U.U.C. Library Secial3 Dept. Box 870 ' Chap! Hill, H.C. WEATHER Sunny and mild; high tempera lnrr In middle 70s; Thursday gmrnilly fair and warmer. SALARIES ;..Thj'tit lojislaturt ought t takjt cofntxanco of lhi notd. Sm VOL. LXV NO. 163 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1958 Complete UP Wire Service FOUR PACES THIS ISSUE I mops Dispatched After Nixon Mobbed WASHINGTON. - .T Four com pnars of U. S. Airborne troops ;hI Marines are in their way to lie Caribbean area as a result of i ic mi'b acti.m against Vice Presi (Unt Nixon in Venezuela Tuesday. : i VICE PRESIDENT NIXON . . . of farted Zi Caracas NSA To Hold Race Parley This Summer A lour week seminar of 15 South-j rut students from newly-integrated! colleges and from institutions which will soon be desegregated, will be; lu Kl tins siinwucr. Tin' seminar will be sponsored b the Cnited States National S;u (!cnts Association, with a $11. 0) jjr.mt the NSA received from the ; I irlil I'oimd.ition in April. 1 Tin" srtnin ir will be held on a in n Southern e a m p u s. probably (i!no Wcslcyan University. Dela ware. Ohio, from August 418. I-1 . 1 uk KUiits. eliairinuo of (he desegregation subcommittee of the NSA has been notified that he may b chosen as one of the 13 .-.Indent repre sent at i es. The purposo of this seminar is to c;ielop understanding of the prob lems and complexities of race rela tions in the South, and to provide .Li ecliu ation.il experience which will prepare these students to make a responsible contribution to the solution of the human relations problems facing them on their cam puses or in their communities. Outstanding persons will be in vited to aid the program and participate in the seminar. Student representatives will be puked by Kay Farabee. president of CSNSA. Paul Hilling of the South ern Area Council of YMCA and Max lleirich of the American Friends Service Committee. To aid in program development ' and review, an advisory committee to the seminar will be appointed. ! The IUv. Charles Jones of Chapel 1 1 1 I is on the list of six men who will compose the committee. They are being sent, a Defense Department spokesman said, to "cooperate with the Venezuelan government if requested." A spokesman said the troops, numbering about 1,000 were being sent to "certain United States bases in the Caribbean area.'' But he would not say what bases. Among the American bases close to Venezuela are those in Puerto Kico and Trinidad. Earlier Tuesday president Eisen hower demanded, and promptly re cieved, assurance that Venezuela will take adequate measures to protect Nixon. The State Department said it has been advised the Venezuelan government moved in infantrymen and tanks to keep order. "The situation looks much bet ter, and Mr. Nixon's staff in Cara- c;;s assures us that both the Vice ' President and his security aides are satisfied the situation is under; control." a Sti-te Department of ficial said. Secretary of S.ate Dulles, speak- I ink on behalf of the president, hint ; ed Nixon would cut short his good will visit if Veneuzelan authorities ( failed to act promptly. The visit normally would end Wednesday af I ternoon. j "If there is any lack of will or I capacity to protection) wc want to know that quickly." Dulles told , Venezuela's Charge d'Affaircs at an emergency conference at the State Department. Both Dulles and Tarchetti indicat ed they believed communists insti gated the anti-Nixon rioting in a i move to inflame U. S. relations with Latin America. 1 u . " v ' Hi ' ' - ' 1 t-Vl it- - j! . ' b ( x r-- ill l I " 'P "4 --C f it-:. , I I- sif. .. '1 x - ! Mi I i - 1 If ' ' - T - 1 1 ' i j " i ...... . ' I V';':f::S . ; ' - j Presidential Veto Radio Glty Bill Upheld By Solons The veto of the UNC Amateur Radio Club appropriation bill by Student Body President Don Fur tado was ' upheld by the Student Legislature last night. In submitting the veto, Furtado gave the following reasons for his action: "I do not feel that the members of the UNCARC have adequately explored the possibility of receiv ing initial tinanciai support irom other areas." "If we provide the $2,000 which has been, requested, we will have entered our General Surplus by the sum of $600. It is very unusual and generally undesirable to enter the General Surplus. The General Surplus must be maintained as an emergency cushion." "The Radio Club' has yet to re quest bids for the equipment de sired." i "The operation of the UNCARC, if equipment is furnished by stu dent government, should be under the control and scope of some pro gramming arm of student govern ment such as GMAB. ' The Student Body President concluded his message by saying: "There is no doubt in my mind that the Radio Club as proposed is a worthy organization and could benefit some students of the Uni versity. It must be remembered, however, that the funds of the students are expendable and not unlimited and that all new finan cial demands must be weighed carefully, remembering our obliga tions to the students and those or ganizations that we have previous- Jim Tat urn's Contract Is Extended To 1963 TOP FRATERNITY AWARD GOES TO PHI DELTS Chayicellor Emeritus House presents House Tropliy to Don Millen Phi Delts Win Award As Leading Fraternity Scholastic Group Taps 13 Thursday Phi Iieta Kappa, honorary scholas tic fraternity, will initiate 31 UNC ; students Thursday. The initiation will be at 5:30 p.m. ' in Di Hall. Following the initiation at Di Hall, a banquet will be held in Lenoir Hall. Membership in Phi Beta Kappa j is based on a quality point aver age. Juniors, after completion of in the preparation of 1 73 hours with a 2.6 quality point average, are eligible. Transfer stu dents who have spent two years at another school are eligible for I membership after completion of 45 i hours of work with a 2.5 quality point average. Transfers, who spend one year 1 elsewhere are eligible on com pletion of 73 hours of work here with a 2.4 quality point average. Students who have spent lour years at UNC must have a 2.3 quality point average and 108 hours of work completed. The R. B. House Outstanding Fra ternity Award was presented at the IDC meeting Monday night to Don Millen. Phi Delta Theta fraternity, by Chancellor Emeritus U. B. House. scholarship. The pledge class also won the Outstanding Pledge Class Award. Phi Dolt's held many positions on i campus and .participated in the IDC i and intramurals. The award is determined annual- j Total possible points are 22',2 for Iv by a board of two judges, Sam j campus representation,, both rasaoc Magill and Hay Jefferies, of the j positions and percentage participa Dcan of the Student Affairs office. 1 tion in extracurricular activities assisted this year by Tucker Yates, 1 outside the fraternity; 174 for 1FC president of the Interfratcrnity participation; 15 for intramurals Council, on the basis of a point ! participation; 10 for social activi system. 1 ties and five for house appearance. Phi Delta Theta earned the tro- j The house appearance points are nhv mainly on its accumulation determined by the sorority house of 28 out of a possible 30 points for . r .. Library Club Initiates 45 ; New Members I Forty-five students and alumni ! of the UNC School of Library Sci j ence have ben initiated into the newly-formed Epsilon chapter of Beta Phi Mu. international library science honor society. Epsilon , is the fifith chartered by Beta Phi Mu, which was founded 10 years ago at the University of Illinois. Other chapters are in California, Florida and England. Fourteen of the UNC initiates are i currently working for a master's degree in library science: Aylene j E. Cooke, Mary Frances Morris and Frances V. Thackston, Dur ham; Mildred H. Farrow. Guilford College: Bobbie Newman Redding, Greensboro; Adriana P. Orr and Audrey B. Zabiocki, Chapel Hill; Walter Gary, Wilson; and Philip D. Shore, Pilot Mountain. Other student initiates are Jeanne P. Helstrom, Salem, Va.; Evelyn M. Kocher, Radford, Va.; Elaine Lansdell, Elberton, N. J.; Kathleen' H. Cheape, Greensboro, Ala.; and Dewey F. Pruett Jr., Birmingham, Ala. The 31 new alumni members in clude Margaret AJlman, Edith E. Averitt, Jane C. Bahnsen, Olin V. Cook, Josephine B. Floyd, Jean Freeman, Eleanor S. Godfrey, Charles C. Hopkins, William H. Johnson, Pattie B. Mclntyre, Ro- ' bert A . Miller, Gay G. Moore, Katherine B. Mouzon, Helen M. Peacock, Virginia Y. Wells, Tera B. White, and Lena Mae Williams, all of Chapel Hill. Anne E? Andrews, Burlington; Hazel Baity, Marjorie W. Lindsey, A. R. McGalliard, Davoria E. Neil sen, Emma W. Pohl and Gloria K. Whetstone, all of Raleigh; Audrey J. Cushman, Mary E. Darst, and Mar garet S. Tillett. all of Durham', Grace B. Farrior and Mildred C. Herring, Greensboro; Gay H. Spi- vey, Guilford College and Mary Jane Wing, Altanta, Ga. Miss Crater, Hal I ford Take Sullivan Prize Julia Ann Crater and Sonny Hall iard have been named recipients ot the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Avvard. This award, established in 1928. is bestowed annually upon the man and woman of the graduating class vim have best demonstrated an at titude of unselfish interest in the vcllare of their fellow students. The terms of the award cm pliasie that it shall not be based on scholastic, athletic or other col legiate attainments. Hallford and Miss Crater were chosen for the award on April 28. The award presentation will be made later in the year. Both win ners will receive an engraved certi ficate and a plaque. GM SLATE Panhellenic Council, 5-6 p.m., (rail Room; Women's Orienta tion Council. 44 p.m., Roland Parker I; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 6:30-9 p. m.. Roland Parker II Krcr film and foreign film, 3- p.m., Roland Parker 2; Women's Orientation Council, 2-4 p.m.. WuodhouM Conference Room; Carolina Foium, 4-C p.m., Wood house Conference Roo.n; IDC All Candidates For Degrees Get Briefing A general meeting of all degree candidate;! will be held in Me morial Hall Thursday at 4:15 p.m. for briefing on commencement exercises. Dr. J. C. Lyons, faculty com mencement marshal, said it is "very important that all planning to get degrees at the June com mencement be there to get instruc tions." This meeting will include details on forming the commencement procession and where and how to Court. 7-11 p.m., Woodhouse Con ferrnee Room; Sociology 179, 10 j go about getting academic costumes a.m.. Rendezvous Room. and commencement program. mothers. There is a possible total ol 100 points toward the award. The award was named after House for his service to fraternities since he has been here and will be presented by him as long as he lives. The trophy itself will be retired affter eight years, going to the house that has won it the most times. At that time another trophy v ill be started. Austrian Art On Exhibition Through May An exhibition of drawings by Paul Flora, the celebrated Austrian art ist, has gone on display in the Morehead Planetarium's South Art Gallery here. The exhibition will close on May 31. Planetarium Manager A. F. Jen zano said that "we feel very fortu nate in securing the exhibition of this quite prominent artist." His first American showng was in New York in March of this year. A native Austrian, Flora lives in Innsbruck, Tyrol. He has had one-man hows in Vienna and Mun- ich, is represented in a number of galleries and has captured prizes and award in European countries. Four books of his drawings have been published, and he has illustrat ed a number of books published both in Amercia and abroad. The Executive Committee of the UNC Board of Trustees met in Raleigh Monday in the Governor's office to condsider appointments and promotions submitted for ap proval by the three divisions of the Consolidated University. The Board approved the extension of Head Football Coach James Moore Tatum's contract for two additional years, from Jan. 1, 1961, to Jan. 1, 1963. Appointments approved for the UNC were Karl Ludwig Selig, As sociate Professor in the Dept. of Romance Languages; George Brown Tyndall, Associate Professor in the Dept. of History; Loren G. Mac Kinney, Assistant Professor in the Dept. of Pediatrics. Pauline Wayne JVIcCaskill, Assist ant Professor in "the School of Nurs ing; Lucia Cameron Morgan, Assist ant in the Dept. of English; Ben jamin Eagles Fountain Jr., Assist ant Professor in the School of Edu cation; Paul S. Hubbard, Jr., As- Alumni Assn. Member Drive Closes Taday An increasing number of solici tors engaged in enrolling seniors in the General Alumni Assn. are reporting 100 per cent response among the soon-to-be alumni for whom they have personal cards, ac cording to Frank Black and Jerry Oppenheimer, co-chairmen of the Senior Class Alumni Committee. Today is the deadline for the more than 50 committee members to report results of their solicitation to the Alumni Office, headquarters of the Alumni Association in the Carolina Inn. In commenting on the favorable response so far to the enrollment of the graduating class, Co-chairmen Black and Oppenheimer pointed out that there will be no other on-cam-pus drive this year to enroll seniors in the Association. Seniors who will not graduate until August or .later are urged by the committee to join now and take advantage of reduced mem bership dues of $1 to which they are eligible during their first year as alumni. It ' was emphasized that to be come an Association member at this time implies no obigation on the senior's part to continue his membership beyond the first year. All first-year alumni who join the Association at the special rate revive all benefits of regular membership, including a full year's subscription to the alumni magazine, Daily Tar Heel Staff Urged To Attend Meet There will be a meeting of all members of The Daily Tar Heel staff in the news room at 4 p.m. Thursday. ' Editor Curtis Gans has urged all present and prospective members of The Daily Tar Heel staff to at tend the meeting. Doug Eisele Is Ahernethy Prize Winner Douglas George Eisele, former editor of The Daily Tar Heel, has been named recipient of The Ernest H. Abernethy Prize for Student publications work. Eisele was elected to the editor's post in last fall's campus wide re call election. The Abernethy Prize was estab lished by Ernest H. Abernethy of Atlanta, Ga., in 1922, as an annual award of a plaque and $50 in cash. It is presented to the student who is adjudged by a committee to have done the most distinctive work during the current year in the field of student publications. sistant Professor in the Dept. vof Physics; Robert Arthur Rupen, As sociate Professor in the Dept. of Political Science. (See FACULTY, Page 3) Y Officers Are Insta At Banquet Fifty-six students were installed into the YM-YWCA in tits annual banquet and installation ceremonies held in Lenior Hall's South room Monday night. Highlighting the ceremonies was an address by Dean of Student Af-. fairs Fred H. Weaver. Weaver - reviewed the year - with comments on the highlights of the joint organization. His topic concerned the history of the Universy and its "founding in the 1800's cf an organization such as the YMCA and the manner in which that organization has come to permeate every ' phase of ,' UNC lite . . . and how such a gathering of dedicated Christians has reflect ed a student harmony founded on student responsibility, which is now and always, will be the best man ner in which to secure a mature mind and an educated one." Following a welcome by Belle Corye. outgoing president of the YMCA Stewart Colson , presented reflections of the years achieve ments and highlights. New YMCA president Dee Dee Devere intro duced the speaker, Dean Weaver. Miss Ann Morgan and Kelly Wal lace then introduced the new YM-, YWCA executive committee of ficers. They are, with YMCA officers and YWCA officers appearing in pairs, presidents, Bill Sugg and ly committed ourselves to sup port" . The appointments o:! Summer School Student Body . President Curtis Gans and Secretary-Treasurer Everett James were approved by the body last night. Other Summer SchooT appoint ments not previously announced, and approved include: Jiia Rose as chairman of the Men's Honor Council, and Phil Blazer, Bob Bur roughs, Fred Smith, Kay Herring, Burt Davis, Bob Shephaid, coun cil members; Gordon Street, Jean Southerland, Jane Duncan, Joel Fleishman, John Minter, t-on Dot son. Betty Hobson Student Govern ment Board; Nancy Turner, chairman, and Barbara Miles, Libby Johnson, Betsy May, Nancy Grubb, Molly Adams, Beverly Heaton, Women's Honor Council Members; Hadyn Davis, Angus Duff, Dillon Wooten, Don Millen, Mike Smith, Dance Committee; . Delegates to the NSA: Don Fur tado, Paddy Wall, Curtis Gana, Ed Levy. Frank Elkins, John Brooks; Alternates, .Ralph Cummings Charlie Gray, Diana Johnson, Lil lian Shannonhouse, Gary Greer, Roger Foushee; Second Alternates, Joel Fleishman, Hugh Patterson, Lin Butler, Jim Smalley; NSA Committee, Bill White, Ann Smith, Gary Greer, Lin Butler, Roger Foushee, Jim Smalley, Jeanie Pa den,. Pete Liman, Ann Harvey, Sue Campbell, David Evans, Pringle Pipkin. . - Sig ma Xi Sets Annual Affair Friday The UNC chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society, will hold its annual banquet and initia tion at 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 16, in , south, dining room of Lenoir Hall on the UNC campus. 'Following the banquet the presi dential' address of Sigma Xi will be delivered by Harold Hotelling, professor of statistics and associ ate director of the Institute of Statistics at UNC. . According to Walter H. Wheeler, associate professor of geology and secretary of the local chapter, Dr. Hotelling's speech to be given at 8 o'clock Friday night in room 207 Venable Hall will be open to the public! Dr. Hotelling will discuss "The Statistical Method and the "Philosophy of Science." iSigma Xi was founded at Cornell University in 1886 for the purpose of encouraging original investiga tion in science;, the UNC chapter was established in 1920. Member ship is contingent upon evidence of excellence in research in one of the sciences. Advanced undergrad uates and graduates who show pro mise in scientific research may be ! 'elected to associate membership, DeeDee Devere; vice-presidents, to be promoted to full membership (See Y-OFF1CERS, Page 3) later if deemed worthy. IS. V- First Wesley Lectures To Feature Paul Til I ich 4 V- 5 x 4 ' - ' 7 DR. PAUL TILLICH First Wesley lecturer next fall The Wesley Foundation has an nounced that Dr. Paul TuTich of Harvard University will deliver the first Wesley Lectures at Chapel Hill October 3-A. ' Tillieh is a clergyman of the Evangelical and Reformed Church. A native of Germany, Tillieh served for four years as chaplain to the German Army in World War. 1. He served as professor at the universities of Berlin, Dresden, Leipzig, Frankfort and Halle. As a leader in the Christian Soc ialist Party, he was forced by Hit ler to leave his teaching position in Berlin. He found refuge at Union Theo logical Seminary in New York -and conducted seminars in philosophy at Columbia University. In 1955 he was named one of Harvard's six distinguished service professorships. The Wesley lectures will be 4e livered in Hill Hall at p.m. in October. Tillich's first lecture will be entitled, "The Present Encoun ter of the World Religions." The second one will be, "The Present Encounter of Religious and Secular Faiths." The lectures are being sponsored by the Wesley Foundation. the Methodist Church's foundation for Christian education on state and private university campuses. Foundation officials have express ed the hope that these lectures will be permanently established in Chapel Hill for the purpose of en couraging a continuing dialogue be tween culture and the Christian faith. The lectures are non:sectar ian in purpose. IN THE INFIRMARY Students im the lafirmary yts terday included: : Misses Jo Maria Brittot, Caro lyn Escoit, Patricia Gregory and Betty Winslow and David Bins, Panl Clari, Wallace Graham, Richard Hart, Lewis Hawley, Ted Bnffstetter, George Jackson, Rich ard Masoa, Evgeae McDonald, Thomas McGee, and David Par-Ver,