SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 195 THt DA1LY..TAR HEEL PAGE TWO Hum !atum s 1st 1 se, aaria o Revolts f H fSflK f Jf Friday Elected, William Friday's Position Officials As Of Last Friday The Consolidated University of North Carolina has a new president. William C. Friday was unanimously elected to the post by the Board of Trustees last Friday after serving as acting president for less than a year. In accepting the position ,i i. v BILL FRIDAY . . now it's official it, Victor S. Bryant Sr. of Durham, chairman of the se lection committee which recommended Friday, explained that the delay in selecting a president was due to the upt Supreme Court desegregation decision, the University's "poorly competitive position due to inadequate faculty sal aries." uncertaimv as to where the University stood tin-, tier the State Board of Higher Education and an "accumula tion of internal troubles." A cold fall drizzle soaked Carolina ladies and gentlemen as they wound their way to Kenan Stadium 'Tor the Tar Heels' clash with the Deacons of Wake Forest yesterday. Over 3,000 musicians representing Go bands entertained the fms in Band Day ceremonies following the scoreless first half of the game. In spite of the threatening weather the bands plaved such songs, as "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and "Uook For the Silver Lining." It was a tie Ik Ugame, the first since Jim Tat urn's ar rival on the Hill. Carolina scored the first touchdown, but the Deacs revived in the last period and scored after a )G yard drive to the end zone. Neither team was able to make the conversion and the game ended with the score standing at f)-f. On Tuesday evening. State Associate Justice William A. Rodman addressed the Philanthropic Society. He spoke on "The Proper Function of the Appelate Court . Rodman expressed his views on the court and a'. so stated the various responsibi.i.ies of a court jiu I;". He con laded his speech by savin :l. it if the people did not like their laws, it was up to them and their legislature to change them, not the courts. A group of university men has solved' the housing prob lem by setting up a co-op hou se. They take turns cook- 2 ing the main meals, but each person is responsible for get ting his own breakfast and lunch. Members are charged according to the amount of food thev consume. No positive action has been taken for the lifting of the parking ban as yet. However, the Hoard of Aldermen has promised to lift the ban for Go days if fraternities take ac tion to alleviate their own parking problems. It is now up to the fraternity men to try and find a solution to the problem other than parking in the street. The merchants have extended free parking time in a privately-owned downtown lot to two hours. After the limit, there will be charge of 2;, cents per hour, with a maximum charge of S 1 a day. T n-. flcniiinc upLpihI and tu f'nrolina' scene was A 1 v v 1 1 iti 1 iii --vx-.j made tip largelv of parties and ' r r DOMINO . Uncle Sugar soured and his buiness manager talked to two representatives ot the Dept. of Internal Revenue about back taxes. The matter was straightened up and Domino went on late but unabashed bv the incident. Bernard Dunn, the bands business manager, said the back taxes and fines would be payed' as soon as he got his books up to date. 'The official stydent publication of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published daily except Mon day and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Entered as second class matter in the post office at Chapel Hill. N. C, under the act of March 8. 1870. Subscription rates: Mailed. $4 a year. $2.50 per semester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester. Editor Managing Editor ... News Editor Business Manager ..'.. THE DAILY TAR HEEL WEEK IN REtflEV Editor ,: ' - - . CHARLIE SLOAN Staff Writers GEOROE PFDCGST ami IX (1 RID C.I.AY Night Editor -J.- FRED POWLEDGE Friday said, "We must keep always an atmosphere of free don responsi bile freedom in which our faculty and students may study rond work.' With reference to the elec tion of t h e Consolidated University's youngest presi dent, Gov. Hodges said, "We have made no mistake today. The past 8 months of dealing with Friday have been of un usual pleasure for me." f L RODMAN , up to the people - - - . ----- - dances. Billy. May and Fats - r 1 Domino were the featured bands, Domino's appearance marking the first time a rhythm and blues group has appeared for Germans. Uncle Sugar soured on Domino before the concert Friday atfernoon, and the rhvthm and blues artists' ap pearance was delayed while he FRED POWLEDGE CHARLIE SLOAN RAY LINKER BILL BOB PEEL The State: Autos And Industries v , : ... .. , Monday and Tuesday in Ashe ville of North Carolina League of Municipalities held its 47th convention. ; The convention approved an 11 point program of its own that aims towards better housekeep ing practices, and which princi pally calls for amendments to motor vehicle registration stat utes to require listing of vehicles, for ad valorem taxes as a con dition precedent to issuance of licence plantes, joint city-state ' vehicle purchases and permissive legislation to establish capitol reserve funds for necessary capi tol improvements.' Six panel speakers spoke to the North Carolina municipal lead ers on the topic "Industrial De velopment Is Municipal Busi ness." The leaders were told the pitfalls of not seeking stable in dustries for their communities. The Ku Klux Klan seeking a revival in Piedmont North and South Carolina announced plans for a cross burning and rally at Concord Saturday night. The rally, which featured two min isters, one from Charlotte and the other from South Carolina, taught the "Bible teachings" about segregation of the races. In Red Springs, Governor Hod ges .said , that North Carolina needs "locally financed, locally operated industries which will utilize the many farm people who must supplement their income or go under." Adlai's New Campaign Tactics Causing Campus Disenchantment iames Reston . In TJie Xcw York l imes CHAPEL, HILL, N. C. TJie saddest sacks in this elec tion are the liberal intellectuals. Their hearts still belong to Adlai, -but they are disappointed in his campaign. He has their votes, but he no longer has their en thusiasm. A reporter for The New York Times had to argue his way across the campuses of America in the campaign of 1952. Then, as how,, The Times was endorsing Eisenhower, and the man had to defend himself from outraged faculty members at every lunch and dinner. It is not the same now. At Cornell, Wesleyan, Yale and the University of North Carolina thi& week, the pro-Stevenson intellect uals were still protesting that four more years of Eisenhower would bs bad for the country, but they now regard Stevensor. as a good man who has let them down. What excited them in 1952 was the arrival on the American po litical scene of a new Wilsonian figure, intelligent, eloquent, high minded, courageous enough to ex press ideals and , objectives re gardless of what the party bosses, the labor-union leaders, or the Legionnaires thought. They do not think he lost in 1952 because of the kind of cam paign he ran. They think, so far as one can generalize on so com plex a subject, that he lost be cause of the accumulated .griev ances against the party that had been in power for twenty years. Indeed,, they believe and many i, professional politicians agree with them that Stevenson end ed the campaign of 1952 much stronger-than he began, and that his campaign of '52 was so much better than Eisenhower's that he probably picked up several mill ion voters- between the conven tion and the election. STEVENSON'S CHOICE Nor do they belive that it was necessary for Stevenson to change the whole tone of his campaign, indeed the whole public image of his personality and character, in order to mobilize the strength of the Democratic Party. The party , organization stronger now than in 1952, not . primarily because Mr. Stevensoq ship ot Britain, Trance and Cer- Rioting In Red Satellites; New Fighting In Middle East This has been a tense week, wtih the eyes of, the world for the moment . turning f rom Egypt Palestine and Tunisia to the S viet satellites. In East Germany 60,000 police have been mobilized to keep the wave of anti-communist unrest now sweeping eastern Europe from spreading across its borders. The new Communist leaders in Poland have set up workers' "mi-, litia units" in plants and organi zations throughout the country to help deal with Anti-Russian demonstrations. , In Budapest. Hungary, students had been demanding the with drawal of Soviet troops from the country and the release of Cardinal Mindszenty and the re turn , of Imre, Nagy as Premier. In Southern Hungary Imre Nagy, former premier, announced that he. will'' soon form a new gov ernment, "of the peoples front" which will deal with the country's problems. ;i; ; - ; ; The .Unitivd' 'States was reticent on th&.most part :about the hap penings ' in Europe. President Eisenhower denounced' the use . of Russian troops to quell the anti-Moscow revolt in Communist Hungary, He hinted that he might favor taking the conflict before the United Nations. A calm that had existed on the Egyptian-Israel border was ended Sunday. Three Israeli soldiers were reported killed and 27 were reported wounded in mine blasts: a'e"w fighting in Tunisia broke 'out Thursday between the, French and Tunisian troops near the .is following old-fashioned city hall tactics, but because the party workers have been out for four " years and don't like it, and be cause the party now controls far more state and local governments than it did four years ago. None of Mr. Stevenson's sup porters in these university com munities was against his efforts to strengthen the party by identi fying himself with the other candidates on the Democratic ticket. They merely question wnether it was necessary or wise for him to adopt his present tac tics in ocder to do so. This does not mean that they are switching to Eisenhower. They are sticking with Stevenson for a variety of reasons. First, they are no fonger re strained by the thought that the Republicans had to take power in order to learn the realities of the post-war world.- This bothered many of them in 1952. Like Stev enson himself, they had doubts about whether it was good for the country for one party to be in and the other out for twenty four years, but this is no longer a factor. Second, many people in these communities are troubled about the glorification of Eisenhower. They think 't is not only false but undemocratic. They believe it is not dispelling but perpetual ing illusions about American life. And they are deeply disturb ed about the application of mass advertising techniques and per sonality appeals in a campaign for the political leadership of the United .States. AMERICA IN TRANSITION Finally, they have a conviction about the United States at this moment in its history which seems to differ from the image widely shared in other communi. tiesi They note the vast changes in America in the last four years, 'created by a population rise of over eleven million, and by the new industrial revolution brought about by automatic machinery, the development of atomic ener gy, and the vast surpluses of American farms and factories. They not 3, too, the political revolution now . taking place 'n the Communist world, the neutral world and even in the relations . is anions the Allied natinnc at a -.time .when the political learter- Algeria border, Premier Habid ' .Bourguiba announced. ; Egyptian urgings for a new conference on the Suez Canal transmitted through the United Nations to Britain and France were rejected. After a three hour conference between Christian Pinau, French Foreign Minister, Prime Minister "Eden and Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd of England, Chris tain Pineau said that no proposal put forward bv the Egyptian Government could be "seriously" considered by the French and British Governments. In the political scene here at home, the two candidates for the presidency exchanged views about the abolition of Hydrogen ' Bomb tests, "president Eisenhower ' ; answered Adlai Stevenson's state ments that th? curbing of the Hydrogen Bomb was" the key to world peace with the rebuttal that it would be illusory without , Inspection. There were differences of opinion concerning Soviet Pre mier Nikolai A. Bulganin's note to the White House urging an end of the nuclear tests. The President, in one of the most strongly worded diplomatic communications in recent years, told Marshall Bulganin that his letter departed from internation al practice in a number of re spects. " Stevenson condemned the White House for not giving t enough consideration to the So , viet proposals for the abolishing of Hydrogen Bomb tests. many is on the decline. And their conclusion from all this is that the United States has reached another one of those points in, its history where the major problem of government is not to consolidate the gains of the past but to innovate, to go forward wtih new ideas and new plans to meet these new prob lems at home and abroad. This seemed to many people in these unjiversity communities precisely . the kind of problem Stevenson would have articulated wtih more skill than anybody else but they do not feel' that he has done so. Frankly, however, they don't expect to get imagination, intel lectual persistence, or bold exer cise of Presidential power" from Eisenhower.' They think his Ad ministration has been largely a holding operation, which was useful for a time" but has been outmoded , by events. Consequently they are sticking with Stevenson, but they are not happy and not very hopeful. Pogo I: TU6 NSW C21&HAI PLAN WIUU 31 fC& US ro Si fPHPLY pli?M" we WANT to HtLV Li'l Abner THIS ??-BUT VCy SAID THEV WAS TH' MOST BEAUTIFUL BUNCH a GALS IN TH Of n &t 1 i I . r V - I.-. i - ' 1 - J ':;::i;-'--f.;i::-.j:-;:fc-ij.s:S5-j.:s YMCA And Church Activities Keep Mayos Son Mighty Busy Charlie Sloan The son of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Mayo has come a long way since he entered the University of North Carolina. Gerald M. Mayo, more popularly known as Ger ry, is a junior now, and president of the. YMCA. A Phi Eta Sigma, he received a two-year scholarship awarded, annually by'Burlington Industries o a" ris ing junior for outstanding scholarship and', leader ship. Mayo was born i n Greenville. N.C., and since then has lived in Chocowinity, N.C. and Falkland, N. C. His first experience at the University was with freshman camp and he has been active in the camp's work ever since When asked about his major he said he is specializing international in re lations in the Political Science MAYO international relations Dept. He added that it is "not going to do." His main interest, he said, lies in the field of international relations, but it is not missionary work. In fact, he added, "there's not any such thing as I'm looking for yet," He thinks it will be some kind of overseas so cial work, perhaps in the United Nations or some similar organization. In the summer of 1953 Mayo went to Belgium as an exchange student. While there he lived with a Belgian family and said he learned a great deal about their way of life. In Belgium he won his glider pilot's license. He recalled having to land in a hayfield one time and being forced to dismantle the plane in order V. ? W COUNTRY 1$ Z!N3 uzlD in a tsopy old BUT WAY. IMAGINE J WAL, THIS'U- BE TH' IS A BANQUET L A HONORlN THE. l( HOfiT MP i )P rr GRANDMOTHER TH' VXR.' to get it back to the base. When asked what the farmer thought of having a sail plane land in his'hay field, Mayo said, "The farmers are used to it . . . this one carne out with a little screwdriver and helped me take the wings off." Last year Mayo was co-captain of the fencing 'squad and number one man on the foil, a sport he learned in Belgium . Also very active in church work, Mayo serves on the North Carolina Presbyterian Synod Council ; representing phapel' Hill's Westminster Fellow ship. He also represents -the U.' S. Presbyterian "Church"' on ' the United Student" Christian Council Planning Committee for the Southern Regional Con ference. When he leaves Carolina, Mayo intends to at tend Yale Divinity School for a year before enter ing the air force. He is presently First Sgt. of the AFROTC Drill Team. WThen he enters the regular air force he ex pects' to be either a pilot or navigator. He plans to stay in the service for three years. Last summer Mayo attended Union Theological Seminary in New York. There he studied contem porary theology, Christian ethics and Christian edu cation. His trip was sponsored by the YMCA. In New York he lived in a co-op house with 11 girls and six other boys. He said it was "quite an experience." Asked how the Y has changed since the YM and YWCA started working more closely, Mayo said, "There is a renewed interest and a new atti tude towards the Y, and I'm very pleased with the way the students are cooperating to such an ex tent.". Speaking on student apathy, he commented, "This feeling of: apathy has been very evident during the last year or so, but I've sensed a change in the past three or four weeks because of a more sincere cooperation between students, faculty, the administration, the trustees and even the towns people. "The amount of activity within the YM and YW itself is evidence of a new attitude of decreasing apathy among the students towards campus activities." t student efinite what I'm Wg DO MUCH ff5ff2 i u n Li fit Ktf IN QOJ.21 AS' lO WHO fO VCTg FOX. FASTEST i ir fnV 2tysA oo n LurjM S . US RED-&LOODED HE-MEN ) I rf J ( ISN'T HE U OUGHTA GIVE HIM TH' JZ I V -. ' J f N I f-- jvz nTMAT. By Walt Kelly By Al Capp