Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 31, 1957, edition 1 / Page 1
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J tj !T C Ltfary Ssrlals Sept. chi?6i run, :i. c. WEATHER Cloudy with little change in temperature. Light rain ending to day. High, 68. F A U B U S Naw, ha didn't have da courage of his convictions says the ol' ed on page two. VOL. LXV. NO. 36 Complete Lfl Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Lewis Dormitory Captures Honors In Annual 'Rod And Gun' Events By Tommy Johnson Lewis Dormitory won team hon ' one p nit over Kappa Alpha Iratcrn.ty m the Rod and Gun I 'icld Meet. Tuesday afternoon at I Ik- Durham Wildlife Club Are;.. Severity five entrants narticin- ated in the affair which is spons ored anrmallv by the intramural department A group of .some 3j students was ,,n hand to watch. .1 I in Crawford won a close vic tory over Hill Sharpe. 134 to 231. to mi the target rifle competition for the second jcar in a row. This event was the most popular with :Si entrants. Max Vallotton and Rill llav worth tied for third and fourth place lunor.s. Harry Wells was fifth. (lav Co. ven was victorious ;n the trap shotting competition alter a i mi off battle with Al bird. in and William t'rulchfield. Co h of these sharpshooters had a first round score of 23 f r 2.Y In the run off. Cow en hit 1 1 of 12 to finis!) two ,-diead of Crutch I" id who hit D i t 12. .Ionian hit !! birdies. Charles Forbes and D.md Collins came in fourth and fifth, respectively. T mmy NVlmv took top honors in the archery competition with a s'i.it of l.'I'J He was 21 points ahead of have Core who scored l'.l Wa.vre Irvm. .Fun Smith and !'(( Brake were third, fourth and fifth respectively. .ferrv Corbin headed the list of 12 entrants in the bait casting ( ompef itiori with a score of 54. Monarchy Said Aid To Britain j The British mmarrhy will con-; That is it the Dialectic Society t has ae.vlhing to do with it. In Tur-d.iv night's meeting ;t bill to condemn the British monarchy ,h v oted (low n ") 2 Opin.on valid, but on the whole I'.ritish Rovaltv was lavor e ! Am ng th. se Senat rs in t,.vor ot the monarchv w;s Irwin Averv who s,,kI that although Pol s' ;,ir..- come and go. the Mima rchs arc the ones who bind the C'-mmonw o.!th together. Il- s,ud that the (Juccn's g "id will to, irs foster friendly relation- aiiimu Britain and inner - of the world -I .spe.iker Tom Warluk were it not fur the mon th" Empire might fall a- 1 u r t)l as. points ahead of Don Nich Ritchie Smith and Tom Mc- Iver. who each .scored 50 points. Chuck Sehlapkehl came in fifth with a 48. (.'each Walter Rabb. director of intramural activities. presented received a handsome plaque for winning team honors. Director Rabb termed the event a success and expressed a desire to farm a UNC Rod and Cun Club on the campus. He said that a "Big Four" Rod and Cun Meet (? (fO o mm the winners with trophies. Lewis will be held next Spring. ri : I H o G mecoming iris Will Reign Over Weekend ourt Sel actions To day ft 1 I I ROD AND GUN WINNERS Pictyred above as they received fheii trophies in the Rod and Gun meet Tuesday are: Jerry Corbin, kneeling, with the team and bait-casting trophy; standing, left to right, Gay Cowan with the trap award, John Crawford with the tar get rifle trophy and Tommy Nelms, archery trophy. (Jim Moore Photo) World r 7n Brief sir, ps n.i'ion Cue added art hv . part Andrew C'anoutas said that "we can only see the econ inic aspect of a British Institution." He con tinued that a!thoui,'h financing lie Ro.val Family may seem ex pensive. I'. S support d National b.dtlefields aii'l museums make Rivalty -eem "like a needle in a h.iv stack." Speaking au.iii'st the monarchy. I'at Adams saol that the monarchy wa- "eating up the fat of I'.ntian and also -f the t'nited States He aNo said that the monarchy has b en "Useless for the past tM I eais " Ihi'lolph Alpert.s ralle( the mo ii i tli v "a barbarois institution of rule by one ruler." Ceneral opinion of the I)i Sen ate was that the monarchy is a vital part of I'.ntMi Traditnn. and tint without it the Kmpire could ipt have endured. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yes terday included: Ann Riggins, Nancy Greene, Emory Burkhardt, Mary Brad Icy, Carol Goldwin, Norma Mer chant, Alice Wahmann, Alleyne Carton. Judith Bennett, Wallace Ann Waynick, Dorcas Dark, Wadie Mikhail, William Bunch, James Cadieu, Frank Montgom ery, Robert Noble, Richard Lee, John Clare, Ben Gurion, Michael Deutsch, James McDonald, James Tyndall, Robert Barnwell, Edward Faulkner, Roland Evans, Luke Forrest, Lloyd Lohr, Ken neth Brimmer, Sigmond H. Sea graves III, William Woodhouse, Frank Netherland, Ronald Koes, John Lyon, Roger Goodson and James Owen. . Maynor's Money Hoax DCKHAM. Oct. T,0 .V Inform ed sources today wrote off the re ported finding of $162,000 by Ver i.on 1. "Jitterbug" Maynor as a hoax. The money, they said, is in worthless confederate bills. The I- III. w hich has examined the money, would make no com ment on the report. The agency -aid it "no longer has an interest in the case" and said that "should speak for itself." "It takes quite a period of time to check $li;2.000 in real solid cash." the F15I said. racial situation, Eisenhower said he was having difficulty in find ing just eactly the people he wants to serve on the Civil Rights Commission set cp by Congress this year. The two matters came up at the President's news conference. Court-Martial Little Rock WASHIXCTON'. Oct. 30. 'T President Kisenhowcr said today he hopes and prays it soon will be possible to withdraw all federal troops from IJttlc Rock, Ark. On his order, troops have been at Little Rock since Sept. 24. to enforce a Federal Court order for racial integration of the city's Central High School. Fisenhower moved the troops in after mob violence occurred. On another aspect of the whol.' WASHINGTON. Oct. 30. The Army said today court-martial charges have been filed against M. Sgt. Roy Adair Rhodes, who testified at the espionage trial of Rudolph Abel that he turned Rus sian informer for pay. The Army said the charges asainst Rhodes include one that he violated U. S. espionage laws. 1 Rhodes, whose home is Eaton town, N. J., testified at thcA bed trial that he collected between : $2,500 and $3,000 from Russian '. agents. Rhodes said he went to work for the Soviets while serving as a motor pool sergeant at the U. S. embassy in Moscow. The -Army said he was on this duty from May ! 1051 to July 1953. The 1957 Homecoming Court will be chosen this afternoon at 4:15 p.m. in Gerard Hall by four judges; Mrs. Bill Aycock. Sam Magill, Dr. Virgil Mann and Bob Cox. At press time 21 coeds had ! been nominated by mens' dorms ; and fraternities and quite a few other dorms and fratermities were planning to turn in their ' candidates' names. ! Following is a lLst of the Home ! coming Queen candidates and ! their sponsors: Martha Fortune, I Chi Psi: (Jail Godwin. Stacy; Mary i Lewis R untree, Kappa Sigma; Judy Rock. Alexander; Carol Tieslau. Beta Theta Pi: Gail Wil ' lingham. Lewis; Jean Sutherland, : Steele: Nancy Roystcr. Graham; Wanda Ward, Manly; Caroline Warren, Old West; Betty Davis, Everett; Doris Peter, Ruffin; Frances De Armon. Chi Phi; Caroline Osborne 1 Kappa Alpha; Coleman Jenkins, ! Pi Kappa Alpha; ! Kay Wren, Joyner; Patsy Poy- thress. Mangum; Helen White, Thcoa Chi; Sally English. Grimes; Betty Barnes. St. Anthony ' Hall; Marsha McCord, Delta Upsilon. ? - A rntirf - of .trn ' girl win " tn presented at an informal dance : after the pep rally on Friday night. After the presentation of i the court, the people at the dance will choose the Homecoming Queen of 1957 by popular vote. The Queen will be crowned at the end of the dance. She will also be presented along with the nine other members of the court and escorted onto the field by the members of the Scab ard and Blade at the half-time festivities of the game on Satur day. On Fridav. before the dance. there will be a parade i timii imriini rem n iirnn hiiiiiiTm nn" ''JliAt WjL.--ajt ,?mllt m rfi . mr... i,mm Cut System To Return Normal To WILL ONE OF THESE COEDS BE HOMECOMING QUEEN? Eight of the 21 coeds who had been nominated at press time by men's dorms and frate nities are shewn discussing the Homecoming Dance which will be this Friday night in Woollen Gym. The coeds (left to to right) on the front row and their sponsors are Martha Fortune, Chi Psi; Gail Godwi n Stacy Dorm; Caroline Osborne, Kappa Alpha. On the back row (left to right) are Mary Lewis Rountree, Kappa Sigma; Judy Rock, Alexander, Carel Ties lau, Beta Theta Pi; Gail Willingham, Lewis Dorm; and Jean Sutherland, Steele Dorm. (Norman Kan tor photo) Dulles Held -To B lame For Communist Gains The Philanlliopic Literary Society , iean tourists were destroying .some voted 5-3 Tuesday night to condemn of the friendship lor this country. Secretary of State John Foster! Representative David Mai thews Solon's Slated To Meef Today Student legislators will three bills and a resolution in night's meeting. UNC medical authorities stressed again Wednesday the im ' portance of student receipt of i Asian flu vaccine being offered i free on campus here today. Their pleas followed only by one day a report from the State ; Board of health that one of every j 34 Tar Heels has been afflicted by j the disease since mid-Septemb?r. And. the report added, in some ' North Carolina counties the dis ease is still on an increase. In an attempt to curb any ma jor outbreak here, infirmary offi cials will conduct on-campus clin ics at Gerrard Hall between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. today and Fri day. University Physician E. M. ITedgpeth said the Asian vaccine will be offered free of charge to all students requesting it at Ger rard Hall during those hours. At the same time, announce ment came from Dean of the Fac ulty James Godfrey that class at tendance will resume on a regular basis beginning next Monday. . Cuts, under that system, can . be excused only by the infirmary or . l lie v. a . -w . - - vm. i deM who ml 8Be class, Tieaiv. Ood- .Tre'v said. Since October 7 at the height of an influenza epidemic on cam- . nu 5 students have been on their honor to excuse themselves from debate classes in cae of illness. to- lhilles "for destroying the friend ship and respect" which other na tions had toward the L'niied States. Representative Jim Tolbert said the 'United Stales has lost the res pect and admiration" of the coun tries abroad. He claimed "the whole ship of state may founder." "Victorv in the Mid-Fast is going composed to the Communists by default," he of the cheerleaders, the band, I leoiarked the team, the Homecoming Queen candidates and a police escort. This parade will start at Woollen ; Gym at 7 p.m. and move to Pitts- , boro Rd.. the Carolina Inn, Raleigh St. and back to the parking lot by the gym. After the parade the bonfire1 will be lit and a pep rally staged.; (See Homecoming. Page 3) ! Representative Clarence Simpson presented a list accusing the Eisen hower Administration of actions which he did not like. He named the situations in Indo-China. the Suez Canal and Hungary. Representative Stanley Black said "the Suez Canal crisis has been the train blunder he 'Dalles' has made." Conditional Representative Roger ; Kouehee called the debate 'a crude ; butchering of our Secretary of The legislature will convene in Phi Hall, fourth floor New East, at 7:30 o'clock. Tonight's bills involve the revi sion of Student Legislature by laws, the debt incurred by the for mer hum t magazine. Tarnation, and the establishment of a com mittee to study Lenoir Hall. Dfan Godfrey expressed hh gratitude to both students and faculty for their cooperation in the emergency action which resulted from overcrowded infirmary con ditions. Two nurses, a secretary and on" doctor will be on hand at Gerrard Hall today and Fridav to conduct the "convenient" vaccine distribu tion clinics. Institute Given blamed Fisenhower as the source of j State." He explained that Dcmo- the present trouble He wanted to j amend the bill so it would be direct ed against Eisenhower. Blaming the whole citizenship of the United States for the trouble. Guest Judy Huntress said, "we have crats had been the underlying cause for much of the present-day situa tion. Inactive Represent ive Ft ban Tol man asked the Phi to look more deeply into the question and to ex- of today s The resolution to be considered concerns the placement of trash Grant For Study A $13.40') National SHrticc Koonla- too many prejudices in our conn- ! plore to find the causes trv." She claimed that the Amcr- situation. Registrar, Admissions Committee To Meet Itov Armstrong. misions. ai" Carolina wi director of ad- the University of Norlh be hosts today and of the irars and Admissions Officers. At ins' -ong is president of this association. tomorrow to the fall melius I wecutivo Committee of the icon Assoeal ion of CollegioW The incilni'.'s today and tomorrow rep-cent few ever held on a col lege campus. ' The opening session will be held j od..y at .) a m in the faculty j lounge ol the Morehead I'.uildmg. J The business of I he Executive Committee will include: progress re ; ports on various research projects i being conducted by the association ; mkI plans for the regular meeting of the entire association in April in i I Cinnctnnati. i Armstrong said the assoeation is ' responsible tor valuable educational aids, such as a recent manual sent out to college presidents on studies of space uliti.ation in colleges and universities. This manual enables colleges to make self surveys ot facilities in preparation for in creases in enrollment. The American Association of Col legiate Registrars and Admissions Olliccrs is composed of 1 1.000 col lege members. Me nbers of the Executive Com mittee who will be bore today and ( morrow include: Herman A. Spendl. president-elect of the as sociation from the University of California; Miss Florence Rrady. i secretary, from Occidental College j in California; E. Vincent O'Brien. I treasurer, from Fordham University ' also. Ted McCarroll. vice president ! from the State University of Iowa; ! Clyde Vroman, vice president from the University of Michigan: S. A. I Knock, editor of an association pub- lication. from Cedar Crest College j in Pennsylvania; M. C. Smyser. past president, from Miami Uni i ersi.y in Oxford, Ohio: and mem j bers at large. Robert Earl Hewes from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and William F. Adamj troin the Univeisity of Alabama : . 'f !' . V n n ! . h' Jt f' , ' 1 . 1. cans in me quaurangies on cdin pus. Bob Carter's (SV) bill to set up a committee to revise by-laws of the legislature is scheduled for committee report again. The bill introduced last w'jek by Ed Levy (UP) for the legisla ture to pay a S452.81 debt of the Tarnation is also up for action to night. Held last week for further study was Pat Adams' (SP) bill to es tablish a committee to study Le noir Hall. The Ways and Means Committee will report on study made during the week. tion Grant was nwnrded to the UNC Institute of Kield Physics it was an nounced today. The award was made to Dr. Bryce S. DeWi't for research in grav itn tional field theory. Swedish physi':-i-t Bertcl Laurent, on a year's leave of p.bsencc from the University of Stockholm, will also work on the pro ject . The Institute operates Wuhm Hie UNC Dept. of Physics and is mainly concerned w th problem.; of gravita tion. Agnew H. P.ahnson Jr. of Winston-Salem is the Ins-utite prcT : dent. Institute Starts Today For Employment Group UNC GETS PORTRAIT A portrait of the first dean of women at UNC, Mrs. Marvin Hendrix Stacy has been presented to UNC alumnae and other friends of Mrs. Stacy. Shown viewing the por trait at presentation ceremonies held this week on the campus are (L-R) William C. Friday and W. D. Carmichael III, president and vice-president respe -.tively of the Consolidated University; Miss Janie Robbins Joily of Raleigh, member of the UNC class of 1934; Dr. Katherine Kennedy Carmichael, dean of women at UNC; Robert B. House and William B. B. Aycock, former chancellor and chancellor re spectively of the University at Chapel Hill. A two (lay insti'ute for employees of the Employment Security Com mission of North Carolina will begin bore Thcrsday at the Joseph Palmer Knapp Building of the Institute of Government . The meeting i jointly sponsored by the N. C. chapter of the Inter national Assoeation of Personnel in Employ .iK'nt Security, the X. C. Employment Security Commission, and tlie Institute of Government. The theme of the program is "Living w tli your job." Charles B. ';re J''.. personnel director of Ft. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in i Winston-Salem will speak at the first session on "What Do You Want Fn :n Your Job '" Wade will fol low Albert Coates. director of the ' Institute of Government, who will welcome the group, and Henry E. Kendall, chairman of ESC. who will otfer a few words of greetings. ! On Thursday afternoon and Friday 1 morning there are four sessions sohedi'lcd on what superv isors e-in do about improving supervision, providing 'leadership, delegating fithority. and improving ecr num cations. The sessions will include ketures. movies, tajx- recording '-. and small group discussions. A panel consisting of Dr. T. T. Jones of Durham, physici m to Wright Automatic Machinery Com pany; Dr. Preston Donning of Kins ton, indus'rial physician with E. I. du Pont de Xerr.ours & CYmpany: end Dr. Hans Lowenbach. professor of neuropsychiatry m Duke Univer sity, will discus, "Whc-t Cn Super visors Do About Counseling Em ployees" on Friday afttroon. The final session on Friday will be on "Employees' Responsibility for Administrative Improvements." The j speaker will be Jack Hurt. Bureau of Employment Security. U. S. De partment of Labor, Washington. D. C.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 31, 1957, edition 1
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