U.Tl.C. Library Sacials Dept. Box 870 Chirl Hill. . C FEDERAL LAWS ' They should b rewritten if Doer fer end other government employ es an get paid twice for work as sociated with their offices, editor says on page 2. VOL, LXV NO. 84 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1958 Complete M Wire Service FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE en V Honor WEATHER J fZA 'f 0)i cffi T Xf f Sunny wanner. ( - f f1V SJ Glf) H B f VT HI r 77 "1 M AY n ;: civ . ..- I I : x : IT . Counci! Suspends rive 4' Aw 6 i )' - v. vWv- ir x NEVILLE RUBIN DURING JANUARY VISIT HERE . To Mrs. I'o'K'wi'f. , Lcrciisrc! .iuf Rubin Have A Chat Campus Chest, Legislature To Hear Capetown University Student Head Nivillc l!ul)iii. pi 'Mlmt of the slmWitt Ix.tls (if tie l'ni cr.sity f t('!v n in the I nmn of South Africa, will spenk In tlu- Campus l liost committee and in a Student Legislature meeting liere Tluirsda-. meriilx'r of the Intern.'itional Assrnfjly of World L'nix ersity Serv ice, uIj'ii m'hm here Jan. 12 when Mi J 'ti iiiicr Ii(misc- t-It 'i.sited the j I 'ni ei sity. 1' He l a president of South ATiica. ' i ' lier e hf is mrttfr of the l,l rit 1'iiiiy, it SM'tv. Uwh viiikinii tr -li.ims, Ui' mH eil;tn t( Hie tocmbers oi t'ne Ca:oiis CI cM lov tlu- money wliic'n fie Campus Cliest yives to the World University Service is used throughout the world, accord ing to Miss Libby McCord, co-chair man of the Campus Chest drive. The Student Legislature, meeting, i which is open to the public will be ! gin at 7:34) p .m. and is held on the i tup fhmr of New East. WRC Continues I Interviews For Coed Positions Dr. King Talks At Phi Meet By ED ROWLAND news in V. Women's h 1 '' v J Defense Funds WASllINd I ON. F I) :i 1 1" TliC Sen. lie vncidily and o t rhelmingly passed tcd.iy a S1.4!l) ( H 1 (KMi cincr- ncy ilc li n e money bill. The ine.isiiie. previo'isly apprised by the House, carries $l.2"V.tMX.uxi nl new appropriations to step up programs lor ballistic missiles, nil char suliin 11 UK- than can launch on s lcs. detettum systems for both 1 retiiy aiiraft and mi-siles. and ;.(l(!i!ional bases for tiie strategic Air Com'iiand ' SAC . A?my Moon WASIIINC.TON. Fob. 3 -.V The Army is cons'iderin:; a proposal by it; satellite scientists to send up . I,, c the Ctrl of tins year an elaborately ins-rumented moonlei. wei-hmg as nun h as 700 pounds. It would be denned to gather de tailed data for the eventual build in: ot a true space station. Tins would be no. 4 ol the Army satellites, following the launching si ine time between now and April of a sec ond explorer an da third, .'ti'i pound TV-equipped leconnais saui e elude Candidates for Chairman of Wu- Orientation and Editor of the Handbook began surveying in the Council Koom of C.raham Memorial esterday. ac cording to Women's Residence Council chariman, Julia Ann Crater. Additional candidates interested in submitting applications for the posi tion may examine these tiles be-; tween the hours of 2 p. m. to p. m today through Thursday in the Council Koom. Applications, which may be ob tained in the Council Hoom. should be turned in to the office of the Dvan of Women by Wednesday. Feb. 1 1 12. at p. m. Final selections will be made alter interviews of candidates by Wo men's Residence Council, which will consider organisational ability, or iginality and presentation of ideas to the group by the applicant. Candidates will be notified of the time of their interview 24 hours 1 prior to the meeting. The Campus Chest, which devotes tiO per cent of its budget to the World University Service, will begin its drive Feb 22 and it will last until Feb. 28. Frank Klkins is coordinating Rubin's one day visit. Law Student Rubin is a graduate of the Uni versity of Capetown where he re ceived a Jluchelor of Arts Degree. He it now stuUyintf for his Bachelor Of l.MW. lie Is ulno vlec-prosUlent for Inter mil ional Hclatlon of the Na tional Union of South Afrieian Stu dents. He has traveled around the 1 ! world in connection with the World University Service. The WIS is a university mutual assistance organization. It is the onlv student to student assistance organization with a comprehensive program in Asia and the Middle McCord. A college should "aid in the de velopment of responsible thinking Dr. James King, associate professor of history here, told members of the Phi and their guests last night. Dr. King, in delivering the guest iddress at the Phi inauguration of its president, added that colleges need to follow two maxims: do not each too many subjects, and what vou teach, teach throughly. He declared that there is no glory road" to education, but con- tant drill is needed. Dr. King, who was introduced by outgoing president Jim Tolbert, -tressed the different purposes of 1 college from that of a university. He said colleges should lay the foundation for better living in any career. "Intellectual power should be the goal of a college," Dr. King, who teaches a "suicide fifty" histnrv section rieelarerl The gra duate has the art of applying know 'edge, he said. He said college educations are divided into two levels: general, which is exposure if not absorbtion of broad culture, and arts and sciences, which Is administration of knowledge through culture. -The -unrnker. who rave his brtrf talk bt'turv noiiio firty irons, em phasized that due to the practice mesentinu quantity instead of qual ity in courses, said a degree may be obtained without being earned. He said the blame must be shared by everyone. '"The curriculum is being enriched while it is being im- Violations Durina Fa I Serh iiMimIMIlliril. Ill ill I II 1 1 "Mm. mijj.bumiiJ.L1IJL.JMWWIW'IUWI'"I "WW I I " "I " 1 " j - w- , A'r ;v 5; ' - i , i . i . - I . !) 'i f . . i t - I Wftt - - KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA This coed foursome represents the Carolina members of Kappa Kappa Gamma which will become the seventh sorority on the UNC campus this year Besides helping organ ize the local chapter, the four Kappas will conduct rush this semester. They' are from left to right: Dede Sheets of Huntington, W. Va., a William and Mary transfer; Boots Koch of Elmira, N. Y., an other W&M transfer; Sophie Martin of Chapel Hill, Duke transfer who will be undergraduate counselor to the new chapter; and Sue Gilbaugh of Portland, Ore., who attended Orgon State College and is to be graduate counselor to the chapter. - , ( Message Comes From Staying xpl f orer Africa. Kurope East.' said Miss Duke Tickets Tickets lor the Carolina-Duke regionally-televised basketball game here Saturday afternoon are now- available to all students, accord ing to the ticket office. Today is the first day of the open exchange and students who have not exchanged their passbooks for Duke ducats may do so starling this morning. Tickets for Carolina games with , Wake Forest in Winston-Salem. N. C. State in Raleigh and Duke in Durham are also on sale. These are regular tickets alloted to the school. 1 1 (See PHI, page 3) j I I I it ' s I It " -s I I K h r' : I JESS STRIBLING Neir Phi Society President NKW YOU K, Keb. 4 iJf The Tirst American visitor to space has messaged home: staying longer. Come on up. Weather fine. That's the report from earth- bound scientists listening to the j humming radio of the Explorer J satellite. i The Explorer has given them ; early information on the three things it was sent into orbit to ob serve: cosmic rays, meteorites and i the temperature of sunlight and earth-shadow. From these first reports scientists know that the cosmic weather has been calm. They also know that Explorer will be aloft for many a slormy day in space as well. These stormy days come after the gigantic solar flares explode from i the surface of the sun, ' sending hursts of high energy''-. radiation pouring toward earth. In its egg-shaped orbit. Explorer will be able to measure the fury of the sun above the atmosphere and report back whether mere flesh and blood humans can endure it. The orbit of Exulorer has now ! been pegged as 230 miles from the i earth at its closest and 1.600 miles from the earth at its most distant. Average traveling time in this path is a little less than an hour and 55 minutes. este One Case Involves Excuses Five of 18 men found guilty by the Men's Honor Council during the fall semester have been inde finitely suspended from the Uni versity, a report showed here to day. Of the remaining 13, 12 were placed on probation by the Men's Council and another was handed an official reprimand. A report by Council Clerk Gary Cooper showed that one student was indefinitely suspended after his conviction on charges of pur chasing and using false excuses. lying to Honor Council members and to his professor. False Excuse It was assumed that conviction and judgment grew out of the false excuse scandal uncovered here. Other cases in which defendants were indefinitely suspended from i the University by the Honor Coun cil include the following: 1. Lying on four counts regarding absences from a sociology quiz and final examination. 2. Altering an official University excuse ana . tying 10 an inMiutiw. 3. heating on a Spanish, quiz and ying extensively Sk-iontists also believe? that Explor er may stay in spate some 10 years at the most, several years at the least. Journalism School Gets Check From Foundation ; Journalism Foundation directors have turned over a cheek for $3. ! G02.62 to the School of Journalism . ; for expenditure at the discretion! ol the Dean. In accepting the check which re presents the income from the Foun dation trust funds. Dean Norval Neil Luxon said. "No other state ; press association supports its School jot Journalism as does the North I Carolina group. We are most grate- ful." Scholarships Dean Luxon reported on the ex penditure of Foundations funds in 19.Y7, SI. 350 of which went for scholarships. Donald J. Chipman of the Piedmont Publishing Company. Winston-Salem. treasurer of the Foundation, made the financial re- Playmaker Presentation F Arnold Moss Portrays G. B. Shaw In 'Back To Methuselah' Production Soviet Moscow. l ib. 3 U' Premier 4, nun. in his latest letter to President Eisenhower .offers to dis cuss the control of outer space, the S viel government disclosed today. Hut Hie oler is wrapped up in a r.ukare. including abolition of nu de, ir weapons and reduction of armed forces in n form that piev- f.S'ee Vo7t llnefs tje 3) For years one of America's lead- 1 ing depietors of classic roles, Arnold , Moss will be having his first en counter with the modern classicist. , Pcrnard Shaw, in "Hack to Meth uselah." which comes to Memorial l , GM SLATE Ilie fllwintf activities are sche duled lor Graham Memorial to day: Petite lramatuiics, 7-9 . hi.. ICol.inri Parkrrl: Forum. .Vfi l. in.. W'oodhouse Conference Koom: Women' Residence Conn til, 2 5 v. m., Council Koom. Hall. Feb 2a and March 1, at 8: 30" Opening in p. m., with Tyrone Power, Faye Emerson, and Arthur Treacher star nil in person. As if to make up for lost time, I Moss is working on this show in a irip'e capacilv- as ador, adapter, and co-producer with the Theatre Guild. 'Hack to Methuselah" has long been considered one of the most masterful of Shaw's works. Hut it wns unwieldy, requiring three eve nings to present in its original form. Moss undertook to adapt the play into one evening's entertainment, without losing any of the essential j ideas or the sharp wit of the origin- ! al. theatre trail with great sue-J "Journey to Jerusalem;" and El- . . , . . ii tir.,i few further mer Kite's "Flight to me wcm. Moss aligned himself with Shakes peare, playing Prospcro in Marg aret Webster's production of "The Tempest." starring Vera Zorina. His performance turned Moss mer ctss After making a revisions, on the basis of audience reaction during the tour. Moss was joined by the Theatre Guild in pre senting the play in 42 cities before New York in March. This union w ith the Theatre Guild j overnight into one of the nation s, as co-producer in a sense returned leading Shakespeare actors, him to his home base. After serving Feeling that Miss Webster was in as an apprentice with Eva Le j no small part responsible for his Gallienne's Civic Ueporlory Theatre, i success in his first encounter with tn h;id retired from urofcssional i Shakespeare. Moss has enlisted her theatre to teach English and Drama his 4 al Brooklyn College. In 1911 the Theatre Guild called i him out of his retirement to appear ; lor them in Ernest Hemingway's Fifth Column' with Franchot Tone. The teaching profession lost a well icgarded member when the critics acclaimed Moss's performance, and iie has been a steady theatre worker ever since. ' After appearances in "Hold on to During last July and August he J Your Hats" with Al Jolson and tried out his adaptation on the sum-j Martha Raye; Maxwell Anderson's k.nri-if'f us director again in first bout with Shaw in 'Back to Methuselah." Following "The Tempest," Moss was in gerat demand for Shakes pearean roles. In "Twelfth Night" he was acclaimed "the best Mal volio of our generations." He has also appeared as Gloucester in "King Lear with Louis Calhern as Loar. and with the American Shakespearean Festival as the Duke of Vienna in -Measure for Mea , sure." I k . ft - V 't.Vt'Si vk7f' if - df t t port to tlie directors at a mceeing held in connection with the 33rd Midwinter Press Institute. j Thomas L. Robinson. publisher, j Charlotte News, was selected to a I three-year term as director, and , Hal H. Tanner, publisher, Golds- ! boro News-Argus, was elected to , fill the unexpired term of J. Neal Cadieu. late publisher of the Rich- ; mond County Journal. Rockingham. , Tanner will serve one year. j (gficials ' Directors re-elected to serve until 1881 include Miss Beatrice Cobb. Morganton News - Herald; j Frank A. Daniels. News and Ob sever and Raleigh Times: Steed Rollins. Durham Herald Sun. Wil liam C. Lassiter. Raleigh attorney; and Leslie S. Thompson, Whitcville News-Reporter. Officers re-elected by the Board were Holt McPherson. High Point Enterprise, president; Thompson. vice-president ; and Lassiter, sec ret arv-treasurer. to Honor Council members. A, CVieaUns a .. trvatYi ctuix . and lying extensively to Httnor Council members. " ' Twelve Cases rvrri- rnnnrt shnweri that llie , Council tried a total of 12 cases j during the fall semester, involving i total of 23 UNC men. Five of the total students involved were found i not guilty. According to the Council clerk, ; the remainder of eases involving students alleged to have used frau dulent excuses growing out of the recent scandal are now being pre pared for trial. Council Chairman George Rags dale said earlier that substantially more than 50 persons probably would be involved in the excuse scandal uncovered here just before classes resumed after the Christ mas holidays . At the same time, he said the Council would look with leniency upon those violators who turned themselves in for use of the fraudu lent excuses. ADPi Sorority Taking Part In Heart Drive - toy sr r. v. - -s, x : a f"-s. . . I JS". I 1 ARNOLD MOSS AS GEORGE BERNARD SHAW Scene From 'Back To Methuselah' Production Members of Alpha Delta Pi soror. j ity arc taking part in the Chapel j Hill Heart Fund campaign now un- j derway. ' Covering the dow ntown area, the sorority members, in teams of two, j are calling on Chapel Hill business firms for their contributions to the fight against the nations' greatest killer, heart disease. The solicitations began yesterday and will continue through the week. The sorority is working with the Chapel Hill Comunity Club which distributed red heart-shaped boxes heralding Heart Month. Mayor Oliver T. Cornwell pro claimed February as Heart Month and launched the campaign with the first contribution last week. ADPi's work with the campaign is under the direction of Miss Betty ' Carolyn Huffman, activities ehair i man. Jerry Shields 1 Is Winner Of Scholarship Jerry A. Shields, senior journal ism student from Kernersville, has been awards the Gerald W. Johnson j Scholarship for the spring scmcs- ter and the summer session, i Shields is scheduled to receive ! his A. B. in Journalism degree in August. ! Funds from the School of Journal I ism Foundation of North Carolina Inc. provide this and three other ! scholarships in the school of Journ- alism this year. j Other scholarships from Journal ism Foundation funds awarded earlier arc held by John u. Asli ford, Scotland Neck; Bob E. Myers. Thomasvillc and Raymond P. Smith, Chapel Hill. IN THE INFIRMARY I Students in the infirmary yester day included: Misses Judith Ann Dennett, Doris Braxton. Mary LtHiIsc Biz zell. Cecil Martin, Catherine 1 Goldet and Jane Stainback and Allen Thomas, Robert Costello ! Bernice Batts, Thomas Aldridje, William Evans, Fernando Bel mont. Vonnie Smith, Robert Mat- j thews, John Barto, John Steed and j Joseph Frirdberg.