U.N.C. Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill. ft. C. fill Zr""- WEATHER -Cloudy and colder. Expected high 52. HONOR When in secret, one may worry. See editorial, page 2. VOL. LVU NO. 90 Complete W) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS ISSUE A 1 1 ft 1 V MX is'' Last 'Duke Painting On Library; Maintenance Surprised' Work Thought Completed Last November By WALTER SCHRUNTEK When will the last "Duke" paint ing be removed from the entrance of Wilson Library? According to Giles Horney, UNC maintenance supervisor, the work was supposed to have been com pleted last November. He express ed surprise at the knowledge thai the entrance of the library still bears the remains of last Novem ber's vandalism which marked nu merous campus sites, including the pitla of Morehcad Planetarium and the Old Well. Horney felt that the 'Duke'' painting on the entrance of the library has remained during these past months as the result of a serious oversight. He said that he will set his crews to work imme diately on correcting a situation which has existed as a campus eye tc these past several months. The work, he said, will require special1 attention because of the I nature of limestone. Each case of ' defacement requires separate at , tention and treatment, but Horney felt that the same process used' on the columns of' the planetarium would remove the paint now on the librarj' wall. Work is expected" to start to day! Revolt Hinted j BUDAPEST Hungary's ! Soviet-supported premier took note Monday of signs that a new Hungarian revolt may break out in March. - In a speech made at Salgotarjan .and broadcast by Budapest Radio. Premier Janos Kadar said the revolutionary movement has mov ed from the towns to the villages and farms. r, lie called on Hungarians ' to be "watchful, for though the coun-ter-revelution has been broken, it can still incite disturbances." Kadar told the communist mili tia it should "beat down only the counter-revolutionaries and not make a public show of strength." His speech came as Budapest .university studsnts returned quietly to classes with a new form of greeting: "Muk." The three let tors are initials of a Hungarian phrase meaning. "We'll start again in March." Underscoring the mutterings was a disclosure that weapons caches arc being found daily in Budapest university buildings. A student demdns'pafion last Oct. 23 led to the first violence (See WORLD NEWS, Page 3) Annual Jenkins Lecture Given Today By Intern Dr. Gilbert Mudgc of Johns-Hop-Kins Medical School will give thL year's Lee B. Jenkins Memorial lecture Wednesday at the UNC Clinic Auditorium. Dr. Mudgc . will appear before the combined staff of the Univer sity's School of medicine at 4 p.m. to explain new methods involved in traditional ways of removing body, wastes in the treatment of severe diseases. Dr. Mudge, the third lecturer in this annual series, is a pharmacolo gist and internLv at John's Hop kins University. IN THE INFIRMARY Misses Sylvia Yelton, Elizabeth Meloy, Jane Stainback, Nancy Stockwefl, and John Crittenden, Kee Yoo, Lawrence Bernard, Thomas White, Michel Cap, Wil liam Gautler, Robert Williams, John Johnson, Kenneth Albord, Patrick Leonard, Douglas Sharp, Marvin Smith, Robert Biggs, James Emerson, and Richard Oresman. 'Duke' art Student Fined By Court For Cross Burning William P. Cheshire, UNC stu dent from Hillsboro, was fined $10 and coJis in County Recorder's Court yesterday morning as the tirst person " to be tried tor vio-, !ation of the State's anti-cross j burning law. The defendant, represented by ittorncy Percy Rcade of Durham, leaded nolo contendere to the charge, before Judge L. J. Phipps. Cheshire presented several char acter witnesses but did not take ihe stand in hL- own behalf. He was charged with burning the cross in the yard of the Cheshire Webb home in Hillsboro on the light of Dec. 27 to show 3raham who was visiting how he felt about him. Frank j there! I Cossacks Dance Here On Feb. 72 The original Don Cossack Chor- j us and Dancers will be brought j to the UNC campus cn Feb. 12. j Presented by the Student Enter- j tainment Committee, the program; A'ill be held in Memorial Hall at 3 p.m. With Szrge Jaroff as conductor, j the Russian performers are now on a world-wide tour which began j in the spring of 1956 and will end in May of this year. During 1956 their tour took them through 12 countries, including 'appearances in Berlin, Paris, Tokyo, and Lon don. Since their first concert in Vi enna in 1923, the Don Cossacks have sung in every country in the world except Red China and So viet Russia. The troupe first visit ed the U. S. in 1930 and has ap peared in this country annually for 26 seasons. In their concerts the Don Cos sacks present a wide variety of Russian folk songs, operatic mel odies, and old Russian church mus ic, spiced with lightning-fast Cos sack dances. Frequently included on their programs is the musical version of the Origin and History of the Don Cossack Chorus, illus trating their part in the Russian Revolution, Civil War and flight from their home country. The Chorus is now well-represented on LP records, .having at ! present seven albums on the mar i ket. Still - . s , J : t ; J 4 THE LIBRARY FRONT that teas thought gone since Elections Board Head Doubts Law Efficiency By NEIL BASS , , . . , , i Elections Board Chairman Ralph Cummings said Monday night he! wa -uncertain of . the . fficieiicy.7 j of the current Elections Law which j places ballot Laxcs in individual dormitories. j Cummings was guest speaker at! the regularly scheduled Monday j night Student Party meeting. Elaborating, Cummings referred to "discrepancies" which occurred during the past fall election over which the current Elections Law exerted control. Chairman Cummings said these discrepancies necessitated disquali- fication of numerous ballots which in turn lowered the percentage of voting stiiHpnts. In electoral action, Harold O'Tuel was named over Don Jacobs to fill a seat vacancy in Dorm Men's III. The seat was vacated by the resign ation of Dick Gustafson. The race for Gustafson's vacated seat was a close one. O'Tuel de feated Jacobs by a narrow margin of 5 votes. APPOINTMENTS Chairman Sonny Hallford named the following SP members on a committee to investigate campus r If f - ' ' , y . , p , ,A - . . ' .r ,s, : - :Jr:' ... fx - seniors are eligible to place . ,. .! .,,,w;v.-.., , .'I. .Lm-.-m- V, -. IxJ" ' orccrs- according to Bob Hornik, 1 1 r " i "ft t' VI C ' rffcs : Grail class ring chairman. 1 ; m czS ?V;a'feri. ! The Balfour s is rd ,Z T-.. I & W Phone 6031. I v-rtVvi,; q gm's slate ! The UNC Air Force Officer Training Unit, will represent Caro lina at the Inauguration Parade of Gov. Hodges Thursday in Raleigh. emains I 1 I s ' I J I ' , - I I ' I , . November areas to determine platform planks for the coming spring election: Joel Fleishman, John Brooks, Gardner Foley, Gary.Greer, Eypretl James, Miss Babs Moore, Dav id Evans, Don Furtado and John Riy. Appointed to succeed Fleishman as Social Committee chairman was Miss Phyliss Krafft. Chairman Hallford also appoint ed Miss Betty Huffman as party file clerk. Miss Huffman succeeds Miss Judy Davis. uuring xne perioa aesignaiea iori committee reports, party Treasurer Bob Carter reported the group was some $50 "in the red." Carter re quested contributions from inter ested members. Also during the period, , Chair man of the Advisory Committee Whit Whitfield announced revision of the Elections Law was being de liberated by the committee. Whitfield said discussion was being held on the possibility of limiting the number of run-off el ections. The party will not meet next j week due to a conflict with the presentation of Carolina Foruin Speaker V. K. Krishna Menon. 1 KM Wfr-vs AFROTC TO BE IN i - v t s t . ...... i f ' i 1 V f I ! ,AV- x- ii I ii . M" nik reoucsts that he bo contacted ! t il . f: U : 51 . I I ' tVir. 7oH Rota Tan TTmivo i Law Grant Interviews On Friday ! 4 Dr. Brainard Currie of the .University .of Chicago School of Law will be here Friday to inter view prospects for law school scholarships there, according to the UNC Placement Service. . Dn Currie will be at the Place ment Service, 204 Gardner, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to talk with interested students. For the second year the Univers ity of Chicago School of Law is ( offering a three - year $1500 per year tuition scholarship. The scholarship is autormtically re newable for the second and third years upon satisfactory completion ' of the first- year. Interested students have been asked tp make an appointment at j the Placement Service beforehand. ! Those who cannot ga by should ' call in their appointment at 9-3751, ! according tothe Placement Ser vice, j , Thoso students who have not ' decided where they want to go j btit want to go to law school have j been asked to see Dr. Currie. j Anyone desiring more informa- tion has been asked to check with anvone in the Placement Service. Coed Improves From Holiday Auto Mishap Stella Anderson, junior from West Jefferson injured in a pre-j : . : ,1 Sc. ! Liuisimas auiumuuuc avuiuvui, is reported to be making progress to ward recovery. "Her mother wrote me that she j improving," reported Dean of is Women Katherine Carmichael. Young indicated there is a pos Miss Anderson asked that the sibility the UNC-N. C. State game TAR HEEL express. her gratitude here Tuesday, Feb. 19. may also for the letters, cards, and roses ' televised. which she has received. "I espec-; 'Broadvisicn' will be used in j ially appreciated them considering coverage of the games. This com-1 the time of the semester." The Women's Residence Coun cil also is sending her The Daily Tar Heel. I In a letter to Dean Carmichael Mrs. Anderson said that letters from friends at the university had meant a great deal to Stella. Miss Anderson. a journalism major, was injured Dec. 23 on Highway 268 near North Wilkes boro. A car driven by Lee Riddle, 23, of North Wilkesboro. struck Miss Anderson while she was unlock ing the trunk of her car. She was crushed between the two vehicles. Her leg was almost severed and had to be removed at the hospital. Miss Anderson also sustained a broken left leg and fractures of the pelvis and skull. s 4 " INAUGURAL PARADE The band (bottom left) will lead Guard (right) and the Drill Team '5 . - ' I?. ir jrt ' - rr -i .'. .. 1? -vn ... t ' fj ""J p p'4 I ring by the University administra- A - it ' It) ff i f C j tion and the Order of the Grail. ri'w X'" J -it's I It Wit 1 For further information, Hor- P-f n I Y arch ! i- - v. 4 i Is DR. HEARD . Harvard visitor . Over WUNC-TV Broad vision Games With Two cf UNC's last four home basketball games will be televised over WUNC-TV, according to an announcement Saturday by John Young, assistant director of the station. - Televised will be the UNC Duke game on Saturday and the UXC-Wake Forest game Wednes day, Feb. 13. ; ; , , The casts will be live from Wool- len G'm and start l 7:55 ! p.m. bines t,he telecasts with radio play- J by-play and is worked out with other radio stations in the state. WUNC-TV will transmit pictures of the game action while differ- j enr radio stations will carry the j play-by-play. i Young said "In view of the fine I showing the Big Four teams are ' making again this year, particular- ; ly the first-place Tar Heels, we j know there will be an unusual j amount of interest in these games, j and we are particularly glad to be able to telecast them. ; He said he appreciated "the co-1 operation of the the state, which broadcasters in made the tele - casts possible." young saici ne is nopeiui some arrangement will De worked out to televise the UNC-State game. "High school officials' have told the unit, followed by the Color (top left). y r 1 ear s 1 i Year's At Was Effective Feb. 1 Dr. Alexander He.ivil. professor of political science at IWC lias accepted a visiting researcli professorsliip at Har vard I'niversity, He will be on leave of .' bscnee from his tluties at Chapel Hill lor one year, effective Feb. I. H).-,7. it has been an nounced jointly by Harvard University and I NC. Rumor has been persistent in wnjcn w be open in June whn the past few weeks that Dr. Chancellor Robert House retires. Heard is being considered, along jq COMPLETE BOOK with several others from the Uni versity and out-of-state, for the position of chancellor here. A committee of the Consolidated University is currently interview ing prospects for the position, -v- Wil I Cover Duke,Wake us that a large number of their games are scheduled on the same evening and that their athletic pro gram would suffer from the tele cast," he said. '"We are, of course, anxious to cooperate with the schools and do not want to interfere with their I basketball program. If a satisfact- cry solution can be found we will i add the State game to the 'broad i vision.' schedule," he said. UP To Hear i Sam Magill j On Woes Director of Student Activities ; Sam Magill will addre.s the Uni-! versity Party tonight at 7:30 in the Roland Parker Lounges of Graham Memorial. Magill will speak on the admin istration views on several campus problems, such as parking. The entire student body is cordi ally invited to attend, party Chair man Mike Weinman said. "This promises to be an extrcm- elv interesting and worthwhile 1 talk," Weinman said. No party business will be trans acted with the exclusion of commit- tee reports and a short review ot old business at the session, accord ing to Chairman Weinman. The UP chajrman expressed extreme-pleasure that the Columbia St. parking ban had been lifted. 'The UP pledges continued atten tion toward getting student park ing lots this year," Weinman con cluded. Company Representative For Rings To Be Here The Balfour Company repre sentative will take orders for class rings in "Y" Court on Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 18-19, from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. All juniors and Faculty Committee on Frater nities and Sororities, 3:30-5, Grail Room; Woman's Residence Council, 3-5, Council Room and 6:30-8:30, Grail Room; Mardi Gras, 7-11, Roland. Parker Loun ge: W.A.A., 7:00, Woodhouse Conference Room; Men's Honor Council, 7-11, Council Room. oono. Absence Leave Under a grant from the Ford Foundation, Professor Heard will complete a book, "Money in Foli tics" during his year at Harvard He has been assembling material for more than three years on the How of money in politics in a pro ject financed by the Edgar Stern Foundation. j The year at Harvard will enablo ; Dr. Heard to put hi. findings in j book form. He has already present I ed preliminary findings, with con J elusions, in magazine articles and I in testimony as a consultant to a ; Congressional Committee. While at Harvard Dr. Heard, author of "A Two-Party South?" and co-author of "Southern Po litics in State and Nation," may also lecture to students in the. Dept. of Government. At Chapel Hill Dr. Heard is Pre sident of the Faculty Club, Chair man of the University's Committee on Established Lectures, and has been a member of ti:e Political Science Dept. at UNC mice 1.950. A native of Savannah, Ga., the 39 year old "professor graduated from UNC in 1933. and received his M. A. and Ph.D. degrees at Columbia University. He became a staff member of the American Em bassy in Quito, Ecuador, and served with the Navy in World War II. Free Flicks May Cease In ! Carrol! Hall : There is a strong possibility that ! showing of free movies in Carroli Hall will be discontinued unless ' students stop littering the audi torium, Graham Memorial Actiw- ties Board Chairman Tom Lam beth said yesterday. Lambeth made it clear that this '.hreat did not come from GM but from Carroll Hall custodians. Lam beth's statement in mil rea'is; "GMAIJ is able to .show tree mov ies in Carroll Hall through cour tesy of the building's management. We do not pay rent for use of Ihe auditorium nor do we pay for jani torial services in the buiiuing. "Carroll Hall lias certain rules regarding use of the auditorium. One of them is that there is to he no eating, drinking or smoking within the auditorium. Whatever we may think about the reasonable ness of the rule or any part of it, it is a rule which we must obey if free movies are to continue show ing in Carroll. "We know that many people smoke during free movies because they do not realize that it is against the rules. In the future, GMAIJ will do its best to remind audien ces about them. We hope that stu dents attending the movies will cooperate with Carroll Hall at tendants so that it will not be ne cessary for them to forbid future use of the auditorium as they hue warned they may." Wake Forest Faculty Boots Pinty Raiders WINSTON-SALEM AP T-.v o men have been suspended and two coeds placed on probation in con nection with a panty raid at Wake Forest College Jan. 9. The men had been tried by the Men's Honor Council and given I warnings. But the faculty execu tive committee overruled the council and suspended the men. None of the names uas. released.

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