U.'C. Library 2 rials Dopt. Box 870 cha?3i Hill, ::.c. ' VV'' ; .' WEATHER (.rnrrally fair and omrwhat Colder. CAN Get off it. and vote says the old ed on page two. VOL. LXV NO. 45 Complete UPi Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE f? Lzj Li! '.',.M V . 2 ,':A bw (fi) St ii- out- for ! SP Leader Urges Vote For Slate I Student Patty Chairman Whit Whitfield yesterday urged Carolina j students to consider his party's slate j of candidates for the fall elections Tuesday. I Wluttiold said. "1 think the (lent Tarty has nominated an Mandni'! slate of candidates the election "From the legislature d o w n j through freshman, sophomore and Junior c I (ss ollieei s, the slate is filled with outstanding candidates; with a purpose to pr note student jvvernmecf." St i m ! n r Party c.-ndid:Mcs were; siloc'cd fro-n liu'h G-eek and in dependent '-roups. Wint field pointed cur j Wl.-tf el, I said t'r ! SI' did not i v an! In n, a' e u i i ( s t .; would retoon null Hilled in the coming' months Instead, he urged students j to consider 'he administrations of j p.-'s! Student Body President Mob Yomi" 1 i-t year and the current fd'iiini-tration under Sonny Kvans. Width Id said that SI is asking voters to consider the success of these two adninistations. He said that the .udeuts should hear in mind nt the promises of what will he dnie. hut nl what has heon done Juid i oiitimuiiL' to he done in Modem vi en-rent by Student Par ty ele ted oll'ici..ls. ; In Tuesday's election. seVs will he filled on (lie Men's and Women's Jliumr Councils. Student Legisla ture. Student Council find freshman, si.phemorc and junior c!ns officer. Hath tin t will underway at ' a o Tuesday ft, ' itW w rf. s.w Vr- 1 IJ i5? i 1 k '! a. o . . .. ... 1 s ... - 4 "W1 s 1 i. .... .. ' nW2 'A V" V - v rfV x - -V s-s ' r- V & ... ' .siM- Jo5tL. fc S; . .. au V i 7- t V 7X1 r Ii 1 C I u6tVV'.W.)v.A' Vs-, s Sbf . 4 1 y, f s "s 1 VVn s Number 5 For UNC; Hathaway Has A Broken Arm By BILL KING An alert Carolina defense turned three South Carolina fumbles and one bad punt into touchdowns to gain a resounding 28-6 revenge win over the Gamecocks in Kenan Stadium yesterday. A crowd of about 22,000 plus a large regional television audience saw the Tar Heels bounce back after a 35-0 defeat to Tennessee last week and completely overwhelm Coach Warren Giese's charges. It was the worst defeat he has suffered at USC. It was perhaps the best defensive effort of the season for the inspired Tar Heels as their stout line stayed in the Gamecock's backfield all afternoon and stopped the. running of the vaunted King Dixon Alex Hawkins duo. The victory was not without a price, however. Tar Heel quarterback Curt Hathaway suffered a brok en arm late in the third quarter after turning in his finest game of the season up until then. The injury fqreed Tatum to call on sophomore Nelson Lowe to back up Cummings at quarterback. Tatum had been holding Lowe out to give him an extra sea son of eligibility. Rushing Tar Heels It was evident from the outset that the Tar II --els were all business as the line charged the Game cocks continously. The Gamecocks lost six fumbles in the contest, three going for Tar Heel tallies. . AXSK 'SfttVr4XvM$jWvMCFarid TAR HEEL BREAK UNC's Jim Jones, 80, and Phil Blazer, 70, are pictured in an attempt to block the kick of Gameccck Heywood King from behind the goal line. The faulty kick, which landed on the USC 11-yard-line set up the Tar Heeis' final touchdown of the game. (Pete Young Photo) Congressman Blasts Student Solons; Labels The Inter-racial Bill Shocking' Board Studies Test Proposal V.y FTIIAK TOLMAX Special to the Daily Tar Heel KALEIGH; Nov. 9 A North Carolina Dt nutcrat today lambasted member of the State Slvulcnt Let"- I isoture for rnssner ; ycs'.crday of hills ttpprovim: inter-racial mar riages and prostitution. i ItM.KIC.il. Nov. 8 -'.V-- The Stale's Advisory Budget Commis si) hi today looked with favor on a proposal under which applicants tor admission to units of the Greater t'niversity of North Carolina and I Fast Carolina College would be giv en scholastic aptitude tests. At the same time the board uni on the State Hoard of Higher Edu cation to draw up a plau under which tests would be given to all hi'jh school graduates in the state. I) S Coltrane. the state's budget olliccr. said the tests for the hich school graduates would be for pur poses of vocational guidance and to dete-mine qualifications of the grad ual)'-, tor admission to the state's institutions of higher learning. The budget commission told the I'tuversity and Kast Carolina Col lege, in t iled, that it would recom mend to the Governor and council ol state that the institutions be reimburse!! from the contingency and emergency funds for losses in reo-ipts resulting from the plan to five aptitude tests to applicants fori admission. I'tider tli'- plan, those taking the aptitude tests would pay a $7 lee. IIowecr. if they passed the tests and won admission to one of the iiist it at ions the ! would he credited toward their tuition payments. It was estimated that proposal would icdac receipts of the I'nivcrsity's three units Rep. Harold I Cooloy, speaking to the group this morning, said he was shocked by the action taken." He told members of the mock as sembly that they had 'shocked the sensibilities of our people." criticism last year for his refusal to sign the Southern Manifesto a j resolution condemning the Supreme j Court's integration decision. was emphatic in - hi criticism of the! college legislators' behavior. 1 regret very much the actions taken by this assembly." he said. He pointed out that in his opinion "a more constructive agenda could 1 have been prepared." I The congressman's address came ! at the close of the weekend asseni- from 21 white throughout the Other action dents included of a bill which commended Presi dent Kisenhower's use of troops ;o enforce int curat ion at Little Kock Central High School and condemn ed the actions ot Arkansas Gov ernor Orval V. Faubus. This bill was introduced by UNC Delegate Pat Adams and passed a joint session of the House and Senate by a W :8 The Chapel Hillians drew first blo:d just after the second quarter had gotten underway. With 44 sec onds remaining in the first period, South Carolina halfback Frank Destino fumbled on his own 32 and tackle Don Redding recovered for the Tar Heels. North Carolina ran three plays before the end of the quarter and moved to the SC 20. Ed Lipski. Hathaway and Daley Goff got the 12 yards for the Tar Heels. On the very first play of the second period. Hathaway pulled a beautiful fake to fullback Lipski and pitched out to Ron Marquette who went wide to the left to the 12. Halfback Emil DeCantis carried j to the three on the next two plays and then Lipski broke off left tackle for the score with 1:32 gone. Phil Blazer, who has made nine of ten extra points this sea- 4 i 3V t bly made up of some 212 delegates vote. and Negro colleges ' Speaking in favor of his bill, state. Adams asked the legislature to bear taken bv the' stu- h' nlind the le"a, sKial aud moral . ..! issues involved in the Little Rock wnTT-.vn-T. - son made good on the lirst ol lour UNC Delegate Larry MacElroy during the day. spoke in opposition to the measure. Another Fumble He pointed out the constitutional and South Carolina got possession ethical problems raised bv sending twice before its next fumble but federal troops into a state without the consent of the state government. .loci 'Fleishman. deleg;i e from UNC. wr.s selected as the best speaker in the House. Departing from his prepared text. Cooloy indicated that he con sidered the actions taken prior to his appearance a personal insult. " I am certain my position on ra cial matters is well known," he said. Cooloy. who received widespread Kennedy Will Speak Tuesday Night At 8:15 s? f President's Hope C.KRMANTOWN. Md.. Nov. 8- (AP) TYesident Eisenhower today expressed prayerful hope that "the curse of the atomic explosion will pass from man's knowledge" and that only its good will remain. Eisenhower voiced the hope in a brief informal talk at the dedica tion of the new 13-million-dollar headquarters building of the Atomic Energy Commission (ALU). The building is situated on the outskirts of this small community some 30 miles north of Washington. ' The Role of the Attorney in Con gressional Investigations" will be the topic of Senate rackets commit tee counsel Robert K. Kennedy when lie speaks here Tuesday night at 8:1 o'clock in Hill Hall. The Law School Association is sponsoring Kennedy's speech, which will be open to the public, as an other event in the Heck Lecture Series. The Series is supported by a fund set up by the oldest living alumnus of the UNC Law School. George Heck of Glen Head, N. Y. Herb Toms of Shelby, chairman of the LSA speakers committee, will introduce Kennedy at the Hill Hall program. The association president. James Ramsey of Roxboro, will preside. Accomplished Pianist To Play For Musicale Next Sunday Sportsnik Notenik RICHMOND, Va , Nov. 'J -J.V- A dner returning to his large four-tlooi- sedan on Richmond's West Gi.k o S'reet today found this neatly prin'ed. unsigned note tucked under his v mdslneld : "You may not realize that a small English sports car is parked behind ou please be carctul not to run it ilow n " CE PLANT TOUR Forty members of Alpha Kappa I si professional business fraternity loured the General Electric Plant in Asheboro this week. This tour w.n the first in a series of pro fcssion.il tours sponsored by the irtermty each year. Ar. accomplished pianist. Mrs. Cara Kelson, whose performances have covered among other places, London. Paris and New Zealand, will perform here next Sunday, Nov. 17. Mrs. Kelson will be presentetl at the third Petite Musicale, sponsor ed by Graham Memorial Activities tional Symphony Orchestra of New Zealand. She has performed for the Arts Council of Great Britain I and the Community Arts Service ! of New Zealand. She has also broadcasted recitals for BBC of ' London, ABC of Australia, NZBS of New Zealand, Radiodiffusion ' Erancaise, Paris and the Ceydon The address was switched to Hill ; Hall from the previously-announced location in the Knapp Building. Toms said, when great interest in hearing Kennedy was expressed on the campus. Following his arrival at Raleigh Durham Airport at 5:.7 p.m. Tues day. Kennedy will be honored at the Carolina Inn at a private din ner by the law students. A public reception will be given in Graham Memorial following his talk by the Law Wives Association. Kennedy has been chief counsel for the Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in the Labor ot Management field, and prior to i that held the same position with j the Senate Permanent Subcommit- ! tee on Investigations. j In 1953 he managed the campaign of his brother. Sen. .John F. Ken- j nedv (I)-Mass.i. having just com-1 pleted a year's work with the .Jus tice Department He holds the A.B. j degree from Harvard and the LL.B. i from University of Virginia School. i ! i V , ii . I Si v N S J I I ! was unable to penetrate NC terri tory. With 3:45 left in the half, the Gamecocks were on their own 27. Dixon then took a pitchout and hit Hawkins at the Tine of scrimmage but he fumbled and : this time it was center Jim Jones who pounced on the ball. The Tar Heels took over on the 27. this tiine with, the passing Cummings at the helm. On the first plav. Cummings rolled out and hit end Mac Turlington at the left sidelines on the 15. He did it again on the next play, this time a bullet to Turlington at the two. Fullback Giles Gaca got the score as he went off left tackle for the 13th Tar Heel point with 2:42 left. Blazer made it 14-0 and that's the wav it was at half as another late THE STATISTICS I . :' : ;saai yssvis(--j - :: ' 4f u -S -t . .:..-. i , t,s x--.w-.-x-.-v: -j s.,-- " " -' - ' X HATHAWAY OUT FOR SEASON Curtis Hathaway is shewn as he was helped off Kenan Field yesterday after receiving a brok en arm during piay. The painful injury came late in the third period, after Hathaway had sparked the Tar Heel victory. (Pete Young Photo) Tatum Calls Ball Game Best Effort This Year ROBERT F. KENNEDY Law IViard. in the Graham Memorial Lounge at 8 p.m. No admission is charged for h(T concert for Arthur Honegger, concerts and the public has th c()rnp,)SOr ,n honor of his 60th Broadcasting Service. In Paris, she played at a eham- thesc been cordially invited. Originally from New Zealand. Mrs. Kelson received her early training there. She received an As sociated Hoard scholarship which enabled her to study four years at the Royal Academy of Music in London. She has also studied in composer, birthday. She also took part in the Victory Celebrations of Croydon, London in 1946, for which she per formed the Grieg Piano Concerto. Mrs. Kelson's recital at Graham Memorial will contain the Mozart C Major Sonata, K. 330, and the Schubert B Flat Sonata,, Op. Post Joseph Class Wins Award A UNC student from Greensboro has been named the recipient oi toe Pilot Freight Carriers Scholarship for the academic year 1957-58. ( The $.")00 award went to .Joseph M. 1 Clapp. son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Clapp of Greensboro. i The award is made each year by the Winston-Salem firm to a senior ! majoring in traffic and transporta tion in the School of Business Ad ministration. The winner is chosen j by officials of the B. A. School. Clapp is presently serving as pres- I ident of Alpha Kappa Psi. profes j sional business fraternity at Caro i lina. and is a member of Phi Beta j Kappa and Beta Gamma Sigma hon orary fraternities. As a freshman, he was active in VMCA freshman activities on cam- USC UNC First Downs 9 14 Rushing Ydg. (net) 13H 2(M Passing Ydg. (net) 18 92 Passes Attempted 8 16 Passes Completed 2 6 Passes Int. by 11 Punts 5 7 Punting Average 27.4 35.1 Fumbles Lost 6 1 Yards Penalized 30 75 Tar Heel threat failed after tlv By DAVE WIBLE j UNC's 28-6 victory over the Game- , cocks of South Carolina yesterday i afternoon was termed "the best GO minutes of Carolina football this ; year" by Head Coach Jim Tatum in a post-game interview. Tatum. who a week ago was "ashamed as a coach" for his team's performance against Ten nessee, felt that yesterday s game was an even finer performance than the Navy game which the Tar Heels won 13-7. The only blemish to an otherwise perfect afternoon came near the end of the third quarter w hen junior quarterback Curtis Hathaway suf fered a broken arm. Hathaway, playing one of the finest games in his career, moved around his own right end for eight yards on an to put him in. but there wasn't much else that we could do." Referring back to the ball game, Tatum said. "The reason I feel that this was our best game, is because of the way the boys fought back to overcome bad breaks in the open ing minutes. I thought we would never get out of that hole. That South Carolina team was one of the (See 60 MINUTES, Page 4) Paris, on a bursary from the New 1 wilj aso present three short Zealand government, with Mon- j pjores hy Debussy, and one each sieur Lazarc-I,cvy, teacher of the Ly RameaUi Lully and Dandneu. famous pianist Solomon. j rrs ( Kelson is now living in Mrs. Kelson has made frequent ! appearances, a soloist, with the Ni-1 (See MUSICALE, Page 3) White Named Delegate j To Industry Convention Louis Norman White, a junior in the School of Business Administra- ( tion. has been selected as south- j eastern student representative to j the 62nd Annual Congress of Amcf- . ican Industry, to be held Dec. 4-6 , in New York at the Waldort-Astonu Hotel. White wuT attend the sessions j with 30 other student ' guests of the j National Association of Manufac- ; : nnc and in cur'r-fi VP VCaTS W3S panel, in which they quiz business men. White, a transfer student from Wake Forest College, was graduat ed from Henderson High School, but nnw lives in Laurinburg. He is Gamecocks could do, nothing on the ensuing kickoff. In the third quarter, the Tar option play and was hit very hard out. Heels kicked off twice before the : uy three Gamecock tacklers. When Gamecocks could run a play from the players unpiled, Hathaway was scrimmage. The Tar Heels picked j writ'hing in pain from a fractured right forearm, which will end his pigskin activity for the remainder of this season. The injury forced Tatum to make a move he dreaded. With Hathaway Subway Stalls NEW YORK, Nov. 8 (AP) Eight passengers spent most of to day in semi-darkness aboard a sub way marooned underground be neath Broadway by a freak flood. People could get to them but the passengers either because of in firmity or timidity couldn't get touchdown threatened in the pro to score a up a third cess and fourth. Two Straight Fumbles Blazer opened the second half , . i . ..f vice-president and presioem n u- University Club, the organization j w hich sponsors pep rallies and other "Carolina Spirit" projects, lfo was graduated from Senior High School in Greensboro, where he was a Na- j t-. .tition.ii ttonnr Society member, in majoring in ujummi; uuu h""'"- UNC. with a kickoff which Dixon took i out and Dave Reed suspended, he on his goal line and returned to )iacj ony one signal caller left on his 31. But the SC star was rack- tlie s(lliad. Nelson Lowe, a sopho- ed by a host of N. Carolina tack- ni(,ro quarterback who had been , lers and lost the ball. Captain Bud-j .eid out thus far this season be dy Payne fell on this one and the f ause Gf an injury suffered early Tar Heels were all set to go with j in fau practice. entered the game another touchdown drive. j m tie t nird quarter, thus leaving Hathaway ran one play, a pass j nim with onjv tvv0 games and two j to Turlington which was no good ycars- of eligibility. and Cummings took over. j ' Nelson has been working right ; Gaca got four up the middle to j along with the (.u,b an year'.' Ta- i the 27 and the talented Cummings ;tum comTnCnted." and I think that took to the air. On the next play, j he nas everything a quarterback , he hit DeCantis at the six but the , needs He is tough, a terrific passer, j play was called back as the T?r Thev breakfasted on rolls and coffee brought in to them. For lunch they were brought sand wiches and coffee. The train stalled at 5 a.m. when a broken water main flooded the Broadway - Seventh Avenue line tracks between 74th and 75th Streets. Most of the passengers aboard were going to or returning from work. ia:4. (See TAR HEELS, Page 4) a good kicker and a v ery hard run- ; ner. 1 was very sorry that we had , IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yes terday included: Misses. Ann Cofield. Nancy Milan. Patricia Hamer, Barbara Sills and Margaret Smith. Messrs. Edwin Avery, Oyvind Nor strom. Kenneth Brimmer, Joseph Alala. John Gibson, Terry Veazey. Robert Peebles, Charles Gibson. George Schroeder and Wadie Mikhail.

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