Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1957, edition 1 / Page 1
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TJ.?:.C. Library Serials Dopt, Box 070 "Chupal Hill, B.C. WEATHER Generally fair, windy and quite cool. Friday, partly cloudy with rtiing temperatures. A CAREFUL The editor discusses Russian attitude toward peace and the rest of the- world on page 2. VOL. LXV NO. 67 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1957 Complete () Wire Service FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE n Iddq 1? n n A Bifid r i i fill V VK I 1 M M. J I J f A II I 1 MM OH N - ' -v. ? . s s ' K "V, V, V i ...-. i A s ' v: . V'. if V s'V A ' ' ' As 8ht WflDTI 'WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS' Taylor Williams as Venables and Marion Fitz Simons as the Com tesse de la Briene in "What Every Woman Knows' which continues through Sunday at the Playmak ers Theatre. Performances are at 8:30 p.m .Tickets are available at the box office each evening at 7:30. They also may be purchased at 214 Aberneth, Hall and Ledbetter Pickard. Preparations Set For Mock Trial; Payne Faces First Degree Charge I'.v 1.1) KDWI.AM) i Tu n l'.ciuu tt. Cilcs Clark, l'rc'.i.ira! urn- luv U.f tn.il of Sunt'i .uul l.ukc Crulx-tt. Jim I V itiu-sse for tho state arc Gail Willinuham. Sarah Van Wi-yk, Mau- lSuddy I'.-viu-H'fadily al't-ai nr riu'.i (!i i ini t (l yt" 'k i , w InU' liync Icuincd hi tl.c M.imnni; C'oun'y app-'ivnily unu onicd Tlio annua! mock trial undt-r tin-spi)n-orshi) (t Alpha I'hi Delta law liaU'imty. is m licdnlcd fur T . -' P m l''rid.i m l.iiniini'. Hall rmirt I (Miin. I'a lie's lauci-. (ialnii (i i'Je. said. ' We can indicate to the jury lha; Payne is not at all a, la'd:. We are conhden! that the .jury will ntiini a erdat of not guilty." Assi;m (i.ie in the detense a'.c l or the prosecution Solicitor Jack rive Canaday. the Manning County ml -oil toid rcpoiter, "Payne is an- medical examiner, and Officer Her man Stone of the Chapel Hill Police Department, in addition to Sheritt Legislature Sets Meet The Student Legislature will meet tonight at 7:30 on the top floor of New East for its last session before Christmas. Charlie Gray's (UP) resolution "concerned with the conduct of the State Student Legislature'' will have to come out of the was and means committee. The resolution ''censures and condemns'' the SSL action against statutory bans on interracial marr iage and repudiates "any claim as serted by the SSL to be truly re presentative of the student bodies of its participating schools." Pat Adams' (SP) bill' "to ap propriate $28.75 to the Dean of Awards" and his bill "to add Pea nuts to the comic section of The Tar Heel and to appropriate $5 30 for its purchase" will probably be debated. The money ging to Dean of Awards will be used "to have the necessary information filled in the student government certificates for academic excellence." The certificates will be given to sophomores who were twice on the dean's list during the last year. Tally Eddings (SP) bill "to establish a committee to investi gate the possibilities of having a street light placed between Lenoir Hall and Raleigh Road" (the street Woollen gvm faces) will probably be put on the floor for discussion. The next meeting of the Student Legislature will be held Jan. 10. 4 I el vk n n . in i Charlotte Coliseum Is Site For Game By BILL KING CHARLOTTF. The streak is on the line aain tonight. Fnrman University olters the next (hallene to Coach Frank McGnire and his s -anu' winning skein at S p.m. to night in the Charlotte Coliseum here. 1 The Tar Heels made it in a row Tuesday niht with ? and 86-0 victory over George Washington. It was win num- bcr two in this voting season as the Tar Heels opened with a 7)-f,r) v ictory over Clenison last Saturday. U The iniurv-riddled Carolinians had little trouble dis- 1 s1i:I'Lm- iniiirf with veterans Pete lirennan and lorn- r my Reams to carry the club to an easy triumph. ShalTer and " lirennan each had 20 points and Reams dumped in 22. Furman Winless - in 1 ocably guilty of murder in the t .i si decree, and I see no reason why an intelligent jury should fad j Carl Churchill. to realize that. He obviously went ti the scene of the knifing with the mieiit of murder, een though the kr.ile used was not his." Hudson assistants will be Hal C( ti. 1 , .lo!m Comer. Phil Hansdell ; i;i! Dalloil I.oftotl. ( lerk ol Manning County Court fieorue Com:ins subpoenaed seven v itia's-scs scsterdav for the trial. For the defense Gage has called Payne, his roomate Fred Svvearen f;tn, and Betty Hoffman. Friday afternoon the prosecution ; p.d defense will examine prospec tive jurors and will select 13 for the trial. Phi Defeats Coed Bill By ED GOODWIN A bill calling for the immediate removal of all coeds from the Carolina campus was defeated 80 At the trial itself Julgc Malcolm by the Phi Literary Society Tues i;,,.,. n ,,c tu.i vr-ii cnr.iiina inrvr. ! day night. Di Passes Bill Condemning Torture, Capital Punishment ior Court will preside T Dialectic SciiaU tal puiiishiuer.t in all cent Inst d'"'ree iiiiirt niht by a o!e of til!. The 'foiip ;.l- initiate pa-s'.'d a and capi crimes ex r Tu "-day three was The r.i'A iir"iiher irrdud'-d Car', r.arnn-itnri. mhi r Knglish major I'.ub (iinri. si'inor markeling ma j r; and i!:id Gardrr-r. junior in du-stii.il tnanaem',rit mair. In other badness. Senator Pat ,, , instilled the death sentence v' as ineffective und that it contrary t Christian ethics. Senator Peblc liarrow, speak ing negativi'ly. said that the fund- amental concept of jurisprudence 1 is th:- protection ol society. He ad-1 ('( d tiiat ever since Hammurabi, t!;e concept f "an eye for an eye,'' has been accepted. He said also that society had the right to ex-1 ait retribution, and pointed out; , r 'J 'bat he felt that jrenieditated mur. A'lam- was .icclamied president pro tempore of th" S m i'e. sue C ceding I'.ill S ihi-toa. w ho re S'cned Senator Harrington va-, a" (laimed as reprcs nta'ive from the Di t 1 the D"l)al' Council, sue feeding Senator I'.idty Huffman, wlio also resign d. Senator P.arnngton introduced the bill of th e r-r.ing. which, if passed, w''u'd have condemned (TitMtal fuinifutunt 'and torture With ut reservat ion. P.arritv.'tori. in support of h;s lull, said that capita! punMiment Senalor Gary Greer said that the Time rate in America has not decreased as a result of capit al punishment, and hence capital punishment was not an effective ddcrrcnt. He cited psychological data to back up his punt that puni-hment is no more effective than g "od treatment. The idea that retributive just ice doi-s not protect society was cit: (I b Senator Gi rry Poudr.eau. He pointed out that murder is in larg measure a one time crime. L 1 V - I I f T I J i w PROBABLE STARTER: Sophomore center Dick Kepley will be cne of the probable starters as the Carolina Tar Heels go after win number 35 against Furman in Charlotte tonight. Kepley started the first two Tar Heel games this season. Note To De South Building: Was Dat Snow We Seen? Note to PNC, administration: Please send a copy of the lirst srmesUM exam schedule to the weather man. When we saw snow yesterday 1110110111;. we were a little confused. 1 eiyone knows the only time it ever snows in Chapel Hill is dining first semester linals. so we search cd I i.i nt it a 11 v lor a newspaper to t;ie us the date. Mad we hreeed through Christinas holidays? And was exam lime here already and we hadn't studied? Put no. we were actually seeing pie-season snow. Or at least we hope it was pre season snow. Alter all, it's a well-known fact that if it doesn't snow durimg, linals. there's no use studying you're onna Hunk anyhow. ' It's something like: we know we'll know if there's snow. . . The bill was Introduced by Dele gate Warren Coolidge, who said that the campus had been invaded by a petticoat brigade' which had hindered "Carolina gentlemen" scholastically. 'The emphasis is now on dat ing," he said "not studying. Car olina is now a party school which produces mental midgets." He said that Woman's College provides the necessary facilities for the education of the state's women and that they don't need to come to Chapel Hill. Delegate Clarence bimpson saiu , K.c that the removal of coeds would help solve the problem of insuf ficent dormitory facilities for men. Going Home Christmas? Try Our Travel Service Furman will be seeking its first i win tonight. The Purple Paladins V are 0-4 on the season, having lost to Tennessee 84-61 ), Pittsburgh 3 (83-45), West Virginia 105-67 and f Presbyterian 9G-78. For the tall, powerful McGuire 5?d men, the starting lineup will prob- fi ably read as it has in the first two games. Brennan and Shaffer will bt at forw'ard, sophomore Dick Kepley at center and Kearns and veteran senior Bob Cunningham at guard. The Furman attack, which usually centers around 5' 11 guard Dick Wright, might suffer tonight as Wright is nursing an injury which might keep him out. The little jvfn- I ior scored 545 points last season. The starting forward posts will probably consist of Bryon Finson 'and 6'6 Bob Conard. A 6 9 center. I Steve Ross w ill probably start along with guard Bill Gaines. South Carolina Saturday The bame tonight marks the sec 1 ond in a series of three this week for the national champs. The Chapel I Hillians return home Saturday after I noon to go before the television I cameras again, this time against a ! strong South Carolina five. I McGuire will probably give most j ot his squad an opportunity against Furman as he prepares for a long voyage to Lexington, Ky. and the Kentucky Classic which begins Dec. 20 1 next Friday). The Tar Heels, are expected to encounter their toughest opposition thus far this season against some strong inter sectional foes. Their first opponent is Minnesota. v il H? r-s... JA 1 m ' ; The snow falls, squirrels scam per about and The Daily Tar Heel Christmas Ride Service continues at full swing. If you don't like the idea of driving home alone, or if you have empty spaces in your vehicle whv not list your name i with this convenient Tar Heel serv- Fla., ! In case you don't have a car but enjoy riding in them. The Daily Tar Heel will be glad to help you He said that only a limited num- j find a ride home for the holidays, ber of superior women should be ! So, w hether you want transporta- GM's Slate 1 n following activities are rh'lul'(l fur (ir:iti;mi Meninri.il lod.iv: kinaiiee Committee, t-.l p. 111.. (iniil llomn; Student Coun cil. 711 p. hi.. (ir;iil K00111; SI Cam us, 7-7: HO p. m.. Roland lar kT I: Hub's Coinmittee. 4-." p. in.. Koland Parker 1; Symposium, 4-T p. m.. Koland Parker 2; Audit Hoard. 16 p. 111.. Woodliouse Con-Irn-nei Koom; I P Camus, 6:30 7:30 p. 111. . WoihIIioiisc Conference Koom; Women's Honor Council, t: 15-10 p. in., CouiH-il Koom. SARAH VAN WEYK Witness In Murder Case Symposium Fund Grows Three additional fraternities have pledged their financial sup- and thus th:re needs no real de- P" 10 u.e udruima i"uu,, terrent for rcneaters. ,brinSing the Symposiums total ,, ., ,n; u.,,. budget to S3.844.31 to date, it was Speaking against the bill, ueie ate BiU Fackert S3id th3t tH is ancient, and that its application . 44- :...4: ,0; h allowed to matriculate here. Delegate Don Jacobs said that the cwd were a "threat to the security of males" on the campus. He said that some students spend '$35 to $45 a week" on women. who lack the foresight to look lo the future of their boy friends. "Women come here to marry and get men to support them," he said. tion home for the holidays or have space available far riders, stop by the Tar Heel office in Graham Memorial or mail a card t; Ride Service, care of The Daily Tar Heel, Chapel Hill. Riders Wanted: Will Heath, Gary, Ind. vir Penn., Ohio, and Ind. turnpikes. Phone: 80250 or 8453 Charles Speranza, or Saul Bor- Fla.. Phone: 89130 Hilly Goldman, Tampa, Phone: 89002 Lindsay Love, Frog Level, Phone.' 88808 Robert Rohlfs, Albany, N. Y., New York City or western Mass.. Phone: 89112 Tim McKenzie, Chattanooga. Tenn., Phone: 89055 Jane Payne, Richmond, Va.. Phone: 89106 Joel Snow, St. Petersburg, Fla.. Phone: 89174 Jackie McCarthy, Norfolk, Va., Phone: 89048 John Reddan, Washigton. D. C, Phone: 89037 Paul Rule, Tidewater, Va.. Phone: 89128 news in 4 brief He added that he recognized the odkin Boston Mass. via New York need for a student social life bu'. that "a warped social life leads to a warped future." Speaking against the bill. Deleg- to such crimes as armed robbery and rapr were wrong. Senator Rudy Albert pointed out th.it tlie protection of society was seised by capital punishment, and that murder in the first degree was prevented to a large measure by capital punishment. Smator Crecr later pnposed to amend the bill, adding a clause whereby the use of capital punish ment would be restricted to first' degree murder. The amendment j ! passed by a vote of 5-2. j urn Finance Committee Chairman state' constitution said that the Al Goldsmith. University existed to educate The most recent pledges were "youth," which meant both nen mad? bv Zeta Psi, Phi Delta and women. Theta and Beta Theta Pi. Another opponent of the bill The total in the Symposium tre- Dalegate Joey Lopez, said that asury at present includes a $2000 the alleged trouble are not the grant from the Student Legisla- fault of the girls, but of the boys ture. $500 from Graham Memorial and doations from the Falk Founds ation Grant through the Political Science department and from the Order of the Grail. All six soror (See SYMPOSIUM, rage 3) who date them. "If girls become problems," he said( "it is because men let them." He said that men' have to learn how to live and work with women. (See COEDS, rage 3) New Jersey and Conn.: Phone: 3771 Richard Bell, Orlando, Fla., Phone: 89130 Bill Dorroh, Jackson, Miss., (Leaving Dec. 20) Phone: 89165 Charles Coleman, Southeast Geor gia via Columbia, S. C. and Au gusta, Ga. Phone: 99443 Rides Wanted: Dick Alexander, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., Phone: 89182 Ronald Bull, New York or Phila , delphia, Phone: 89107 j Nick Ellison, Cincinnati, Ohio, Phone: 89150. Harold Stessel, New York City, Phone: 89064 Mixed Bridge Tournament Slated Tonight Four $5 gift certificates to Town and Campus will be given to the two best partnerships at the speci al all-student bridge tournament to be held in Roland Parker Lou nges 1 and 2 tonight at 7 o'clock. First, second, third and fourth place winners will receive master points. Booby prizes will also be awarded. The tournament, which is being sponsored by the GMAB Tourna- BSizzard GATLINBURG, Tenn., Dec. 11 (AP) A blizzard struck th? Great Smoky Mountains today, dumping 11 inches of snow and halting mo tor travel. Screaming winds whirled clouds of powdery snow among the big balsams high in the Smokies. U. S. Highway 441 from Gatlin- burg across the mountains to Cher- j okee, N. C. was closed. State j route 73 between Gatlinburg and Townsend also was impassable. Court Refuses EDINBURGH. Scotland Dec. 11 (AP)-A Scottish court today re fused to permit the marriage of 26-year-old socialite Dominic Elwes and 19-year-old Tessa Kennedy, heiress to a Shipping fortune. Four judges of the Court of Sessions rejected the runaway lovers' appeal against a tempo rary injunction, obtained by Tessa's father, in barrinng their marriage. NORA & ISTVAN Appearing Here Tonight Ballet Dancers To Perform This Evening European dancers, Miss N)ra Kovach and Istvan Rabovsky, will perform with the dance ensemble tonight at 8 o'clock in Memorial Hall. Other featured dancers will be Miss Sonia Arova and Job Sanders. The dance group Is being spon sored , here by the Chapel Hill Concert Series in conjunction with the UNC Student Entertainment Committee. Carolina students may pick up "free tickets to the dance concert by presenting ID cards to the In formation Desk in Graham Memor ial. ID cards must be taken to Memorial Hall in addition to the tickets tonight. The Kovach-Rabovsky concert is the socond one this year cn the Chapel Hill Concert Series. The Student Entertainment Committee will sponsor the following program during the rest of the year: Jan Peerce, singer, February 6; Pitts burg Symphony Orchestra, March 11; and Alec Templeton, pianist, April. The two stars in tonight's dance performance were formerly top artists of the Russian ballet. Miss Kovach and Rabovsky escaped frnrr, behind the Iron Curtain in 1953 when they were making an appearance in East Berlin. already signed up for the tourna ment to come even at the last minute, as there are facilities for a large number of participants. ments and Contest! Committee, is i They also stressed the fact that open to all undergraduate stu- for students unable to get the dgnts. ; partner of their own choosing, last The committee has invited any minute partnerships will be pro- Bill Harrington, St. Petersburg, additional couples who have not vided. Orientation Advisors Needed Counselors are needed for spring semester orientation, ac cording to Chairman Jerry Op penheimer. Anyone who has served as a counselor before and who is in terested in helping is asked to call Oppenheimer at 6031 sr 9460 or telephone Mary Jane Fisher at 8-9083. The orientation program will be held January 29 and 30. Sec ond semester classes start Janu ary 31. ; J 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1957, edition 1
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