Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 15, 1958, edition 1 / Page 1
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- 1 I U.?:.C. Library Serials Dspt, Box 070 Chapol Hill, H.C. r WEATHER Clowdy, mild and rain by to night, with txptcttd high of 55. -TRAGEDY It could havo been avoided with cooperation of local polic and fir officials, editor says on page two. VOL. LXV NO. 83 Offices in Graham Uemorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1958 Complete tfJ Wire Service FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE 1 "v II 42 1 CDT J m 4 in d:te((tH eiir M WWW. Tor Heels Seeking. Comeback Tonight; 'V, r " 1 Meet W 61 f pack 5 i Seeking 24th Con Contest; ' PRESIDENT FRIDAY . ycttivi ready to move utive Consolidated Offices To Move This Week Consolidated University offices. Chancellor William Aycock's ol n,w in South Building, will b? ficc will remain in South Building moved .some time this week into, as will other UN'C administrate) nw quarters in the former Insti tute of Government Bldg. on East Franklin St. The building, except for m.nor work, is ready for occupation. The cost of remodeling the building y nrviiml $40,000. The offices of President WilJiam fYiif jv. Vice Presidents M. Whjburn and H'. I). Carmirharl I the opening of the AckJancf Art Jr. auiL Uuin.... Mumuvr - A. H. Mumim. but the interior -will b VS. The offices being vacated by Con solidated University officials will be occupied by members of the t'N'C administration. Chancellor Aycock's new home on Country Club Road, which is bring renovated by the Univer sity, is expected to be ready in about two weeks. No date has been set as yet for Committee Winds Up Hearings The Newspaper Research Com mittee concluded its series of open j hearings Monday with its second meeting. j During a four and one half hour . session the committee got the opin ions of five students on such mat ters as the endorsement of an edi- tcrial candidate by a political par ty and recalling the ed tor. The commit' ee also asked what the studen s thought the relation ship should be among The Daily Tar Heel and the School of Journalism, the University administration and the student government. The students were also queried on ' what they thought was the best way to select the editor, what the edi tor's responsibility should be and what salaries the editor and the other members of the staff should be paid. CLOSED SESSION Those testifying asked to present any other points they might want to make about the paper. The com mittee will meet in a closed session to draw up the report which it will Fiibmit to tli Student Legislature. Those mrmtwrii of nip lmuy Tr ' V i) v. - 7 Si: 0 r, sec 5500 Expected To Case-McGuire Clash in At Home See : -4, , -a irzz y - j? t 'i I TE.: 1 Rape Case 2 On Faculty Are Promoted By Trustees By BILL KING The masterminds of the Altantic Coast Conference come head to head ! tonight in Woollen Gym and what The Executive Committee of the will transpire is anybody's quess. UNC Board of Trustees Monday It's the Carolina Tar Heels and approved the promotion in rank of the N. C. State Wolfpck in their j wo , faculty members, Harvey second meeting of the season at 3 Smith and Waiter L. Smith. o'clock and only coaches Frank Mc- j The promotions were included Guire arrti Everett Case p'us their in a report submitted by Chancei- Shcnarit w ho tran(crrrct from finished hy the end of January. Heel who appeared Detore me com w- rift rir,r,i- ;nn!h Tt1iitdin t toast two more months will hplrnittee V 1 1 V III II ' v.- 1 k uh . . . ( . . . . - - - 3 EXPERIENCED HELP: Carolina forward Roy Soarcy might b on of tho Tar Heal reserve to o action against N.'C. Stato to night. Searcy, a senior from Draper, has proved useful in the clutches In several games this season. to the new offices across from Gra- required ham Memorial. 1 grounds. for . landscaping thii U. S. Military Investing Funds In Scientific Research At UNC The U- S. military is investing j heavily in science research at Carolina. Some are projects of long standing; some have come fallowing Sputnik and President Eisenhower's new science empha sis. Sought by CNC physicists, chem ists, mathematicians and statisti cians arc findings in connection u,ith nrtilort which include the ...... . j . . - following: 1. Rockets, including intercon tinental guided missiles, the baic tdatistieal research on which has been done at Chapel Hill. 2. Cosmic ray research. 3. Research m high tempera tures and cfects on metal.. 4. Research in low temperatures. 5. Gravity research. 6. A special program for train ing hih school science and math ematics teachers. Those half a do.cn programs are but a few of the laboratory projects on which scientists at the University are working in this of artificial satellites and .teppcd up preparedness in areas of defense. Iincluded in backers of the re search here are the U. S. Air Force. Army Ordnance, Atomic Energy! Commission, the U. S. Navy, and the National Science Foundation, a federal agency. The NSK is granting half a mill ion dollars this year and next jear to ay for the concentrated training of 101 high school math and science teachers, 51 this year and 30 next year. Resides this, juimmer programs for high school and college teach ers of sciences and mathematics are being financed by the federal government. The University is one of 17 col leges and universities taking part in this significant program. Be sides the cours? now going on, two similar summer programs were conducted here last summer. The Institute for National Sciences under direction of Kenan professor Arthur Roe is sponsor of the Chapel Hill program, and Professor E. C. Markham is o I rector. An account of what the UNC Department of Statistics is doing in basic computations in develop-r.-.nt r.f t'nidpd missiles and H- llivisv v " b:mb carrying planes now can be brousht up to date to show that statisticians in Phillips Hall are working with the military and oth- er scientists at wnue oauus ing Ground in New Mexico and at Patrick Air Force Base in Flori da. Basic statistical work on "The Matador" and the B-52 globe-circling H-bombcr was performed at UNC. were: Dous Eisele, editor; Miss Mary Alys Voorhces, man aging editor; Syd Shuford, circula tion manager and University Party Chairman; and Pringle Pipkin, re porter. Tom Lambeth, acting director of Graham Memorial, also testified. He was a former member of the paper and was a candidate for edi tor in 1956. SDeakinz first, Pipkin suggested the problem of selection centered around the lack of an adequate training system for the staff mem bers and that the paper should put more effort into recruiting. Raid tin trouble with the present system of selecting the edi tor is that he in not tested until after he has been in oficc. However, he said it would be rather hard to find a better method than the pres ent one. " He suggested strengthening the power of the present Selections Board and said he should not be on a selections board which would Judge him should he run for reelection. NEEDS CAMERA To improve the newspaper he said it needed a camera for its own use and should have first priority on Sug g Chos&rf I d'H ead State Executive Group Bill Sugg of UNC was elected to! Other members of the executive head the state executive committee for the Collegiate Council for the United Nations CCUN at a con ference here last weekend. Sugg, who also is chairman of the wai rruw was in charge of the conference here that Was attended by around 30 delegates representing 15 colleges in North Carolina. He is. a junior from Winston-Salem. "It was a very successful week end " Sugg said. He commented that interest in the United Nations and the CCUN was high at the con ference, and he believed the goal of the conference had been accom plished. This goal was to try to organize rrUN crouDS on other state cam-1 puses and to set up a state com mittee that would coordinate CCUN projects and programs. This state CCUN executive com mittee, headed by Sugg, has another Carolina student as a member. Miss Connie Bernstein, junior from Char- chairman ot the committee, elected Sunday at the business session of the conference, include: Vice-Chairman, Leon Mur ray from AtT College; U. N. Model Assembly program Chairman, Dick Wood from Duke; program chair man for high school : participation in the state, Miss Heea Haider from nniifnrd! and orocram chairman for UN Day, Human Rights Day and other special events. Sugg said the executive committee plans to meet early in February to map out plans for various projects. Next month Sugg, as chairman of the executive committee, intends to visit as many colleges as possible in an attempt to have them affiliate with CCUN. By the first of March he hopes every campus in the state will be attuiaiea. The executive committee does not WINSTON-SALEM, Jan. 14. Judge Allen H. Gwyn signed an order in Forsyth Superior Court today sending a High Point Negro charged with raping the wife of an assistant basketball coach at Wake Forest College to a mental institution for observation. Charles Moore was ordered taken to the state hospital at Goldsboro for observation for a period not to exceed 30 days. Judge Gwyn issued the order on motion of attorneys for Moore. ' Moore is charged with raping Mrs. Al DePorter, 25, Dec. 13. He was working at a, service sta tion and was riding back to the station with Mrs. DeForter when the alleged attack occurred. Moore's attorneys argued last week that Moore did not have suf f irint mnnl ranaritv to enter- a pes and shoutd b? sent to state mental institution. . Debt Limit WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. Of Ths Administration asiked today for a five-billion-dollar increase in the aational debt limit, to 280 billions. The first reaction in Congress pointed to appproval, as a matter of regretful necessity in view ot the ever-climbing costs of national defense. The debt has already pressed to within less than 750 million dol lars of the present 275-billion limit-Chairman Mills (D-Ark) and Rep. Reed (R-NY) ofthe House Ways and Means Committee in troduced a bill to carry out the request from the treasury for the lifting of the ceiling. respective charges, have any idea what's going to happen. The two master strategists, gen erally conceded the fathers of mod ern ACC basketball, will lock horns in a battle of wits and a capacity crowd of over 5.5C0 is expected to be on hand for this traditional ard rivalry-ridden fiasco.. State Seeks Revenge For the Wolfpack, the cry is revenge. The Tar Heels whipped the Raleigh club, 39-30 ' in the finals of lor William Aycock to the com ; mittee and approved by the com ; mittee. j Harvey Smith, of the Sociology ; and Anthropology Dept., was pro i moted from associate professor to full professor. Walter L. Smith, of the Dept. of Statistics, was reappointed and promoted from assistant professor to associate professor. , -CHANGES Included in the report wereths grant Irom the . Committee .. on Comparative Politics of the Social Science Research Council to coa- tbe Dixie Classic in late December. following personnel changes: The score was an exact indication ! D Leaves of absence. Carlyle of "what happened" in that contest iames Frarey, associate professor and it was only one of many tim:sof the School of Library Science, that McGuires and Case have match-' was granted a leave of absence ed wits in their long rivalrv. B-th I f OT the fall semester, 1953-59, to clubs used slowed-down, ball-control , complete work on his doctor's tactics i the Classics finale but al vmvermy. whether the same thing wl be used , A eaTe of bence ?as , , . . . . ito Fedeneo G. Oil, T'olitical tonight ts as uncertain a the nitm- ; . . , . r , - Science Dpt professor, for lb.'1: her of filter tn a cigarette.' . v. . - ... Isonns somfSter. lft8. to accept a lur i uf urn., nuuiu " little revenge revenge for a 74-61 loss to the Maryland, Terps Satur day nignt. it was tne t.rsi conrer- . . . n;nnrin .vnrk in th. I study of South American political Darties. Carolina comes, into the contest cUuc R Baker, professor in with an i 1-2 . record on the season j the school of Dentistry, was grant and a 4-1 mark in conference com-j eo a ieaVe cf absence from Marcn petition. Its only; other loss wa3 to jq to juiy l. 1958. - West Virginia. The WolfpacK nave ; 2) Retirements. The committee a nine and three record for all J approved the retirements of Jan games and are 3-2 in the conference Philip Schinhan, professor in tha excluding the Dixie Classic loss to j Dept. of Music. July 1. 1953; Mary Carolina ). State has lost to South ' Thornton, library assistant, July 1, Carolina and Duke, the latter a 76- 1958: and Rachel R. Lear, recep- 73 double overtime thriller Satur- tionist, also July 1, 19o8. ence loss since the Tar Heels lest their final game to Duke in W5. day. .. Aaytbnj Csa Ilappe Both clubs can expect the unusu 1 j tonight in furthering the ."anything (See COMMITTEE, page 3) lotte was elected cnairman oi c,.Ptarv of treasurer. bureau Her duty is to find Duitctu. xmti u, ho vvmilrt arjDoint a sec- -.-.itkt ,.,,rc in thP OUBK so speakers speakers for state. retary from this campus shortly. AT MONDAY NIGHT FIRE Jamming Almost Disastrous GM SLATE The following activities are sched uled for Graham Memorial today: Panhellenic Council, 5-6 p.m., Grail Room; Jehovah's Witnesses. 7:30-8:30 p.m.. Rolund Parker 1; Forum, 4 p.m., Roland Parker 2; GM Board, 4-6 p.m., Woodhousc Coufcrcucc Ryom. Jammed telephone lines to the fire department Monday night during the fire at Memorial Hos pital almost caused a tragedy at 215 Henderson St. A bzic was discovered in the student rooming house, but could nnt ho mnorted for 13 mmuies i v v m - r due to busy signals on the fire de oartment's phone. rnrious I students and citizens were calling to see if the blaze at the hospital was a continuation of the arson outbreak which terror ized Chapel Hill last week. Meanwhile, residents of the stu flent rooming house fousht the cpcnnH hlae with buckets of wa ter until the fire" department ar rived. NOTHING NEW Captain Blake of the Chapel Hill police force, said there have been no new developments in Iatt week's series of arson cases ... A. but the rash of tires leaas to speculation that arson was in volved. The two suspects are still under surveillance, according to Blake. Meanwhile, the Chapel Hill studios of WUNC-TV are continu ing their normal telecasting sched ule despite last Thursday's fire which caused an unofficial $60,000 worth of damage to the UNC Com munications Center, according to John Young, director of the Chap el Hill studios. TEMPORARY STUDIO A temporary studio is in opera tion in the motion picture sound stage and television administration offices, located in the basement of Swain Hall. Director Young said, "An almost superhuman effort on the part of the engineering staff, production crews, and administrative person- tin u"nnt nositive all of the fires nxl enabled the station to return were started by the same person,! to the air so soon." Alan Maclntyre, Chief. Engineer f iviiMr.TV and his staff have Ui ft A j done4 'wonders' getting the com plicated electronic equipment eomDanies. and other university personnel lor their efforts in aid ing the studio to begin telecasting so soon. DAMAGE UNKNOWN Insurance adjusters are still try ing to determine the full extent of d bv the fire The exact amount can't be de termined until contractors remove some of the debris from the build ing and the trenches under the building where water has not yet been removed. Tho university radio station, WUNC-FM, has been broadcasting from the facilities of WCHL since the fire, but will return to, their own studios today. "The excellent work of the fire department and studio staff saved UNC Property Is Inspected Due To Fires InsDection of all University property is currently being carried on by members of the state tire marshal's office and the Chapel Hill Fire Dept. The University hopes to follow!' up on recommendations submitted by these two groups-for eliminat ing certain fire hazards, according to J. A. Branch, UNC business manager. This inspection came largely as a result of recent fires which "made us conscious of hazards that exist" Branch said. He said some of the recommen- rtatirme miiht he in the line of additional fire extinguishers or more fire hydrants. Several years aao a similar in spection was conducted. As a re sult, fire pscaoes were erected on Race Relations TTTCk-TmFT! Ala.. Jan. 14. W Race relations have -worsened in the South in the past year, says Tuskegee Institute, and realistic action is imperative "if serious difficulties are to be avoided i.i j the near future." But some progress was. made to ward peaceful settlement of differ ences, notably in actions taken by the Federal Government, Presi dent L. H. Foster said today in the famed Negro college's annual race relations report. All branches of the government "made clear," the report observed, "that American citizens must re ceive treatment which is racially non-discriminatory in education, transportation, recreation, voting and employment. Nevertheless, Foster said, "Race relations in the southern states are in a more unsettled and dis turbed status than a year ago. The divergent segregationist and de segregationist points of view are held more resolutely now than in the recent past." 4 ( See 5.500. page 3) 3) Continuation of service tor one year for those who have reached the age of 65 by July 1. These include faculty members, 1 William W. Cort. Dept. of PHibljc Health; ,T. F. Dashiell of the "Dept. of Psychology; J. T. Dobbins. Dept. of Chemistry; P, H. Epps, Dept. of Classics; ; S. E.' Leavitt, Dept. of Romance Languages; B. L. Ull man. Dept. of Classics; and L. R. Wilson, School of Library Science. Non-academic personnel in clude: Bessie R. Buchanan and Edna Humphreys, dormitory host esses. 4) Continuation of service1 ior vear for those who have These W. C. R. H. ness include faculty members. George. Dept. of Anatomy: M. Hobbs, School of Busi Administration; Katharine Space Age WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. UFv-The House agreed today to vote to morrow on a $548,226,000 authori zation bill for emergency Space Everyone Gets m Into The Act During Plays Student playwrights, d'retors, designers and actors will share the j 0n spotlight Thursday and Friday eve- j reached the age of 65 by July 1 ning at 7:30 when three new one-act Dlavs are presented in the Play- makers' Theater. The plays will be primarily hand led by students of ' the Dramatic Arts uept. unaer we Mipeiviaiuu j j a staff member. The presenta'ion of student writ- J ten plays is a tradition on campus, j It was begun under the leadership j of Frederick H. Koch in the 1919-20 season. The list of playwrights since 1919 include novelist Thomas Wolfe; Pulitzer Prize winner Paul Green, J and three current DA staff mem bers. Kai Judgenson, Foster Fitz Simons and John W. Parker. The two nigbt bill will include "A White But erfly." by Gabriela Roepke, Santiago. Chile; "The i Eternal Thread." by Gunam Lee. Seoul, Korea; and "Fairy Beauty, Jocher. Institute for Research in Social Science; A. M. Jordan, School of Education; G. T. Schwenning. School of Business Administration: W. E. CaldweU. Dept. of History; J- P- Harland. Dept. of Classics; H. R. Huse. Dept. of Romance Languages: Guy B. Phillios. School of Edu- W. W. Pierson. Dent, of Political Science; TL R. House, Dent, of English and Classics; A. IP. Hun- Dept. of English: J. W, Laslev, Dept. of Mathe matics: L. C. MacKinney. Dent, of (See FACULTY, page 3) cation: Aoto Hefpnses. OVOU1, nuiEa, uuu ' Prompt clearance by the House bv GfffSe Hill. Jr., Robinsonville Rules tjommiuee was capcuku , for the legislation, which came to j Congress only a week ago. It is j l ; part of President Eisenhower's re-! quest for SI .260.000.000 in supple mental defense funds for the fis- T Oft cal year enaing -une o J,rtprna, Thread." Meanwhile both the House and i , A.nn nt ..vairv Senate continued their investiga- cngtott. Newark. n : M Inl 'Uvou.j - tions Of VJ. a. prvg m .c , . wffli. Dunn. Director of "A Wbite But erfiy is James Heldman. Durham; scenic designs are by John Whitty. New Bern. Albert Gordon, Greensboro, and John Sneden, Tenafly, N. C, are director and designer of "The department and studio staff saved dormitories and huiidings. t fie J in the light of N. J.. and Taylor Willxams.DunB Ropem. .. . .1.,! A ..mmont from i i 11SL1C niiosnco nvi - o ..hanrro will H marts'. , Srrpvp complete destrucUonVYouns said, i (See INSPECTION, rage 3) . recent. Rwsiaa advances, , . IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yeste--day included: Misses Edih Burch, Linda Moore, Lelia Rirahim, Mil dred Whitehurst and Mrs. Eleanor Barksdale and William Brigman. Richard Robinson. Daid Wei on, Colon Rowe, Rowland Hodges, Wil liam Davis, George Elmore, Samuel Baroody, Joseph Quigg. Valent ae Rupeniks, Julian Smith and James
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 15, 1958, edition 1
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