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WEATHER 4 TWO Two Margarets and romance, d editorial, Page 2. rl;n, with expected Compete () Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1956 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS IZZ'J . UNC THIRD SYMPOSIUM MATING: 0 ill NO. .. - - i . ident I Speak ; k p. Graham, former president, and Dr. - LaPP- head of the Nu" !ince Service, will be the Speakers at tonight's ses "ve Carolina Symposium at Ma Memorial Hall, affl will speak on "The 'Nations: The Promise of canmunity.' Dr. Lapp will 53 Atomic Radiation A jjthe World Community." iljham is a native of Fay fmj received his educa p at the University and at university.' He served i$oi of history here un jas appointed President of versify in 1930. mo Dr. Graham left the :y to accept appointment Senator from North Caro le completion of his term I x'he has worked in var itions with the United Na :s most notable work has s a mediator in India and i 5 NATIONS to be discussed by i-i.ii include such topics as Hope is there for world tity with the threat of b tensions and atomic "Is The United Nations :ier to today's threat of Is?" and "If the main hope Iforld today is the United I. what can we Americans bare its best utilization?" iTENT PROPONENT tier featured speaker, Dr. is i physicist, author, and kho has been a persistent pt for civil defense against attack, education of civil : atomic matters, and en ii security administration, bs held such positions as b adviser to the War Dept. I Staff, deputy executive di ti the Atomic Energy Com- Joint Research and De bt Board. Dr. Lapp h a s :ently returned from the Atoms for Peace Confer- I! discuss various topics -d with atomic radiation. posium unars ;duled ' Molina Symposium will averal seminars and dis- 'Sraups again today. ,c of last night's sym is, "Colonialism: a criti facing the world to- J be reviewed. er" for this morning will 3, Mrs. C. W. Tillett, in ell Hall; 9 a.m., James 106 Carroll Hall; Miss iJSn, in 9 Gardner Hall: f Clifford Beck, in 201 Hall, and at noon., in 107 tfnoon seminars are open ?'ic. The speakers for on are: 3 p.m., James 111 thp Lihrarv Accamhtv ! ', Mrs. C. W. Tillett, jfdBeck and Dr. Federico ;K ari(i YWCA, in Roland ;-1 of Graham Memorial. I at the dinners at 6 p.m. Delta Delta, Mrs. C. r phi Gamma Delta, Dr. i eck: anA t omKo. nv.: C. Rhyne. ! GM'S SUTE KheduJed for Gra Jril today include: 1?' Ml p.m., Main j ' pn-helf 5-6 p.m., Grail Pjmpo$ium Committee, !oland Parker 2 and 1 p Witnsset, 8-9 p.m., lUt Chemistry p,m-. Roland Parker ''Committee, 3-5 p.m., jse rt. -"lerence Room; "ci. 5-6 p.m Coun. s;Ba 4-6 p.m.. Ren- 00J; Petite Musicale, Rendezvous Room; ?A::3-5 and 7:30-9:30 l wKom, and SKE, 7:30 ; Chouse Conference V i 5: 4 DR. FRANK P. GRAHAM - . former UNC -president Qualities For Are Cited By Powledge The most important and only qualification for editorship of The Daily Tar Heel, I believe, is experience," said Fred Powledge, candidate for the editorship, yes terday. "Experience" said Powledge in his statement, "is the biggest is sue in the campaign between -Tom Lambeth and me." , Powledge's statement read as follows: EXPERIENCE "There are many kinds of ex perience, and they all go into the making of a good newspaperman and a good editor. One of them, perhaps the most basic, is what people used to call a 'nose for news'." It is the ability of the re poter to sense out events before they happen. "Along with that sense, which comes mostly through experience, is the feeling for the value of news and opinion. The best editor ial writer or reporter in the world would be useless if he could not tell what event, what fact,' ehat opinion was more important than another. "A good editor of, any newspa per must have a deep feeling for the people. He must never under estimate their ability, and he must never forget that his j main duty is to inform the people who read his newspaper. SERVANT "He must know what the people like, and, if it is within his power, he must attempt to grant their re quests. He must never forget that he is a servant of the people; that he, like a doctor, is on call 24 hours a day. A good editor is nothing if he does not have an ambitious cap able staff with plenty of imagina tion and enterprise. He must .be a teacher, father, brother and criticizer of that' staff. "As a supervisor, the editor must constantly be on the alert. He must record daily the pulses of the various departments of his j One Candidate Okayed To Run For Yack, Editor , The Bi-Partisan Selections Board r tt.j:- nt Vio Vnrketv Yack ior Hiuiiui. ui n.v. 1 -yesterday unanimously approved Tommy jonnson, risis Norfolk, Va., as candidate for Yack editor in the spring elec tions. The Board members present at the meeting were Jack Markham, present editor of the Yack and Norwood Bryan, Student Party chairman. Bill Sabiston, Univer sity Party chairman, was absent from the meeting. No other candidates for editor presented themselves at the meet ing, according to an announce ment from the Board. Ivey Rogers Named BA Fraternity Prexy Ivey Rogers of Roxborowas se lected president of the Alpha Lambda'chapter of Delta ,Sijm. Pi Business Administration Fra ternity in elections held last Wemher officers named were: First Vice-president Larry Hm son, of Monroe; Second V president, Robert Byrum. Eha beth City; Secretary, j Zebulon; Treasurer, Fred rop . Lexington; Chancel or, Charles Bunch, Statesville; Historian, Jack Murphy, Hamlet. i DR. RALPH E. LAPP . . . noted scientist newspaper, and he must keep an eye on the future, always trying to improve. IMPROVEMENT "The good editor must realize that he has failed if his news paper is not read and read with interest by a sizable precentage of the people who pay for it. To in crease interest and readership, he must improve day inland day out. "He must forgive, the mistakes of others, and he must readily ad mit and apologize for his mistakes. At the same time, he musts make fewer mistakes than ' any other person on the campus. "These requisites for an editor, I believe, can best be acquired , through experience. It is through daily experience that a person learns to deal with others, to put out a newspaper that will be both interesting to and appreciated by others," concluded Powledge's statement. Holds Session To Norhinote The Student JMrty nominated, several more candidates for seats in the Student Legislature Mon day. , Those given endorsements for the seats included; Jim Pfaf f, year seat . for Town Men's I; Leo Wardup and Nor man Kantor, year seats, and Mike Falk, six-month seat for Town Men's HI; Andy Milnor, year seat for Dorm Men's III, and Miss Barbara Murray for senior class social chairman. . Candidates for seats" for Town Men's II, Town Women's and the six month seat for Dorm Men's III will be nominated later. The SP also appointed Jim Hughes to a vacant legislature seat in Dorm Men's IV. Hughes was appointed to the post to re place John Curtis who resigned, and will serve until ttie end of the present legislative session, ac cording to Chairman x Norwood Bryan. Curtis resigned to become campaign manager for Jim Exum, University Party endorsee for president of the student body. WC Is Host To Di And Phi In Joint Meeting A bill calling for Interposition was overwhelmingly defeated at a joint Di-Phi meeting in Greens boro with Woman's College Mon day night. ' The meeting was held at the in vitation of Miss Alice Wingate, head of the newly formed WC de bate group. More than 16 Di and . Phi mem bers journeyed to Greensboro for the event, and met with more than 40 girls. ' ; ; According to a spokesman for the group, the debate opened slowly, and continued that 'way throughout the meeting. The only speeches of any note were given by Steve Moss and Larry McElroy of the Di and Jess Stribling and Roy McGalliard of the Phi, he said. John Curtis of the Phi occupied the chair, with the other positions filled by Di members. Editor Party Reston Speaks To Seminal' By DAN FOWLER . "The pace of our history is out- running our state of mind," James Reston, head of The New York, -J Times Washington Bureau, said j this week. .s In a Carolina Symposium dis- ' cussion in Caldwell Hall, Reston stressed the lag which exists to- day between our thinking and the events as they occur. He said the people now having the responsibilities of carrying through our foreign policies be gan their training in an era of isolation as observers. , Today, these leaders can not be only observers, -said Reston. He also mentioned that there is no significant rush of young,, as piring Republicans to the Foreign Service as there was of Demo crats in the early days of the New Deal. Reston will speak informally at a Journalism assembly today at 9 a.m. in Carroll Hall Auditorium. Dr. Norval Neil Luxon, dean of the School of Journalism, 'who will introduce Reston, has announced that students and faculty mem bers wil be welcome at the meet- Reston noted political lags in i our thinking today. "We have been taking a year off for the election of a leader when the need for leadership is greater that it has ever been," he said. "We are an impatient people," he said, but with the range of problems facing the United States more full of menace than ever before, we have done fairly well. "We are more united on the fundamentals of our foreign pol icy," Reston said. He noted the great .changes in our thinking in recent years, mentioning the aban donment of an isolationist feeling with the great expenditures on military forces overseas. "The glory of this generation is the . capacity of the people to give their consent to revolution ary ideas," he stated. Reston won a Pulitzer Prize in 1945 for his news dispatches and interpretative articles on the Dumbarton Oaks Security Conference. Carolina Coeds Impressed With New Jacket Lengths By PEG HUMPHREY The garment industry aimed their sissors at the jacket and turned out what fashion edi tors in New York consider a tfindv" " It has been loudly and vigor ously proclaimed as the biggest news of the season. Jacket lengths range from' just below the armpit in accord with the popular empire line to the hipbone no longer, please. Carolina coeds on the whole are happy with this trend. "I love it!" exclaimed Jackie Goodman, explaining that she considers it "so neat" The cropped jacket is de signed to flatter any figure. It may be fitted or 1 loose and is sliced at varying points. Manu facturers are modeling it in all the new blends and weaves to please the fancy of their dis criminating public. One dissenter on the shorter jacket question stipulated that she agreed with its being at tractive but is a stihkler f or the soat which excited de signers so much last fall. She simply feels more comfortable in this Jength which although bees .'Loodniaiosm had o ma-; 5yoqesS UyJies II ranrsifec- j ?. f j I I V s II. t JAMES B. RESTON . Washington journalist Roger W agner Chorale To Be Here 1 The Roger Wagner Chorale, which has just embarked on its first cross-country tour will be presented here on March 22 in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. i The program is under the aus pices of the Student Entertain ment Committee. The 24 Chorale singers and their director, Roger Wagner, are celebrating their tenth anniver sary. During a six-week period the chorister and their conductor will appear in- some -SO-cities-- from coast to coast. ' The Chorale originated as a city-sponsored group known as the Los Angeles Concert Chorale. The demands for its services in pro fessional appearances were so many that in 1947 it' withdrew from city sponsorship and became a professional group. Franz Waxman immediately en gaged it for performances of Honnegger's Joan of Arc. Addi tional appearances in other works followed in the Los Angeles Music Festival. The Chorale was engaged for a program commemorating the bi-centennial of Bach's death. The Chorale was invited to take part in the Coronation Festivities program in London, and the 24 voice group sang in London's Roy al Festival Hall and also broad cast on the British Broadcasting Company, Radio Paris and the Dutch radio. The Chorale has recently com pleted its. first cinemascope musi cal short in color and sterophonic sound, which has been released nationally. Movie-goers have heard no longer top news certainly isn't an obsolete fashion. Betty Bauman describes the big news as "adorable." She prefers a fitted bolero as the icing on her spring sheath. Another advocate of the sheath plus jacket is Dottie Wood. She has recently ac quired a silk sheath (aware that silk prints are slated to "go places" this year) and will spark her dress with a navy box severed at the hipbone and lined in the silk print. One coed evidently unaware of the curret trends but with a feminine eye for fashion ex claimed, "Is that why I-thought my new suit didn't fit!" 'Head Cheerleader A Selections Board will meet Thursday to choose students in terested in running for head cheerleader in the spring elec tions. The board will meet from 3-5 p.m. in the Grail Room of Gra ham Memorial. Students interested in running were asked to attend this meeting. J '.yf DR. RALPH BUNCHE . . . UN mediator March 22 the Chorale singing in more than 12 hit films including "The Egyp tian," "Desiree,'v and "Day of Triumph." The voice of soprano Marilynn Home was Dorothy Dandridge's pinging voice in "Car men Jones." Four centuries of music will be presented on the program here. Repertoire for this unique ensem ble's program includes Orff's ex citing "Catulli Carmina," Debussy Chansons, sixteenth century airs, the Brahms Liebeslieder Waltzes, ! thg .. Faure Requiem and excerpts from Gershwin's immortal Por gy and Bess." ,1 :t Students with I. D. cards . will be admitted free to the program. Townspeople will be admitted af ter 7:40 for $1. Symposium Week Is Proclaimed Don Fowler, president of the student body, yesterday pro claimed this week "Carolina Symposium Week." "We are very fortunate to have with us on our campus this week," said the statement, "some of the world's most outstanding speak ers. I hope that everyone will be able to take advantage of this wonderful opportunity." .Word Given On Elections By UP Chief "The University Party is pur suing a vigorous campaign with a united front," Chairman Bill Babiston said yesterday. Sabiston sjaid there, was defi nitely no "split" among party membership due to Luther Hod ges' failure to get the UP presi dential nomination. "Hodges has thrown his sup port, to Jim Exum," Sabiston said, "and has pledged to help him." "Exum support is snowballing on campus and gaining momen tum every day," Chairman Sabis ton said. Concerning the other candi dates on the UP slate, Sebaston said, "Jim Monteith, Sue Walker, and John Kerr are leading the field." The three are candidates for vice-president, secretary, and treasurer of the student body, respectively. Concerning Legislature nomi nees, Sabiston laureled the "out standing slate," and said he ex pected the UP to pick up "at least four seats." The party currently has a 28-22 majority. "Class, offices," the chairman said, "will be a clean sweep." Commenting on John Curtis switch from Student Party floor leader to Exum's campaign man ager, Sabiston said the "jump over the fence"- was strictly be tween Exum and Curtis. . Two Notables International - By CHARLIE SLOAN Dr. Ralph Bunche last night said he feels certain the United Nations will become, "even more deeply embroiled in the problem of colonialism than in the past. Bunche delivered his speech at the Carolina Symposium "only as a private citizen," rather than a member of the UN secretariat. Bunche shared the platform with James B. Reston, chief of The New York Times Washington bu reau, who spoke on colonialism and the United States foreign policy. Reston noted the American government is in the dilemma of trying to be faithful to its anti colonial tradition and at the same time be faithful to its allies with colonies. "We are deajing with the; consequences of two wars," pointed out the journalist. "It seems apparent that co lonialism is being liquidated," Bunche said. He noted that 600 million have won their freedom in the past decade. The, problems of colonialism, "springing from new nationalism in all colonial areas, are the most complex and difficult with which the UN must deal. They pose a dilemma for the UN in the sense that the UN must deal. They pose a dilemma for the UN in the sense thatthe UN, looking forward to ward an .increasing spirit of in - ternationallsm, is at the same time encouraging nationalist as pirations and nationalism," said the UN mediator. "Any colonial war today poses a threat to the peace of the whole world," noted Bunche. The question is tied very close ly to race, Bunche said. He commented that on a trip in India two years ago he was repeatedly asked three questions. The first concerning Kashmir, the second colonialism, and the third, race relations. Speaking of colonialism, Bunche said there are two basic facts which pose complex difficulties for the world and for the UN. "The population of the world is preponderantly non-white, and there is a strong trend of world sympathy against colonialism and racialism, and for human equal ity." He said Africa is a key area in the coming decades, adding that everything in. Africa is going to have to be accelerated in order to avoid the mistakes made in southeast Asia. . Bunche quoted a statement made by John Foster Dulles in 1947 saying colonialism must be done away with. He cl6sed his speech by saying, "In my book there is no substitute for freedom." t Reston said he thought it neces sary that the problem of colonial ism in Asia, the Middle East, and Africa get the priority it deserves. He suggested that all available ta lent in the country, Republican and Democratic, on African and Asia tic problems be mobilized to help with the formulation, direction, and administration of U. S. policy in these regions. He also suggested that the pre sident consider moving Secretary of State Dulles into the White House as Foreign Affairs Advisor to the President a job Dulles himself once discussed favorably. This would allow Dulles to con centrate on the African-Asian pro blem without the other duties he has as Secretary of State. "The president is not concentra ting on this anxious problem," said Reston. "The . Secretary of State deals with it spasmodically. His staff in the State Department some of it picked to placate the pro-Chiang Kai Shek supporters in Congress, is divided on how the long-range interests of the United. T0man, Robert M. Fox, SiJ.-.sy States may best be served, parti-j s Djxon Douglas W. Sharp, VVSI (See SYMPOSIUM, Page 4.) Ham B. Akin, Jr. DI 1 ice Orientation Committee Is Named Fourteen students have been selected to work on the Orienta tion Committee, Bill McLean, orientation chairman, announced recently. The members of the committee are: John Brooks, Jeep Myatt, John Kerr, Jim Kimzey, Sonny Evans, Jim Exum, Mebane Pritchett, Pat Hunter, Jim Martin, Luther Hod ges, Miss Betty Dent, Miss Sylvia Tarantino, Miss Sue Waldner zr..l Miss Jackie Aldridge. Women's Chairman of Orientation, Annette Nivens, also serves on the com mittee, McLean said. The choice of members was made by the Selections Board, which consists of presidents of the Di, the Phi, the IFC, the IDC and the Chairman of Orientation, ac cording to McLean. The selection of men counselors will be held in April and informa tion concerning applications will be given soon, he said. The Orientation Committee has been divided into five sub-committees: counselor, selection, Co-ed Ball, special events, picnic srul t conselors' folders. Miss Dot Gruel- ach was appointed M assist in the preparation of counselor folder's for women, he said. The Orientation Committee car ries on interim orientation. One of its functions is to mail informa tion to new students upon their admission. Members also plan pro grams for summer school orienta tion, fall orientation, and orienta tion for students entering after the first semester. Any student who is interested in typing for the Orientation Com mittee was requested to contact Melba Renig in 204 Smith, McLean concluded. Transportation Assn. To Inspect Airport The UNC Chapter of the Nation al Defense Transportation Assn, will take a trip Friday to the Raleigh-Durham Airport for an in spection of the facilities and ob servation of the operations of an air terminal. All Transportation majors in the School of Business and all other students who are interested in transportation are invited. The group will meet behind the Li brary at 2 o'clock p.m. A spokes man for the group said they want ed as many to go as possible. Students who are going and can drive a car are asked to contact either Steve Hayworth, John Farm er, Roy Wilson or Jim Carlisle before Thursday. INTERVIEW 1 The Bipartisan Selections Board will interview girls interested in running for Women's Council seats tomorrow afternoon from 5-G in the Council Room of Graham Me morial. Positions are open fur three seniors and one student nurse. IN THE INFIRMAIiV Students in the Infirmary yei terday included: Miss Yvonne D. Berce, Miss Carter F. Chapin, Miss Virgin! H. Browning, Miss Patricia A. Haughton, Miss Linda L. Clev lancL Miss Patricia B. Randall, Earl L. Haywood, Roger . Dalehite, Manuel C. Kranii, Lib ert C. Tice, Daniel L. ShfrriH, John D. Tiedeman, Ethin C.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 14, 1956, edition 1
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