TJ.!I.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Cfcapsl Hill, M.C. . 4 WEATHER Kalher fuld with chance of oe raslonal rain southeast portion Highest In the 40. COMPETENCE Editor discusses "plan for competence" on page 2. Complete (fl Wire Service FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE VOL. LXV NO. 76 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1958 rait Hi L ol m JiJMiM wmair jwkii SP Hears i About Car i Situation t: riUNM.K PIPKIN Assistant Dean of Student Af fairs II.iv Jelfcrits and Ralph Cum nun.:v chairman, of the student, traffic Advisory commission, d in clined lat night before the Stu- , dent Party problems concerning the parking iluati m. Tlu- SP passed a resolutl n by Cummings that a meeting of mem bers of student government, the I'niver.sity administration, and An officials be held to discuss problems concerning the parking situation. A-itant Dean Jeffcries said ; that the -tudents now have 2.844 ; ears registered with his office and that were 1.078 unrestricted park ing spaces on campus for the stu dents. The faculty has registered l.BOO tars and hae l.OOti parking spaces reserved for them. When the $40. (X)0 P.t ll Tower Parking is open f -r parking students will have ."i00 additi nal spaces. The money paid for fines for violating parking regulations on th- campus amounts t around s'.mioo a year and is collected and k pt bv the town of Chapel Hill he stated. He said he plans to re-open the problem concerning these fines. Tie matter will be di-cu.wd with th- Town Manager of Chapel Hill. He said at the present time the Student Affair.s Office gives rc- P rt nl. The council calls before them any student who has five violations and has the right to take away the privilege of a student to have a car at the University. Assistant Dean Jcfferies recom mended that a special office be m-( up take of keeping account of the traffic violation. 1 Cummn mA there wa "ml number" of requests from th se who wanted to rrk at the new lu ll Tower Parking Lot. Cum mings' council has recommended that C.enrral College students be the first group required to park there. "They would be issued special I'.fll Tower parking stickers and would he treated as an illegal parker if found parking in any student or faculty parking space" (from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.), he said. Ken Friedman was appointed publicity director of the party. - JJ" l..Tl"m t . . ."" v.. ' " . , ' -1 -' ' r , ' ,t " I I r ,M !' " " k ill aj! Afew ofor I oonze Here JAMES E. WADSWORTH Installation Is Planned Next Fall ROCKET MAN RECOVERED New Show, Narrator Added At Planetarium "Siar Scouting." thj new pro gram oyen'.ng at th.' Morchcad planetarium here today, has been especially tailored for Boy. C.irl and Cub Scouts' preparation for merit badge requirements in as tronomy, according t Managrr A. F. Jenano. Jenano also announced that James E. Wadsworth of Chapel Hill, leadership training chairman to the Student Traffic Coun-0f the Orange District. Occonee- chee Council of the Boy Scouts of America, had joined the permanent narrating staff of the Planetarium. Yadsv.;i-th. who is UNC hous ing officer here, will narrate the initial program tonight at 8:30 as .veil as others during the run hrough Feb. 3. SUSPECT HUNTED FOR ROBBERY OVER HOLIDAYS Chapl Hill Polic rportd ytrdy that thy had identi fied and war trying to loceta suspect for $250 robbery which occurred at the Delta Kappa Epsilon House. The theft occurred during the Christmas holidays. There was no sign of forceful entry, so the charge in the case will probably just be larceny, police said. One 35 millimeter camera, a clock radio, two summer suits and a sheep skin coat were the articles taken from the house. The Occoneethre ouneil ar ranged and worked with the More nead Planetarium in presenting "Star Scouting". The program points out what distinguishes stars and planets, their brightness and apparent motion, and even drama tizes Indian legends of the con stellations. Devices for study and memory aids which Boy. Girl and Cub Scouts can make from everyday articles found about the home will also be demonstrated. Because "Star Scouting" will By ANN FKYE A national sorority Kappa Kappa Gamma will start colonizing a chap ter here beginning the spring semes ter this year, according to an an nouncement yesterday by Miss Katherine Kennedy Carmichael. dean of women. The addition of this new sorority will bring Carolina's total of na ; tional affiliated chapters to seven, j After Jan. 30. members of Kappa Kappa Gamma from other cam- t puses will probably come to Caro lina to work on the colonization of a chapter here. In addition, outside : members will be helped by at least ! three Carolina coeds who are cur-1 rently members of Kappa Kappa i Gamma. Dean Carmichael said the new sorority would probably try to pledge new girls shortly after the colonization gets underway. The period of colonization will continue through the summer until the actual installation of the chap ter next fall. MOSCOW, Jan. 6 (.Tt Soviet Russia has shot a man-carrying rocket 186 miles into the air and the man parachuted back to earth, reliable sources said tonight. If true, it may b an even more dramatic scien tific achievement than the launchings of Sputnik I and the dog-carrying Sputnik II last fall. But there was no official announcement whatever concerning this venture. It was reported to have taken place a day or two after New Year's. The informants' story was that the Russians fired the manned rocket up 300 kilometers (186.41 (cq) miles) from wintry soviet soil through the 70-below zero cold of the stratosphere and well into th blistering heat of the ionosphere, a vast ocean of electricity whose reflecting layers bounce radio waves back to earth. They did not specify whether the parachutist went all the way up and it was not made clear how he succeeded in getting down. Months ago, however, Russian scientists sent up dogs to a lesser height. The dogs were released and parachuted to safety, apparently unharmed. It was a dog from this experimental kennel, a female named Laika, that was sent to her ultimate death in SDutnik II. Observers speculated that the rocket man was re leased from the rocket in a pressurized container equipped so he could survive at great altitudes and break free of it to ump with his 'chute at the right stage. Two Grants Will Cover 3 Years The move to bring a new sorority to UNC was begun shortly aftet the 1937 fall formal rush. According to figures released by the dean of women's office, around 60 girls who went through the fall rush were denied bids primarily because there ) was not enough room for tliem in A nongovernmental observer of missiles develop ments said today thav if th Russians actually launched a human into lower spact they did it with a German-designed craft. , Eric Bergaust, editor of Missiles and Rockets Magazine, said it been known in missies circles for several years that th Russians have been work ing since 1945 on such a craft. : 1 A rocket plane known as the T-4A, it was design ed to have a range of 12,000 miles and a speed of about 5,000 miles an hour. The accounts of the manned rocket, if confirmed, would give the Soviet Union a claim to fourth coup in space experimentation in little men than four months. The Russians announced last Aug. 26 they had successfully tested an intercontinental rocket mis-;ySs Effective Jan. 1, the grants sile, meaning a weapon with a range of 5,000 miles: WM help the University play an . i .!. - A L. . .UWa x - - or more, mar nan nir any pt n mw v ,MW"- Then came the launching of the two earth satel lites. Now the manned rocket story, which may or may not be true. - The informants said th Russian who rodo the rocket oarachuted successfully to earth. They did not say this mystery man was alive when he landed. ' But the implication was that he was safe. There were no hints of his identity. Dozens of Russians havo volunteered as human auinea pigs for pioneering flights in space, with the moon and Mars among ultimate goals. The University of Noith Carolina School of Medicine has received two March of Dimes grants total ing $237,403 Each grant covers a three-and-one-half year period. The grants were recently an nounced jointly by UXC Chancel lor William B. Aycock and Basil O'Connor, president of the Nation al Foundation for Infantile Paral- mcreasingiy important role in tne teaching of skills that help bring handicapped patients back to more nearly normal lives, it was stated today. A grant of $131,836 will con tinue the support of a program for teaching the concepts and basic techniques of modern rehabilita tion to undergraduates and gradu ate medical students. BROUGHT BY SYMPOSIUM appeal to Hoy, Girl and Cob the currently existing six national Scouts who will be in school on i sororities hero. ' weekdays, seven weekend matinee ,Van carmichael said. ' Student r 1 1, periormances nave oeco wm-u-1 ouini),n ,m the eampus men. iiic) win in- on ,-iai-1 j.j ns.sertin unlays at 10 and 11 a.m. and S was unified necessity tor an- and 4 p.m.. and on Sundays at 2. 3. and 4 p.m. The program will also be pre sented at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. the other sorority." Finally, on Dec. 2, 197, the neces sary student, faculty and adminis- Abba Eban, Israeli Ambassador To Speak Here Tomorrow At 8 P.M. Dr. Abba Eban, Israeli ambas sador to the United States since 1950, will be in Chapel Hill tomor-' gan in liH6 when he went to Je row. Dr. Eban, who will speak in j rusalem to act as liaison officer of Hill Hall at 8 p.m., is being J Allied Headquarters with the Jew brought here as the second pre- ish population. It was Eban's job sentation of the Carolina Forum, j at that time to enlist the partiei A banquet in honor of the am-1 pation of Jewish volunteers in spe bassador will be held at 6:30 p.m. j cial missions on behalf of the Al Wedncsday at the Carolina Inn. j lied forees in the Near East and Aftfr his address a rerention in : Fnrone n ation groups had approved the Graham Memorial has been sehed- i Later, he became chief instruc- uled. tor at the Middle East Arab Cen- Dr. Eban, a prominent scholar j ter in Jerusalem. During this pe- The other grant, which is for $105,576, will assist in the establis hment of a baccalaureate curricu lum in physical theapy. The program for the teaching of rehabilitation techniques and 1 concepts is one of 15 supported by 1 the National Foundation in medi I cal schools across tht country. The I means used today to help severely 1 Vo AiiYrrl nationfe rptiirn in rT"fV- POLITICAL WORK . I Alter World Vfar II, du6dve re far different from His nolitical work in Israel He- ed witn me Jewisn .striivjr , rusalem. In 197 lie was a mem ber of the staff of the Jewish Agency which secured the vote of. the General Assembly of the Un ited Nations to set up the stat of Israel. National Student Assn. Plans Regional Seminar selected of Kappa Kappa Gamma as the new sorority. At this time a bid was extended to the sorority to establish a chapter here. In a letter received yesterday from Mrs. Clara. O. Pierce, execu tive secretary-treasurer of Kappa Of the 24 chimneys on the Caro lina Inn at Chapel Hill, only eight jare used. The other 16 are for looks. I hnitt that wav bv John Sorunt Hill I who cave the' Inn to the University KaPPa Gamma- tn? national soror- as an authority on Hebrew, Arabic I of North Carolina. of Middle Eastern Affairs, was born in South Africa. Raised in England, he attended Cambridge University and later became a member of the Cambridge faculty (see Sorority, page 3) and Persian literature. riod. Eban traveled widely in the countries of the Near East, fre quently lecturing in Hebrew and Arabic to Jewish and Arab audi ences and contributing to journals written in these languages. AFTER WORLD WAR II 'NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS' The Third Regional International Student Relations Seminar of the Carolinas-Viruinia Region of the I'nited States National Student Assn. will be held Feb. 14. 15 and 16 at WCL'NC Forgery Case Investigation Is Continuing The Men's Honor Council is still it vestittating a ca;c concerning Anises allegedly purchased by numerous Carolina students from a former I'NC student. G'ori:e Ragsdjle, chairman of the council, said fht ho was not yet ready to divulge numlxTs of stu dents who are involved in this case. (.see Forgery, page 3) Whit Whitfield. UNC's NSA co ordinator, has announced that UNC may send one or more delegates to this seminar depending upon the qualifications of those applying. Those who are accepted as dele gates by the Regional Recomm endations Committee will receive grants from the USNSA Internation al Commission to help defray the expenses incurred. The purposes of the seminar are three-fold: 1. To inform member campuses about international student relations Popular Play To Be Presented Here Followed 'Teahouse Of August Moon those available a decade ago. The 15 teaching programs will help enable doctors to use new techni ques, and will serve as pilot stu- 1 dies from which should come stand I ards and ideas that will influence ! medical education everywhere. An active member of the Zion- j ist movement, Dr. Eban appeared ! before the Political Committee of; the United Nations in 1949 to Physical therapists are import ant to the team approach that is now used in aiding handicapped natipnts Thrr .iri nnlv two nhvs- plead the case for Israel's admis- j ical therapy curricula giving under- sion to me unnea canons. Mac Hyman's popular novel, "No Time For Sergeants." arrives here as a stage play in Memorial Hall at 8:30 Friday evening. The book came into being as a play when F.mmctt Rogers, associate of prod- sign the sets which include an air plane in flight, a parachute jump, a variety of rooms in army barracks, an induction center and the heart of a deep forest. The show had its world premiere and the importance of NSA's over seas relation with other student 'a second play about the peace-time Army with which to follow up his production of "The Teahouse of the August Moon." "No Time For Ser gents" is an account of a Georgia plowboy who, through sheer inno cent good will, disrupts the opera- ucer-actor Maurice Evans, read the j at the Shubert Theatre, New Haven, the book and passed it along to 1 Conn., in September, 1953. and open- Evans. Evans had been looking tor ed on Broadway in October its opening the play has filled theatres in New York, London, Hono lulu. Sweden, Germany and Austria. The cast is the company which has played the show for two years in New York. The company fea tures Charles Hohman, Rex Ever- AMBASSADOR Eban became Ambassador to the United States in September of taining his function as chief Is 1950, while at th same time re raeli delegate to the United Na- toins. When appointed Ambassa dor to the United States, Eban was the youngest official to hold a position of such rank and im portance in Washington. Ambassador Eban has achieved prominence in the United States as a diplomat, an orator and a scholar of Middle Eastern Affairs. He has been awarded honorary degrees by the Jewish Theologi cal Seminary of America. Boston j University and the University of i Maryland. graduate degrees in southeastern and south midwestern areas of the United States. Th3 need for a physical therapy course in a state university which attracts students primarily from this region will be filled by this new program at UNC, a spokes man for UNC said. Since ! hart. Tucker Ashworth. Howard Freeman, Royal Beal, James Mill hollin and Christian Flanders. Tickets for the production are available at the business office of j The Carolina Forum has invited the Carolina Playmakers. 214 Aber- j ail students and other interested nethv Hall. 11 seats are reserved at persons to attend Dr. Eban's ad- $2.20, $3.30, and $4.40 GM's Slate The following urtivitie are M'hrduli'd fur Graham Memorial lod.iy: Debate, 4-6 p. m., Grail Room; Women' Residence Coun- 'I. 7- p. in., ('.rail Room; CM Alt Publicity, 4-5 p. m Roland I'ar krr I; ITU, 7-9 p. m.. Roland Parker I; Newspaper Research ( onunission, 4-7 p. m.. Roland I'arker 2: IDC. 4-3 p. m.. Wood hcuse Conference Room; Honor System Commission, 7-8 p. m Woodhouse Conference Room; At torney General's Staff, 8-10 p. ni.. Woodhouse Conference Room; Publications Hoard. 4-5 p. ni., Remlezvou Room; APO, 7-9 p. in.. APO Room. unions. 2. To encourage and to stimulate more effective campus foreign stu dent programming through ex change of ideas among the various schools. 3. To create in students an aware ness of the personal part they may play in NSA's foreign relation pro ura m. Prospective participants need not be NSA members or student govern ment leaders, Whitfield said. Stu dents wtho have an interest in or knowledge of international student relations will be valuable, he said. Applications to attend the sem inar may be secured from Whitfield or the Student Government Office. They must be filled out and return ed to Whitfitld immediately for pro cessing. The deadline for applica tions will be Friday, Jan. 10. The last regional seminar was held at UNC last February in con junction with the Regional Assem bly, and was termed very success ful by both officials and participants. tion of the Army and the Air Force. An intensive search was conduct ed by Evans and Rogers to find an edapter for "Sergeants' and event ually they came up with Ira Levin, an army private still in uniform, who had won the Edgar Allen Poe Award for this novel. "A Kiss Be fore Dying. Levin first wrote an abbreviated television script of the play, which was presented by U.S. Steel. While Levin worked on the manu script Evans and Rogers secured the services of director Morton Da Costa, who had just finished staging the musical comedy, "Plain and Fancy," and has since added "Auntie Manic" to his list of direc torial achievements. Peter Larking was engaged to de- dress and the reception in Gra ham Memorial immediately fol lowing the speech. ' ST l' I . f i jo yc . -rr,::-.'.---v--.... - , ... Wetzel ROCKINGHAM, N. C. Jan. 7 (AP) Frank Edward Wetzel, 37, today was indicted for murder in the gunshot slaying of a North Carolina highway patrolman. Sheriff Raymond Goodman of Richmond County said Wetzel would be brought here from Cen tral Prison in Raleigh, and under present plans would be kept in the county jail here during the trial. Interviews Set By Researchers This Afternoon Today from 4 to 7 p.m. in Ro land Parker II, interviews with interested persons concerning the policies and organization of the Daily Tar Heel will be conducted by the Newspaper Research Com mittee. The five-member committee will hold the interviews with one stu dent at a time. The committee was set up by Student Legislature to study pol icies of the Daily Tar Heel and similar college newspapers. The committee will make a report of its findings and any recommenda tions for the improvement of the Dailv Tar Heel to the Legislature in February. Interviews will also be held Monday, Jan. 13, starting at 2 p.m., in Roland Parker II. "Ho Time For Sergeants" Set The stage setting of "No Time For Sergeants"- was designed by Peter Larking, and includes in ad dition to the barroom shown above, an airplane in flight, a parachute jump, rooms in an Army barracks, an induction center and the heart of a forest. The show, which will appear here Friday at 8:30 p.m., was premiered at New Haven, Conn, in September, 1955. Partly eloudy and not quite so cold today and tomorrow, with low tonight in mid-20's. High Low Rainfall IN THE INFIRMARY Thursday 50 17 .00 Friday 37 15 .00 Saturday 39 15 .00 Sunday 33 9 .00 Students in the infirmary yester day included: Misses Eleanor Hemstredt, Lula Sue Ballentlne and Jane MuLsey and Raymond Smith, Joe Eller. Doug McCallister, Charles Moss, Milburn Gibbs, Walter Slater, Amos Ballard, William Brigraan, Charles Campbell, Franklin Clontz. Norman Kantor, Boyce Cole, Jerry Oppenheimer, William Sermons, Donald Tribus and Julian Smith,