also hit fulltime the double figures for Carolina. rhespians Cut Prices For Couples I The Carolina Playmakers have : . Washington's Birtn- " cnoscn ivuy . tl course of instruction, and must Molodet and Maglio paced State not have previously taken the with 24 and 23 points apiece. Ron tcsL . j (See ROSENBLUTH, Page 3) ' received in the Dean of Women's Office. A room reservation fee of $6 is required for each summer term, and a $10 fee is. required for the fall semester. Women stu dents, said tne make their reservations by March 14. Rooms will be held for them until that date. . To reserve, a room, each woman student pays her room deposit at the Cashier's Office in the base ment of South Building. She then takes her receipt to the Dean of Women's Office where she fills out a room reservation card and gets, it marked "paid." Stacy Men, KD Coeds Top Relays By JIMMY PURKS , The combined team of . .Stacy Men's Dormitory and Kappa Delta Sorority won the Co-Rec Swim ming Relays this week in a thrill ing finish. V : i t The winning team took five first places and placed in other !' events to compile an 18 point total. The Chi Phi Fraternity and Chi Omega Sorority team was i leading by one point witlTa 16 point total until the final event. In the final event the tandem swim the men from Stacy and the coeds from Kappa Delta held the lead from the start to win for the crucial three points. Chi Phi and Chi Omega nar rowly missed placing second in ff;,T ,lhftM- the final event, but placed third office,, should 4 . .. . , ... - . lO IIlaft.e lis puiui wiai xi ie. the night one point behind the victors. , The combined' team of Aycock men's dormitory and Pi Beta Phi Sorority w;as tied for third place with the DKEs and the Nurses Dorm until the final event. Ay I cock and Pi Phi came in second In the tandem swim, however, The definition of certain words associated with politics was the topic of a speech by Dr. E. P. Douglass at a meeting of the. Student Party this week. Dr. Douglass, assistant pro fessor of the UNC History Dept., first made comments on the terms liberalism, authoritarian ism, radicalism and conservat7 ism. He said the four terms have certain characteristics in com mon: CHARACTERISTICS (1) They are all symbolic, in that they describe ideas instead of things; (2) They all evoke emotional responses; (3) They all have different de grees of respectability the de gree being determined by the platform from which they are used. '' . . There is no uniform meaning for ' any one of the terras, Dr. Douglass said. The meaning of either of the terms ' will vary from person person. Although the terms often cre ate confusion, they, are words of He presented the following definitions of the words defini tions that he said may be com monly accepted. Liberalism, he said, is a term that 'describes the ideas of per sons seeking "release from re straint." Authoritarianism, on the other Jiand, is a term that describes the ideas of persons seeking to "impose restraints in order to obtain" a more import ant objective." He said there is no subjective definition that will cover all conditions of radicalism. It is necessary to find the definition in some process, he said. AH radicals are interested in "pro moting change," Dr. Douglass said. CONSERVATISM Conservatism is the opposite of radicalism and is a "resist ance to change," he said. Dr. Douglass, who came to the University in 1952, obtained his A.B. in 1939 from Princeton, his M.S. in 1941 frrm Columbia and his Ph.D. in 1949 from Yale. Following the speech, Miss -Nancy Rothchild - was elected secretary of the party, to re- very definite, content, according;., place Miss Shirley PiCrce, who to Dr. Douglass. resigned. thus asurin . place. g the team of third I ' Kh.doled for Cra ,r'4' ody Include: I ''Room; Pan-Hl, 5-6 ' ir.il , R0Cm; SDA' 8-" Koom; Jehovah's Wit- Ntt im' RoUnd Prker . Chemistry Wives, !Und Parker Loung. i Jjt CommtM, 3-5 SK? Conference nJ? 'm p vood- l r nct Reom; WRC MO 1 Rmi Dance i';Cr .Pm' Rndexvous K aims' 3:30-J 7:30 ' Ap0 Room. their "cnop- ping ticket prices" in half for UNC student couples'. rru Plavmakers ' nroduction of the musical comedy. t . "Qoinntflen. Wl iviarrh 2. 3 and 4, a".M ' "Regular - reserved seat tickets .? i niavmakers' musi- I for tne annua , S2. Student cou- I forthcoming ical comedy, ill be presented in Memorial -w : . ihp three nics attending .'-. half price, according to John W Parker, business manager of tne "Date-Rate" tickets can be purchased in YCourt any morning until the play opens,- and at 214 Abernetlv.HA;"" ernoon. The special -be in effect at the box office on the evenings of the plays -per- frker'said the offer is heing maPdaer so students ho he -fceen able to see Playmakers will have an opportunity to do so see THEATRE, page 4.) ' v T L X ' U 1 , : I-I JUST ASK BOB STATONi" There s Lois Of Work In GMAB's Calendar By WENDY MARTIN A lot of work goes into the Graham Memorial Activities Calendar, according to Bob Staton, chairman of the Student Union's Calendar Committee. Staton, a sophomore from Hendersonville, belongs to Kappa Alpha -Fraternity and is majoring in in dustrial relations. He plans to go back to the home town after grad uation and work with the commu nity recreation center. . He began work on the spring se mester calendar with a committee of 25, but it seems he ended up doing most of the actual work. It took. about three weeks to get everything organized for the cal endar. Staton, who had never be fore worked with the calendar, first contacted all organizations on campus and received a list of their planned activities. A Durham printing firm was then contacted to discover what type of layout to use. The layout for the calendar was typed up in chronological order and sent to press Jan. 18. The calendars were returned Feb. 13. The calendar contains the ac tivities that are scheduled for the University for the coming semes ter, and is printed each semester by the GMAB. Calendars are de livered to the dormitories, frater nity houses, radio stations, news paper offices and to the admin istration. They are available at the Graham Memorial information desk, and in GMAB offices. Playmakers SetTryouts For Drama Tryouts for the fifth production of The Carolina Playmakers will be held tomorrow. The tryouts will take place from 4 to 7:30 p.m. in the Playmakers Theatre under the supervision of the play's director, Foster Fitz Simons, associate director of dra matic art here. No title has been chosen for the I play. It is a North Carolina folk comedy in the manner of those originally presented by the Play makers in their early years with Frederick H. Koch. The play was written by Baxter Sasser, a former Playmaker who received his masters degree in dramatic art here last June. The forthcoming performance will be produced March 22-25. It will contain seven characters, four female and 'three male. h'riv nil minimi Co-Rec Relay Winners And Their Prize ' Stacy men's dormitory and Kappa Delta Sorority were winners i n co-recreational swimming relaysthis week. The victorious teams are shown holding thir trophies goldfish bowls, with goldfish th erein. Left to right, back rcw, are the men: Cecil Seals, Kenneth Hoke, Sandy Moffett, Joe Rand, Ed House and Donald Buckley. T he pretty girls: Misses Melba Renig, Doris Atkins, fancy Lyon, Mary (Pt Wc Btten, . Mrcu Mctora ana ma nan nobecK. UNC Photo by J. B. Clay.) Carolina Symposium Won't Be Segregated The Carolina Symposium on Public Affairs, -to be held here during the week of March 11-16, will make no attempt to have its meetings segregated, according to Chairman Manning Muntzing. "The symposium is an educa tional endeavor," he said, "in which classrooms, workshops, sem inars and night meetings will be used for an exchange of ideas. IN THE JNF.riMAnY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss Ruthie Sindtll, Therms R. Grimes, Ronald G. Wilbourn?, Berry D. Marshburn Jr., Dawson V. Carr, James E. Holdford, Jo seph McK. Bryan, June H. Cei lings Jr., Clarence E. Williams Jr., Eugene L. Presley, GeraJ J A. Long, Marion E. Byrd, RcLirf R. Bailey and William S. Akin Jr.

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