U.I4,C. Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill. H 8-31-49 C. WILD ANIMAL Butterfly bits duck. See pay WEATHER Rain, with high of 62. ,2. VOL. LVII, NO. 107 Complete CP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS ISSUI 55. EE r .y.' I ol AW IvSvfT f i till Wesley Weekend' Will Begin Today 'A three-day student Methodist dents, faculty members and towns religious program, "Wesley Week-1 men. will attempt to stimulate the end," opens here today at the University Methodist Church. Th2 program, led by its main speaker Dr. Carl Sanders, will co ordinate three days of sermons, meetings and student discussions with its purpose of "reemphasiz ing the ideas of religion and Christianity." ' Dr. Sanders, district supt. of Methodist churches in Richmond, Va., will open the weekend with the first of four sermons at 11 1 a.m. in the University Methodist Church. At 7:30 p.m. tonight, and at the same time tomorrow and Tuesday, Dr. Sanders will deliver his re maining sermons. His talks will center around the context of the pronounced theme of the program " And God." Discussion groups will hold "cof fee confabs" in the church and "bull sessions" in dorms, fratern ity and sorority houses, according to Wesley Foundation Director O. Murray Unruh. The groups, composed of stu- Musieale To Sponsor Ballad Singer Tonight Ballad singer Earle Spicer will j grams have gained much popular be featured in Les Petites Musi-; ity with both acuity and students cales tonight in a program of tra- j and are considered ideal for a gen ditional English ballads. Shakes- j eral college audience, peare, Gilbert and Sullivan selec- tions and American ballads and Augh musical, his interpre f oik son tations are of interest ty English S isored by Graham Memorial Activities Board, the Petite Musi ' Y- EARLE SPICER sings ballads tonight cale will be held in the main Kunge of Graham- Memorial at 8 p.m. Spicer , has been called the "most re-engaged singer by col leges today" as is evidenced by his 1000 engagements at over 400 colleges and universities. His pro- Football Squad Holds Duel Scrimmage Session Streamlinsd football practice was introduced at Carolina today. Coach Jim Tatum conducted a double header scrimmage in clos ing the second week of off-season practice for -the Tar He?ls. Two scrimmages went on simultane ously with assistant coaches in charge. Both of the head-knocking ses sions took place in Kenan Stadium with a small gallery watching. Cameraman .made movies for the c:aches and players. to study next week. Committee Applications Are Due By Wednesday AH women interested in being members of the women's Orienta tion Committee have been asked to- fill out their applications in the student government office by Wednesday. Members of the Orientation Committee are not orientation counselors, according to Jerry Oppenheimer, orientation chair man for 1957-58. Oppenheimer said committee members will draw up plans for the program next fall. ideas beyond the spoken stage, said Unruh. In the projected broad scope of the program, Unruh said, the pur pose will be carried beyond the reception of Methodists alone. He said the discussion sessions in the church and in the dorms "will be open to all townspeople and students." This will be the second year that the now annual program has been held. A student central plan ning committee, headed by Ray Long, has been in consultation since last October in preparation for the religious program. Faculty and townspeople who will lead discussions in the ' sev eral dorms include: Rev. J. Paul Edwards, Dr., E. M. Gitlin, Jim Tatum, Rev. Charles Hubbard, USN Lt. Commander Howard Childress, Dr. Guy John son, Dr. O. D. Garvin, Rev. A. K. King, Dr. Earl Peacock Jr., Dr. Frank Hanft, D.r J Kempton Jones and Unruh. "". aiwKeipeare and creative writing are taught. After study in London and New York, Spicer went tn to sing witb 1 , , , 0 many of the leading symphony or chestras and 'oratorio sxrieties both' in' this country and in Eng- land. He has made appearances before the English nobility, t h e ! j Gcvernor-General of Canada, and at the White House and for three 1 I years was feature soloist on one ! of the lsading NBC programs ! with Donald Voorhees and his or i chestra. The New York baritone accom- panies himself at the piano and makes brief informal comments stressing the contribution folk music has made to art music and the influence of ballads on crea tive writing. Tonight's program includes the traditional English ballads "The Rich Old Woman," "The Hertford shire Farmer" and "Lord Randal." "Willow, Willow' from Shakes peare's "Othello," "The Night mare Song" from Gilbert and Sul livan's "Iolanthe," and the Amer ican ballads and folksongs "The Lane County Bachelor" and "John Henry." No admission is charged for the program. LEGISLATURE ROUNDUP Lawmakers Find Time For Fun, Too Thursday night's legislative ses sion was far and away the most ac tive of the present 22nd Assembly. . Student lawmakers got some se riouj business accomplished and still found time to have an inter mission of fun. Measures passed were: (1) A bill establishing a commit tee to confer with Lenoir Hall of ficials on wages and working con ditions for self-help students. (2) A resolution urging that freshmen and sophomore nurses have the same curfew hours as other University coeds.. . (3) A bill appropriating $10 to the Legislature Rules Committee to defray printing expenses. One measure, a resolution urgr ing that student government, or ganizations refrain from overspends ing their budgets, was held in com mittee. Reason for its being pigeon holed, according to Ways and Means Chairman Al Goldsmith, was j that a law is currently, in effect , which calls for prosecution by stu dent government's Attorney Gen eral of organizations which spend more tnan their legislative appropriation. roir ma Morehead Applicants To Be Here Fifty-four top scholars among high school graduating seniors being considered for Morehead Scholarships atUNC will attend fin al screenings here March 2, 4, and 5. it was annouced recently by R. A. Fetzer, director of the scholarships. A series of interviews with1 a selection committee headed by John Motley Morehead of Rye, N. Y., donor of the $1,250 a year scholarships, will be held at the Morehead Building here. The Morehead Foundation trus tees will complete, the selection program which has been going on several months in all parts of North Carolina, and including al so preparatory schools in the South. Announcement of recipients will be made March 6. Of the 54 finalists, 42 of them are students in the public high schools of North Carolina, and the other 12 are prep school sen iors. Forty-six of the boys are , other eight are from Tennessee. Kentucky, South Carolina, and Virginia.' .- r; .,. ; ; t:....:. The Morehead Scholarships are rtnc! Hoivfi nm"nc tKo mnci at. tractive offered in American col- leges and universities. Morehead started giving the scholarships six years ago. Scholarship, character, leadership, and a well-balanced aptitude and interest in extra curricula activities, including ath letics, are considered in the screening processes. Trustees of the Morehead Foun dation in addition to John Motley Morehead, include his cousin John L. Morehead of Charlotte, Norman Cocke of Charlotte, Robert M. Hanes of Winston-Salem and Hugh Chatham of Elkin. In awarding 80 undergraduate scholarships at Chapel Hill since 1951, Mr. Morehead's wish that the" "tall timber of the future" be selected and carefuy groomed for places of leadership has been scrupulously followed. Morehead's benefaction coincides with the premises of the "Great Talent Hunt" which now prevails- in ma jor universities "of the ' nation. Bill McNaull (SP) called the cafe-1 teria a "sweat shop." Butch Tom linson asked that sources of "pro duce" be investigated along with wages and working conditions. Tomlinson and the SP's Al Alphin were Speaker Sonny Evans' ap pointments to the investigating committee from the legislature. - Bill Baum, ordinarily the serious and forceful Rules Committee chairman, got the biggest laugh of the night when he asked McNaull if the investigation should be "ma ture and rational." McNaull hesi tantly asked Baum to repeat his question. "That answers my ques tion' Baum said. Chairman Baum, University Party, threw in a serious note when he emphasized that Lenoir's smart ing salaries were comparable to those of other university cafeterias. Such a study must be "careful and tactful," Baum said. Rules Committee Chairman Baum also reminded legislators that a. quiz on parliamentary pro cedure was forthcoming Feb. 28. The quiz wil be of a take-home type. NEW MEASURES New measures introduced were: N CLflf S V ew Planning To Attend Y Conference Shawn above .are twelve UNC students planning to attend the YM-YWCA joint spring conference at Bricks Friday-Sunday. The conference, planned for Carolina students, will deal with the topic "Conscience and Cenformitory." Seated art Bob Newton and Miss Kathy LeGrande. Standing (left to right) are Doug Cant re 1 1, Miss Phyllis Kraft, Tom Long, Miss Jackie Hathcock, Miss Ann Morgan, Miss Joyce Bryant, Paul Carr, Miss Flo Davenport, G. C. Pridgen and Miss Mary Jean Crawford. r - Y Conference To Be The 7th annual joint YW-YMCA Student Conference will be held at Brick's Assembly Grounds near Rocky Mount next weekend. Theme of this year's conference will be "A Student Faces Con science, Conformity and Com promise." and the featured speaker will be Dr. John O. Nelson of the Yale Divinity School. Six discussion groups led by students will apply the conference theme to 1 planning marriage, home and future vocation, 2 meeting the challenge of vocation as students, 3 relating Christiani ty to real life, 4 seeking and maintaining popularity in social life, 5 exploring and conquering prejudices and 6 accepting the responsibility of citizenship in the world community. All interested students have been urged to fill out registration forms in the Y-Court lobby. (1) A resolution endorsing Presi dent Bob Young's purchase of a trophy for Lennie Rosenbluth as an expression; of appreciation from the student body. Special orders were moved for immediate passage of this measure. - At this point, a threominute re cess was called to allow Introducer Sonny Hallford, SP floorleader, time to redress his measure. Hallford's measure actually call ed for appropriation from the un appropriated balance. Instead tro phy funds are to come from Presi dent Young's discretionary fund. Hallford quickly corrected his mis take. (2) The new student government Elecetions Law which will be vot ed upon next week. APPOINTMENTS . President Young's appointment of Jerry Oppenheimer as Orienta tion Committee chairman, and Rep resentatives Bill Baum and John Brooks to the Constitutional Re vi sional Committee were approved. Absent from the session were Herb Greenblatt, Ben Peele, Roy Peele, Miss Val von Ammon and Mike Weaver. Speaker Sonny Exans commend Chance r. 1 i 1 f :JJS:, Loyalty Program Hit - CLEVELAND ( AP) , Former U. S. Sen. Harry P. Cain said yes terday this nation's loyalty pro gram "will lead only to thought control and become a greater threat than any from outside the country." Cain, who was appointed to the President's Subversive Activities Control Board in 1952, called the loyalty program a weapon against those who might disagree with stated policies of the government. "As now constituted, it appears the loyalty program is considered necessary because' of a fear the American people are growing weak and those who argue against stated policites are un-American," he told a city club forum audience. The state of Washington Repub lican said that since World War II ' the nation has been operating on fear rather than on its strength arid thus has not been acting wise ly as it might. , ,' ed the session as the year's most active. It lasted a full two hours. HUMOR The session's humorous side be gan when Whit Whitfield, Student Party, read Lenoir Hall's Operat ing Procedures in conjunction with his bill calling for investigation of wages and working conditions in the cafeteria. The procedures state, in part: (1) "We wish to impress upon you that your employment here is a privilege granted by the Univer sity. (2) "$1.90 worth of food daily . . . may not be shared with others. (3) "The future of allowing stu dents to fill these jobs instead of regular employees depends upon your showing that students are cap able of providing services. It's a wonderful opportunity for a man to secure a fine, education in a manner that will make him proud for 'the rest-of his life. ' : (4) "The-facilities at Lenoir Hall are completely dedicated to the student body HOWLS ; Reading of these procedures brought howls from student law makers and a stream of orators to the rostrum. IS u news ' m a. Bevin Says Ike In Trap LONDON (AP) Aneurin Bev an said last night President Eisen hower's stand on Israel had placed the President "in a trap of his own devising and he is trying to get us into it with him." Bevan, foreign affairs spokesman for the British Labor Party and a frequent critic of U. S. foreign policy, charged in an article for the Sunday newspaper News Of The World that Eisenhower has adopted a double standard in the Middle East. Referring to Eisenhower's ap parent approval of U. N. pressure to ' persuade Israel to withdraw from Egypt, Bevan wrote: "It is as "much the duty of the United Nations to put a clamp on Egypt as it is to demand from Israel that she should not bene fit from an act of aggression." No Compromise CAIRO (AP) Official spokes men torpedoed , last night any hopes in the, U.N. that Egypt has offered to compromise on the Gaza Strip issue.,.- TV. Z' ' The hopes rose yesterday when U. N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold reported Egypt would permit the U.N. forces to take up positions in the strip and help end all raids from either side. Commenting on this, Abdel Rar er Hatem, information director, declared Egypt bad made no new agreement for additional or new tasks for U. N. forces since the one concluded last November. He said the November agreement stipulated that the U. N. forces's task "is to stop the fighting and follow the aggressive . Israeli forces as they withdrew to points behind the Demarcation line (Armistice Line of 1949)." Underground Mobilizing NEW YORK (AP) Bela Var ga, former speaker of the Hungar ian Parliament, said yesterday the Hungarian underground is mobiliz ing for a revolt in March "more deadly than the last." . Monsignor Varga, who heads the anti-Communist Hungarian nat ional Council, made his remarks in a talk and Interview at a lunch eon of the Woman's Pr?ss Club of New York City. He said that "among Hungar ians, the password is 'Muk,' which means 'we move again in March.' "This revolt,' he said, "will be moe deadly than the last. It will mak the last stand of thre Hun garians for their rightfully-deserved freedom." He did not elaborate further. Monsignor Varga was the last speaker of the Hungarian Parli ment before the Communists took control in Hungary "after World War II. Eastland To Investigate WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Eastland (D-Miss) said yesterday a "disguieting flow of anonymously owned foreign capital into the United States" will be the sub ject of a major investigation by this Senate Internal Security Sub committee. Eastland said the inquiry may show a "back door of financial manipulation by which an un friendly .foreign power could quiet yl take over our vital in dustries." "As a matter of fact," he contin ued in a prepared statement, "it is not at all unreasonable to as sume that heavy inroads of such (See WORLD NEWS, Page 3) lor 51 Choice s y me Woman's College Head May Be Named A replacement for retiring VSC Chancellor Robert Ii. House may be chosen tomorrow. Consolidated University President William C. 1 ridav is expected to recommend his choice to the Executive Commit tee of the Board of Trustees who meet tomorrow morning in Raleigh.. Friday's recommendation, if approved by the Executive ' : Committee, will then be voted r f mm 31 I upon at the full board mesting to- noages i aiics To Tar Heels In Washington WASHINGTON (AP) North Carolina's Gov. Hodges Saturday night told Tar Heels in the nation's capital how their home state is striving for a bigger economic fut ure. ". . ."We must do everything possible in every phase of our economy to press forward to a more productive, more prosperous future for all," Hodges said in a speech prepared for delivery to the annual banquet of North Car olina Society of Washington. The Governor pointed again to the state's low per capita income 44th in the nation and point ed again to tne fact tnat 41 per cent of its population is under 21 years old which gives it a lower percentage of income producers than othsr states. This, he1 said, places a relative- ly greater burden on the income producers" in meeting the costs of public education. He said if he had to pick out a few of the problems facing us as as always public education, a re vamped tax structure and a sound tax program ... I would, of course, mention agriculture, not only beacuse of the problems it is facing, but in North Carolina we must do what we can to help save our changing tobocco econo my and to be ready with new eco nomic opportunities for those who must shift to other endeavors." Daily Tar Heel To Hold Meet s Two orientation meetings for prospective Daily Tar Heel staffers have been planned for next week. Managing Editor Charlie Sloan announced yesterday. The meetings are scheduled for Tuesday afternoon at 1 and Fri day afternoon at 2. Both meetings will be held in Roland Parker 1. Approximately the same ma terial will be covered in both meetings. Two sessions were scheduled so that students with lab conflicts could attend the al ternate meeting. During the meeting The Daily Tar Heel's ' organization, deadline schedule and style will be dis cussed. According to Sloan there are openings for new people in all departments of the paper. This meeting is primarily for students who have not worked on The Daily Tar Heel before and those who have not worked on the paper since the beginning of the fall semester. Sloan said this is not a regular staff meeting. Local Restaurant Given 'A' Rating, Instead Of 'B' It was incorrectly reported Sat urday that Michael's Famous Foods restaurant was recently give a "B" rating by the District Health Dept. The restaurant was given an "A" rating several days ago. irrow; A A 1 M morrow at 2:30 p.m. in the Hall of the House of Representatives. Chancellor Robert B. House will retire from his position in June. A trustee regulation put into ef fect last year automatically re tires University officials when they reach age 65. There is a possibility a char, cellor for Woman's College in Greensboro may also be cho.sen. UNC Graduate School Dean W. W. Pierson has been acting chancellor there since Edward Kidder Grah am resigned last June. A committee appointed by President Friday to select a UNC Chancellor recently made its recommendations to Friday after screening candidates since lat August when the committee was appointed. , Four names were submitted to Friday by the committee, h -: ' 1 by R. Mayne Albright o IlaU"n;h. Names submitted. . according to Albright, included members of the UNC Acuity and others, There has be?n slrong specula tion William B. Aycock of th. Law School here will be nominated by Friday for the position. It is known that Friday recently drove to the University of Virginia in Ciiarlottesvillo to see Aycock, on leave of absence there from UNC this year. Shortly afterwards, Aycock turn ed up in Chapel Hill. Other UNC faculty members known to have been under con sideration by the selection com mittee include Dr. J. L. Godfrey, history; Dr. Alexander Heard, po litical science; Dr. Paul Guthrie, businesa administration and Dr. William II. Potent, philosophy. It is not known who. will be named chancellor cf Woman's Col lege. The WC chancellor selection committee, chaired by Reid May nard of Burlington, has been at work since last summer. Trustee Women Will Arrive Here Tomorrow The thirteen women members cf the UNC Board of Trustee? will get a close-up of campus life to morrow and Tuesday when they visit Chapel Hill. Miss Katherine Kennedy Car michael recently announced the trustees will arrive late tomorrow afternoon following the trustees' meeting in Raleigh. They will stay on the campus overnight and spend Tuesday observing various phases of student life. The thirteen are Mrs. R. S. Ferguson. Taylorsville; Mrs. Al bert H. Lathrop, Asheville; Mrs. Mary Mclver Stanford. Chapel Hill; Mrs. May L Tomlinson, High Point; Mrs. Ed M. Anderson, West Jefferson; Mrs. Nancy Hall Cope land, Murfreesboro; Mrs. P. P. McCain, Red Springs; Mrs. J. B. Kitrell, Greenville; Mrs. Grace Tay lor Rodenbough, Walnut Cove; Mrs. C. W. Tillett, Charlotte; Mrs. Oscar Barker, Durham; Mrs. Me ban? If. Burgwyn, Jackson; ard Mrs. B. C. Parker, Altermarle. Sixty-ve women students have been selected to act as hostesse? to the visitors, who will be guests of the women's dormitories dur ing their stay. Following dinner at Spencer (See TRUSTEES. Page 3) r

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