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U.H.C. Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill. II. 8-31-49 WEATHER , ,Cloudy and cool with occassion al rain or drizzle. Expected high high in the 0's. CIRCLES Student responsibility exists, but does it really? See editorial, pag 2. VOL. LVII NO. 89 Complete UP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS iSSUt s Is Rescheduled Addres c n n n LD NEWS mis Eisenhower To Give Military Assistance To Saudi Arabia WASHINGTON ( APx) Presi-1 sistanee would be in this coun df nt Eisenhower is understood to j try's interest. But they said it h'ave assured King Saud that the ; wculd be hard to sell Congress on United States is prepared to help econ mic aid for a king who draws expand and modernise Saudi 300 million dollars a year in oil Arabia's military force. v royalties. "But there is no agreement yet Remarks by Secretary of State on how much aid the United States will give. Meanwhile, the prospect for a program of economic assistance to Saudi Arabia is growing weaker. Informed officials said Congress could be shown that military as- US, BriViin Pledge Solidarity WASHINGTON (AP) The, United States and Britain, whose; relations were chilled by the Suez C"isis, pledged anew Saturday , their "solidarity" in defense aims. Thst was among the points list ed In a joint communique list series of talks held by Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson and Dcfense Minister Duncap Sandys. 1 ments declined to elaborate on The meetings, the official an-; this. However, there were reports nounc ement and the subsequent that one of the main topics in the informal remarks of Sandys seem-1 talks c-oncrned Britain's desire to ,r eh,. , ,mm :cn"OTire some American guided returning to the Angle-American relatlons. damaged by the Brit-; bardment missiles which could Lh-French attack :n Egypt. use nuclear warheads. Egypt Agrees To UN Border Troops UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.- (AP) Jr. made two appeals for accep- Egypt agreed Saturday to hav- tance of the plan. At the end, he ing U.N. emergency forces on the said solemnly he could not pre uneasy armistice border line with diet the consequences if Israel Israel but remained non-commit- fails to comply with , the will of tal bout putting them on peace ; the Assembly and withdraw from patrol in the Gulf of Aqaba area., all of Egypt. Mahmoud Fawzi, foreign minis-! Lodge appealed also to the As ter of EgypL briefly stated to an sembly for support bur ran into extra-ordinary ' Saturday session adamant objections "from the So of.the Gensral Assembly his gov-; viet bloc. Speakers from the So ernment's stand in answer to a viet Ukraine, Czechoslovakia and plea by the United States to Israel Albania hit part of the plan as and Egypt to accept a compromise a new att?mpt by the UnUed peace pian.- Israel was silent but has been reported cool to the plan. U.S. chief delegate Henry Cabot Ledge, Death Toll From Craihes At (AP) Six more Alherican planes went dwn in fatal crashes Saturday at home and abroad, "bringing the toll since Thursday to at. least 51 dead and nearly 150 injured. ! Eleven planes, including a pri- vate craft, singleseater jet fight-; ers and an airliner carrying 101 ! persons, were destroyed in nine j separate accidents, two of them in-; volving in-flight collisions. j Counted yesterday were: t-u u r rvt rta . The crash of an F9F ranter jet on the side of-Mt. Baldy, south-j "east df Palmdale, Calif. ! Fhi To Discuss Eisenhower's Mid-East Plan r A resolution favoring the Eisen hower doctrine in the Middle East will come before the Philanthropic Literary Society during their meet ing on the top floor of New East, .Tuesday 8 p.m. Th? bill explicitly states: "The assembly of the Philanthropic Literary Society go on record fav 'oring the Eisenhower doctrine in the Mid-East, t such doctrine be ing defined as U) congressional delegation of power to the Pres ident to use American military forces, if necessary, in support of any country which might be in vaded by the Communists; . (b) such action be contingent upon the invitation of the country un tfer attack; (c) congressional au thorization of an enlarged pro gram of economic aid to that area." In support of the resolution the ' preface claims, "a power vacuum has been created in the Mid-East by th withdrawal of French and British military forces, and the expansion of Communist control and influence into said area is eminently probable." Dulles and Eisenhower Friday in dicated they feci Saud's visit here is, proving to be a great achieve ment in the struggle to keep So viet influence from taking over in the Middle East. The communique, issued as Sandys departed for home, also said that "the possible adoption by Britain of certain American weapons was explored, and this matter is being referred to the two governments for further con sternation." Officials of the two govern- miss'les. including anti-aircraft weanons and short r ange bom- States to impose imperialism on the Middle East in the form of the Eisenhower Doctrine. 51 The collision of two U.S. Air Force KB29 aerial tankers in the air above a Normandy field near St. Lo, France. The crash of an Air Force F8S jet during a landing at Hanscom AFB near Bedford, Mass., killing the pilot; Capt. Gordon E. De- Groat, 31, Nutting Lake, Mass. The explosion in flight and crash 0f a Navy F7U Cutlass jet fighter on the Camp Matthews ... .. , ., rifle range near San Diego, Calif. The pilot was killed and a shed set afire. More Women Volunteers Are Needed At Hospital Additional women volunteer workers' are needed at Memorial Hospital, according to hospital officials. There are openings for volun teer workers in all branches of the volunteer program, officials said. At present, there is a need or workers in the admitting of fice and the hospitality snop. wo- men wishing to take part in vol unteer work have been requested to call Mrs. Viola Jacobs at the hospital. The need was also cited for do nations of current magadines or magazine subscriptions. The mag azines will be placed in the hos pital waiting" rooms. Umbrella Season To End Tuesday Better keep the raincoats and umbrellas handy at least un til Tuesday. . Mere rain is expected today and tomorrow, according to the Weather Bureau at the Raleigh Durham Airport. It is expected to begin clearing up. on Tuesday. The temperature today and to morrow will be cool but not espe cially cold. Menon's Here For Talk To Begin At 8 Following Banquet At Inn The Carolina Forum has re- j scheduled V. K. Krishna Menon to ' speak Feb. 11, at Ti p.m. in Hill Hall. i Before the a-peech Menon will at tend a banquet in the main hall of t Carolina Inn. Student leaders and ,ome faculty members will be in-. ited, according to Whit Whitfield. Secretary of the Forum. After the address there will be a question and answer session and ..hen a reception at Graham Me morial. Menon, chief of India's delega ion to the United Nations, was :riginally scheduled to talk Dec. 10, but the Hungarian crisis and he special sessions of the United iatioi s forced him to postpone his ngagement. In 1928 Menon reactivated the india League of the United King dom, an organization which sup: ported India's struggle tor inde pendence. From that time until J 1947 he remained secretary ot the j league, carrying on a vigorous j ampaigr. for the independence of .ndia. j Menon is regarded by some as jeing second only to Nehru on the ndian political scene. Menon will be the second speak er this school year. No definite announcement -has been set for he third speaker. Dl Resolutions Asks Officials' Resignations The Dialectic Senate will debate a resolution calling for the resign ation of Secretary of Defense Wil son and Secretary of State Dulles at the meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. on the top floor of New East. The resolution states that "the ! Dialectic Senate go on record a favoring the resignation of Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles and of Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson." In defense of the resolution the "whereas" clauses say," "Secretary of State Dulles has bungled our foreign policy . throughout the world: the gross miscalculation in' trusting Nasser and his neutrals which placed the United States in a dangerous position is part of Dul les's bungling; the" Secretary of State has alienated our allies and the neutral countries by his con- j flicting statements and actions; Secretary of Defense Charles Wil son has continually shown his ad ministrative inability in the de fense department; Wilson's blunt statements about the National Guard and General Motors show that he lacks integrity in govern ment and the confidance of his su periora" 1 V t . t . - February V. K. KRISHNA MENON forum speaker Monday night WORKS OF FIVE MEN: PianistToPlayloday . - . Works by five leading" com-, e featured, on to- posers will be night s Les Petites Musicales con-, cert by pianist Helen McGraw. - ;Les pjcUics Musicales., vnir benta ..by Serge PTokofiell. ? ! presented in Graham Memorial's main lounge at 8 p.m. I Called '"a pianist of the great school" by a French critic. Miss McGraw has done extensive con- j cert work with orchestras and as . soloist both in this country and ' abroad. She has appeared nine i times at the National Gallery of j Art in Washington, playing at her i last performance the Beethoven Fourth Concerto in G Major with j the National Gallery Orchestra. j A pupil of the Russian pianist ' Alpvandpr Sklarpvski Helen Mc- ..i: j u ' ..a-.c t UraW LU.lUIlUt'U lici aiuuica ai. Peabdy Conservatory in Balti- in Pori rinnnrS whirh she has won during her musical rind" thp Peabodv Con- i servatory Artists Diploma, the Walter Naumburg Foundation . iu- : r k awaru, anu me upeiijug ui first annual Festival of American Music. In tonight's concert Miss Mc Graw will play the "Toccata." "Corrente," "Sfarabande," and Student Party To Hear Cummings Tomorrow Student . Party members will hear a talk by recently-appointed Elections Board Chairman Ralph Cummings tomorrow night, ac cording to SP Chairman Sonny Hallford. Cummings will speak on the policies and operation of the elec- tions board. fob. . .1 ! A NEW SEMESTER IS BORN . TV gazing j flick perusal things of the past us it's back to books 11 By Forum f' Gavatta" by Bach, Beethoven's j "Sonata A Major. Op. 101," "Les Qiseaux TnsUs" by Kavei, uar- tok's "Valse." and the Sixth So- , No admission is charged for tne GMAB-sponsored program. Staff Meeting To Be Heidv On Tuesday A mppHna rf Tha Tailv ' Tar Heel staff has been scheduled for 1 Tuesday afternoon at 2 in the , j newsroom. ! All reporters, columnists, sports ns Ul . , torial . staff have been asked attend. . Charlie Sloan, Daily Tar Heel managing editor.-has also in - 1 vited everyone who meant to ap- 1 .. , - piy ior reporioriai worn lasi tc- mester but never got around to it to attend the meeting. Reporters who did outstanding work during the last semester will be assigned regular news beats. Editor Fred Powledge said there will be several revisions in staff organization made at the meeting. Legislature To Meet The Student Legislature will meet Thursday night on tha fourth floor of New East at 7:15, it was announced yesterday by Son- ny Evans, speaker. i -3 Kincaid Named Carolina Forum Head Jan. 19 i Brandon Kincaid, a junior from Statesville, was elected Chairman of the Carolina Forum by a unan imous vote during a Forum meet- ing Jan. 18. He will replace Jim Holmes, who reigned his position Jan. 14.. Kincaid was appointed a mem- ber of the Carolina Forum to rep j resent President of the Student I Body Bob Young. The new Carolina I Forum Representative from the Di ! alectic Senate, Gary Greer, nomin ated Kincaid for the chairmapship. ! No other nominations were made, j Whit Whitfield was the only other member present. Jim Holmes ' presided over the meeting but did not vote. ' Carolina Forum Representative j from the Philanthropic Literary ! Society, Jess Stribling, was the only member absent. Petitioning Begun For A petition to have the comic strip -peanuts" placed regularly in tne Daiiy Tar Heel has boon drawn up by two UNC. students, j Bob Gedney and Joe Adams. ! . -According 'tcf "Gedney, another stujent Fred W. Burrill, was re- J sponsible for starting the campaign I to bring "Peanuts" to Chapel Hill. 250 names were attached to the petition yesterday when it was cir i culated in "Y" court. Originally, the students planned ! to circulate a petition to replace "Pogo" with "Peanuts". Due to the large number of "Pogo" fans however, the petition now states that the Daily Tar Heel will carry three comic strips, "Pogo," "LT ' Abner," and "Peanuts." Band Concert ha4u AJ Maxa j . 1 f 4 PTI. lOClaV I Approximately 100 high school mu -:ciar.s, comprising the East Central N. C. All-State High School Band will present a concert in Hill' From 1910 to 1932 he served 'n . feetions of the country. Hall today at 4 p.m. I he Ceylon Civil Service, holding The di-urbar.ee that brought According to Professor Earl Slo-' appointments as magistrate, dis- new snow to much of the east cum of the UNC Dept. of Music,' tr'ct judge, private secretary to whisked out into the Atlantic musicians participating in the J lhe governor, mayor of Colombo, Ocean. New York City had 5.U event, represent the select mem- j and member of the Legislative inches of sncw in a 13-hour period bers of bands in 16 high schools in I Council. In Ceylon he acquired an that ended early in the day. But Central North Carolina. The musical presentation will climax a three-day East Central All-State High School Band Clinic which began here Friday. The group will be directed by Herbert W. Fred, recently appointed di- 1 rector of bands at UNC. t it i rcrw A. Naval Unit! To Appear j In Parade The University's Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps unit, first to represent the NROTC in a Pres idential inaugural parade last , cd to have, little effect on tne week, will do a repeat performance ' crowded dormitory situation still in Raleigh Thursday. j present on campus. The local unit will send its Accordinj, to j. E. Wadsworth, precision drill team, drum and hoUsing director lhe drop in en bugle corps and color guard to ap- rcUment is not enough to make a pear in Gov. Hodges' inaugural- difference in the worst nous- parade, Capt. A. M. Patterson. ! h e .n the h.story (f au. commanding officer, announced ! y ivcrsity Friday. ! The 34-man precision drill team The 115 new students entering will be under the command of ; tor spring semester, plus about the Midshipman Lt. James K. uryani Jr. of Elkin. Commanding the 32-member drum and bugle corps will be Midn. Lt. Fredric C. Byrum of Eden ton. The color guard will be com posed of the following: Midn. Chief Petty Officer Maurice Glat- men in double rooms, and that zer, national color bearer, of quitc a number of men still re Kensingtcn, Md.; Midn. C. P. O. main in triple rooms. The rooms, Telfair Mahaffy, unit color bear-' originally designed for two men, er of Jacksonville, Fla; and provide crowded living quarters, color guards Midn. P. O. First The smaller spring enrollment is Class waiter i. uose. jr. oi a. ami. Fla. and Grady C. Pndgen Jr. of Sharpsburg. Colloquium Will Hear Dr. Stace W. T. Stace, professor emeritus of philosophy at Princeton Univer- j sity, will present a paper at aj nr. J r . 1 I meeting weunesuay vi Duke Joint Colloquim in Philoso-, pny. ! Dr. Stace's paper 'u entitled "Some Reflections on Empiricism." j I The meeting will be at 8 p.m. in j ' the ' Morehead Bldg. Faculty Lounge. Professor Stace was born in Lon don, England, in 1886. He was edu cated at Fettes College, Edinburgh, 1 ! and majored in philosophy at Tria- ! lly College, Dublin, where he re ; ceived his B.A. in 1S08. interest -in Buddhism and Hindu rising temperatures indicated the religions and philosophies. : snow cover wouldn't last long. In 1929 Dr. Stace obtained a Litt. Skies also cleared in the Appj D. from Trinity College, Dublin, lachian flood area, presenting his book. The Philoso-, Rain fell again in a belt that phy of Hegel, as thesis. In 1932 he stretched along the Gulf Coast and retired from the Ceylon Civil Ser- curved up into South Carolina, vice and came to Princeton Uni- I Snow was reported in the Upper versity as lecturer, where he has ! Mississippi Valley. One and two been professor of philosophy since; inch falls occurred in Wisconsin 1935. j and Minnesota. There were scatter- He is the author of Time and ; ed areas of freezing drizzle un .1 Eternity, a philosophical study ; light snow between Kansas and of religion, published by t,e Nebraska and the Great Lakes Re Princeton University Pres.; The;gion. Destiny of Western Man, for which ' he obtained a prize offered by ! Reynal and Hitchcock for any book on any subject written by a college professor; A Critical His tor of Greek Philosophy; Religion and the Modern Mind and a num ber of more technical philosophical , f books. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Jane Patterson Stain back, Sylvia Sue Yeltcn, Pan Laura Lu, and Hcward Martin Kahn, Patrick Jackson Leonard, Douglas Wilson Sharp, Marvin Russell Cowan, Marvin Byron Smith, Kenneth Barnum Alvord, Robert Ranson Williams and Kee Yoo. Enroslm Decline 9 & I m Littl e i By EDITH MACKINNON The slight decline in enrollment for the spring semcver is expect- jjme number of former students not enrolled in the fall, brought the spring enrollment to approxi mately 6,615. This figure is some 350 students less that the neur record fall enrollment of 6,971. Wadsworth stated that there were no dormitory vacancies f r i ovnB(l(l4 tn hrinrT nitlp change in j the dormitory .-.pace tor coeds, I many of whom are still sharing j three girl rooms. 1 "The only way to really help the ; situation is to get new dormitory j space which is still in the offin, or to have a terrific drop in en i rollment, which is not expected." stated Wadsworth. "In fact, the op posite is expected, it is predicted, that the enrollment will continue to increase next year," he said. Work will continue throughout the semester to alleviate the .situ ation in the three man rooms, where, according to Wad. .worth "the men should not have been in the first place." Elsewhere in US It's Clear And Snowing Skies cleared in the east and northeast Saturday but rain and snow fell in central and western One UNC Student Wins National Contest Prize , Curtiss W. Daughtry, junior from Smithfield, was the only UNC student to win a prize in ! the Reader's Digest College Con I test last fall. ! Reader's Digest announced ' Daughtry, number. 50, would win 1 , $10 in book credits at college hook j stores for being in the first 112 i entrants and S10 more in book j credits for being the best entry from his university. ' In all, four people attending I college in North Carolina won ; prizes in this contest to choose j to choose the six articles in the 1 October issue of Reader's Digest j which a later readership survey would find most interesting. 3elp
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1957, edition 1
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