ir- .jtf- nine i''i,,i'n'-rT'T""' ..y UJr.C. Llbfiry Serlalu Dopt, Box 070 chapsi Hill, k.c. 195 r MM r WEATHER C&ntlnud fair and cclJ. RESEARCH TRIANGLE The cxhievemt rit of the Re search Triangle is a good on. Se page 2. X7 ivxumif VOLUME LXVI NO. 76 Complete LB Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE i ! 1 Sr Hi X X x Orange County Residence Necessary For ABC Vote A number of. Carolina students were not allowed to register Sat urday for the ABC election be cause they were not "residents" of Chapel HiU. Students were turned down on the basis of this interpretation of their "residence": the location to which the students will return, even after an extended absence. The real test for determining whether or not Chapel Hill is a student's residence is if the stu dent has registered his real and personal property for taxation pur-wses. IlilL Walters did not mention require ment of property ownership or fu ture plans regarding residence. Students who are not allowed to vote in Chapel Hill have voting privileges in their hometowns even though they may live at home only during the summer months. At the Cone precinct, approxi mately four students were register ed Saturday. At the Estes Hills precinct, two students who tried to register were declared ineligi ble. Twelve students were registered at Woollen Gym out of a large number who came by. Ten of 50 students were registered at the Glenwood School precinct. No student was registered at the Town Hall. Pioneer Program Extended By UNC Dormitory, fraternity, sorority. ev n married students cannot reg ister and vote in the Feb. 3 rcfrc- endum if they do not plan to make) The UNC School of Medicine will speaker will be Dr. Warner Wells, their home in Orange County. sponsor two postgraduate courses faculty member of the UNC School Karlier this work, third precinct i in medicine beginning this week 01 Mrt,icinc TtcrHtrar Harold Walters sa.d stu-!in thc Ahoskie-Edenton-Elizabeth dents would he eligible to vote Lfi., , . , . . , . . . I City area and in Goldsboro. they filled requirements of dura-, linn of residency one year in! Tho firsl ll'ctllres wi, hc,d the state and 30 days in Chapel in Ahoskic on Wednesday. The SP To Appoint Four Committees Monday Members will be appointed to four tcrviewing Committee must be or new Student Party committees at Me party's Monday night meeting in Holand Parker 1 end II at 7:30. The Advisory Hoard has made recommendations to SP Chairman .Jeha Brooks, who will appoint the members of the committees. The four committees are the Pro gram, Interviewing, Membership end Social. Student Party floor leader Jim Crounover aid thc more important tnd more far-reaching of these committees as far as the student body h concerned U the Interview 11.2 Committee. ThU committee, like the other toree. will consist of three mem Urs. Two of the three on the In- Mikoyan Ratec As Top Tourist By Nixon WASHINGTON Ji Vice Pres tileut Itirliatd M. Nixon rotes An tsl;n I. Mikoyan, the Soviet's top touri-.t n.w in this country, a h f. r tti' ab'est couiinur.i .t leader h h;n ever met. Unlike t h-r com i n tin is t chieftains v.itli whrm Nixon has exchanged ld-as and opinions, the vire presi m .regards Miklyan as flexible with a keen sen.M r.f humor, anil Mt given to repenting rigid com rntinist doctrines. The vice president Is convinced t!;at the unofficial and highly pub lielrd visit of tho Soviet deputy r-rfiuVr h-re will aid re'ations be twren Russia and the United Slate?. Nixon U uncertain Just why Mi Jiyaa and his Kremlin associate decided on his unorthodox trip here Sme believe the articulate Armen 'an hopes to build up more direct contacts and communications be 'ueen the two most powerful na lions. Nixon's Impressions of the So- must have been members of Legis lature. Interviews will be held throughout the spring semester for ! til people Interested in running for Legislature. The purpose of the Interviewing Committee is to inform interested .!ersons of the function of Legisla ture, the time the jobs require and Ihe ability and desire to work needed to be a good legislator. Students appearing before this board will automatically be .nom- j nated in the Student Party for Legislature seats, and won't have to be nominated from the floor. The Program Committee will ob- tin speakers on campus issues. The Social Committee will be in harge of all SP parties. The Mem bership Committee will strive to in- rease the membership of the Stu- lint Party. 'The next couple of months will c very critical ones tor tne &iu- mi Pf.rlt cniil Cmwnrwrpr "ann ve strongly urge any people inter sttd in the Student Party, both old members and those who haven't Dr. Wells' afternoon lecture will bo on "New Etiologic Concepts in Peripheral Vascular Disease." His evening lecture will be a most time ly one, "The Atomic Era: Survival or Extinction." This course is co-sponsored by the first District Medical Society and the UNC Extension Division. The following week the lecture will be given at Eden ton and fol lowing that at Elizabeth City. Both courses run for six weeks. The second course begins in Goldsboro Thursday. This is co- sponsored by the Wayne County Medical Society and the UNC Ex tension Division. The Goldsboro speaker will be Dr. Felda Hightower of the Bow man Gray School of Medicine. Dr. Hightower will speak in the afternoon on "Office Management of Peripheral Disease." His even ing lecture will be on "Some Medi cal and Surgical Problems Related to the Colon." . The UNC School of Medicine is a pioneer in offering postgraduate courses in medicine away from the campus. This program was started in 1916, thc first such program of its kind in the United States. It ion b"am known as the "North Carolina Flan" and other schools followed the lead of thc UNC School of Medicine. Canterbury Club Re-Schedules Meet Rival Rebel Units Agree To Support Castro Government HAVANA, W Fidel Castro today apparently won his battle for peace within the revolutionary movement. Two rival rebel units iigreed to yield their arms and pledged support for the new provi sional government. They are the student-supported revolutionary directorate, whose leaders were assailed by Castro, and the second national front of Escambray. Both wanted greater representation in the new govern ment of provisional President Man uel Urrutia. Castro had declared some rebel leaders were the worst enemies of the revolution. He denounced the directorate for seizing huge arms and ammunition stores at the San Antonio airbase southwest of Ha vana after the fall of the Fulgeneio Batista dictatorship. "We are ready to deliver the arms and do all necessary for the tranquility of the republic," Maj. Faure Chaumont, commander of di rectorate groups, told a news con ference. ' "The epoch of arms and war has passed. Now all that Is , important is the future of Cuba and for this no arms are necessary." The same sort of word came from the second national front of Escam bray, named for the mountains in Las Villas province where the de cisive battle of 'he revolution was ought in the last days of Decern ber. ' r , we are at the disposition of President Urrutia and commander in chief Fidel Castro," said Maj. Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo, commander of the movement. Castro, who had accused Chau mont of hostility to the Castro forces, was quoted by the newspa per Diario Nacional as saying he was overjoyed at the return of the arms from, the air base. " UT1 LOSES ill 73 'J J- v WW Jude Tells School Bofrd Tp Take Steps' v A - rr- j.1 CLARAAIAE TURNER contralto croons 'Carmen' TUESDAY IN MEMORIAL HALL Bizet's Carmen' Coming After months of preparation the, the first Chapel Hill production UNC Department of Music vill of the popular opera include Gene present a musical production of Strassler, a graduate assistant in Bizet's opera, "Carmen," Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The concert program will be un der the direction of Dr. Wilton Ma son. Tickets for reserved seats may be purchased in Hill Hall. Singing the leading role will be Claramae Turner, contralto of the Metropolitan and San Francisco Opera Companies. "Other members of the cast for TV Music Course Includes Lab Classes music, as Don Jose; Joel Carter, member of the Music Department faculty, as Escamillo; and Martha Fouse, soprano of , Chapel Hill, as Micaela. "' These performers have been noted for their outstanding roles in recent University music dramas and operettas. Supporting roles will be handled by Brian Klitz, UNC graduate as sistant in music, singing the parts of Zungia, Morales and El ' Dan- cairo; James Pruet t of Mount Airy as El Remendado; Marilyn Zschau of Raleigh, a UNO senior, as Mer cedes; and Rebecca Carnes, a grad uate student from Shiloh, as Fras-quita. The Canterbury Club meeting has been rc-schedulcd at 6 p.m. joined us yet, to come out to the today, instead of 7 p.m. as was re- nceting Monday." ported yesterday. Glee Club May Sing In Azalea Festival The UNC Men's Glee Club may be , iTday nights, performing an open- extended an Invitation to participate ing songfeeset at the Friday night "Outstanding masterworks in the ma'.n stream of the Western world's music" ,is the melodious phrase being used to describe the latest educational TV offering to North Carolinans the UNC station of n the annual Wilmington Azalea 'estival In April. A-committee official of the 1030 Azalea Festival visited the Gle? hh during Its bi-weekly practice Thursday to hear them perform nd listen to the club's recently marketed 43" record. The official ilso heard a local girl's singing .roup, a blues vocalist and a rec eding quartet wilh ls headquar- ers in Chapel Hill. Although the final decision b concert," Glee Club Director Joel Carter revealed. "The Glee Club," according to Carter, "has scheduled its annual fprlng concert tour to include East ern North Carolina. If the Azalea Festival plans mature, this would easily round out our normally full tour schedule." vict s No. 2 leader were formed "-"" a .-..i ..wring a good-natured but crisp visit ,te meting in the middle of next ii the vice president's office last tne Glcc aub reportedly is Tuesday. It laded more than two l,rf,ady Paring its selections, hours. "It the Invitation is extended and An authentic version of Nixon'j accepted, the GO-voiced singing impressions was obtained yesterday group will perform ot both concerts on an Informal basis. and programs on Friday and Sat- G. M. SLATE Tody s activities in Craham Mmril include: Community Church, 11-12, Ro land Parktri I and II; Weitmin- ttr Ftllowthlp, 9:45-1 1 a.ri Rtndtxvout; Cosmopolitan Club, 4-6, Rtndtrvous; Monday's activitia in tho lamo placa Includt: Crail, 10 p.m., Crail Room; Sound and Fury, 4-5:30, Crail; Campus Chttt, 4-5:30, Roland Parktr 1; Student Party, 7-9, Ro land Perkara I and II; IFC, 2-4, Woodhoust; Rules, 4-5, Wood- houva; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 7-9, 20S Alumni. Summer Opportunities Presbyterian Topic A panel discussion on summer opportunities will be the topic of the program for students at the Presbyterian Hut tonight at 6:30. The four mam areas of discus sion are: work camps, community service, seminars and interns of industry. Participating students include Donn Wells, Tommy Iseley, Dot Richmond and Martha Turner. Ann Morgan, a recent graduate, will be chairman of the panel. A supper at 5:30 will precede the program. 4 h DR. WILLIAM S. NEWMAN . . . wat citing good music Episcopal Light Feast To Be Held Tonight The annual Feast of Lights can dlelight service, presented by the Episcopal Student Congregation, of the University, will be held tonight at 8 in the large chapel of the Chapel of the Cross, next to the Morehead Planetarium. The traditional Feast of Lights pageant, considered the first, ori ginal Christmas play, commemorat es the visit of the three magi to our Lord at his birth. Traditionally given On Jan. 6, its use is older thah, the observance of Dec. 25 as the date .of Christ's mativity. The Epiphany, as the visit of the magi is known in the Church Kalcndar, symbolizes the gift of the light of Christ to the Gentile world. The word Epiphany comes from the Greek meaning "light bearing" or "enlightening.". The Feast of : Lights is taken from the traditional meaning of the Epiphany and is presented la pageant form. Each parish pre sents the pageant according to lo cal tradition, all basically repre senting the adoration of the magi, The traditional service for the Chapel of the Cross portrays the panorama of the coming of Christ to the world, from the prophecies of the Old Testamant to the minis tering of the Bishops in the early- Church to the Gentile world. At the beginning of the service the Church is cast into total dark ness and continues in darkness un til the Christ candle, symbolizing the light of Christ, is lit. To this candle come the wise men, the twelve apostles, and the bishops of the early Church, from whom the light is spread to the candles of the congregation. The service concludes with the congre gation carrying the light of Christ to the world, symbolized by the candles they carry. WUNC-TV. The course, Music 41, will be taught on Monday and Wednesday evenings at 7 o'clock, beginning Jan. 26. It is designed to help the inexperienced listener in a fuller understanding and enjoyment of music. Dr. William S. Newman, profes sor in the UNC Department of Mu sic, and nationally recognized pian ist, author and teacher, will lee ture informally during the two lass periods each week According to Dr. Newman, the course will present a broad survey of the field of music as the West ern world has cultivated it. He commented, "The emphasis will not be so much on music's his- ory or its heritage of great men as on the music itself especially its elements, its styles, and its over-all structures, whether eong forms, symnhonies, operas and other types." This course, taught by Dr. New man for 13 years on the UNC camp us, drew large enrollments in two sections this year Several years ago Dr. Newman nsin? tape recordings of class pro ceedings, conducted the course over WUNC, the FM raido station operated by ihe Universtiy. The venture was so successful that the nrotrram series was repeated. The idea of presenting the rnrrse cn WUNC-TV has been con idered for several years, but only recentlv the maior obstacle how to fellow musical score on televi sion was surmounted through a specially devised technical process. Dr. Newman noted that many visual interests have been added to the course outline which will make the television course more meaningful. Besides Dr. Newman's demonstrations at the piano, black board and phonograph, there will be guest performers including dancers and musicians, student par ticipants and special films. Another feature of the course will be a snecial listening hour to be provided as a "lab class' each See CARMEN, page 3 J '. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. UP1 U. S. District Judge John E. Jliller yesterday laid down a 30-day dead line for the Little Rock School Board to come up wilh a plan for integrating the city's closed high schools. But the judge left unanswered a key question in the current phase of the drawn-out integration con- Anne Frank Interpretation Tonight At 8 AAn original dramatization inter preting the ideas from ''The Diary of Anne Frank", will be presented by Mrs. Marion Rosenzweig in. Ger rard Hall tonight at 8 p.m. Mrs. Rosenzweig has given this reading in cities from Norfolk, Vir ginia to Fort Wayne, Indiana. She has also appeared at colleges in Charlotte and Greensboro. Mrs. Rosenzweig considers Anne Frank to be a very courageous and mature child with great insight. It ;s her hope to bring Anne to the public so that they will get to know her and see what the world lost upon her death. The reading will present the vari ous emotions the adolescent experi enced. Mrs. Rosenzweig wiQ include Anne's reactions to her parents, sister and friends, her first falling in love, her fears and longings. The interpretations are based on the book. Mrs. Rosenzweig has done dram atic Dresentations similar to her "Diary if Anne Frank' for a num ber of years. She does only books or plays with artistic merit or those that have a message, not best sel lers. Mrs. Rosenzweig has also worked with Little1 Theatre groups and the Carolina Playmakers. The reading is being sponsored by the Drama Committee of the I Graham Memorial Activities Board. Extension Course Has Wide Popularity National and international reco-luJty, is the only correspondence nition attest to the evident success course approved by the American trover sy. Miller did not spell out whether he expects the board itself to seek reopening of the schools, or wheth er his court would be satisfied if the board simply prepares an in: tegration plan and has it ready for use when and if the schools are re opened by any means. Little Reek's four public high schools were closed Sept. 2 by Gov: Orval E. Faubus in an anti-intgra-lion move. Faubus shut them un ier powers given to him by a special session of the Arkansas -legislature last summer. The school closing law under which he acted has not been test ed in either state or federal courts; School Beard member Robert Laster. a city traffic judge, said he felt Miller's order placed fhe board in "an untenable position! because compliance with any in tegration directive would mean the board had to violate the state school dosing law. Laster said he felt the board was oowerk-ss to act in the dilemma and had no alternative but to wait cut the 30day period and see what developed. Other members of the six-mart hoard declined immediate com ment. Miller's order named all mem; bers of the board as defendants. They were elected Dec. 6 to sue ?eed a former board which drew up Little Rock's integration plan! 'n 1S55. Gov. Faubus declined to com ment on Miller's action immediate ly. So did Wiley A. Brantcn, attorn ey fcr the National Assn. fcr the Vdvwempnt of Colored ' I erple which is the plaintiff in the Inte- rafrf case, - Miller's order, which put into pfrVft a mandate issued by the -vghth TJ S. Circuit. Court of AP 'valt n .t. Iuis, simply instruct ed the hoaH to "take positive .-em" o iTiempnt a previously tv-vv.--'i :ntrjp-ation plan. T w-r" fo a "vrnrt to the court "ithm 30 rtavs on vhat steps had vn taken or proposed. Faubus invoked the state school losing la-v after the U. S. Sunreme '"curt turned down a request for See LITTLE ROCK, page 3 ' of the correspondence course for dental assistants offered by the UNC School of Dentistry through ihe University Extension Division. Since its first enrollment in Feb ruary 1954, the course has achiev ed some prominence in dental cir cles. Its popularity (students have en rolled from 43 states and Puerto Aico) may be attributed in part to the fact that the course, which was prepared by Dean John C. Brauer of the University Dental School and 12 members of the dental fac- Fire Guts University Building Dental Association as meeting ito educational requirements fcr tak ing the National Certification Ex amination. It is, in essence, an in-service training course with, in many cas es, the local dentist providing thi fee for his assistant and supervis ing the study. In at least one in stance, the area assistants are hoi iig study classes with local den tists acting as leaders of th? dis- The first fire of the new year erupted last night in a two-story University building and rendered the top floor of the building and the entire rear .portion an almost total loss. . ; It took firemen an hour arid a half to put out the blaze which started in the rear portion of the house at 219 I'ittsboro St at 7:30 p.m. According to fireman on the scene the blazt; apparently started around the furnace of the building, now used as an office for a Univer- Thursday. During that hour the actual music scores will be follow ed by the camera, and other aids will be offered by Edgar Stryker, graduate instructor in the Univer sity's . Music pepartment. I ficials. .uijsion. The fact that this is an innova tion in the field cf dental assisting is mirrored in the words of tht president of a state denial assis tants association who says, "I can't 'ielp but mention your Dr. John Brauer . . . and express my gi ati tude for all that he and the Uni versity have done for dental assist ing!' Further indication of the success of the course came in July 1958 when it was learned that the 14 girls who had' completed the course and had taken the National Certifi cation Examination averaged 90.5 with no failures. In contrast to this, the II girls who had taken a one-year resident course elsev&iere I averaged 733 on the examination with one failure and the 20. .who had completed a two-year resident course average 83.6 with cne failure. Recently the University has learned through Miss Merle An- Free Lancer Dave Mcrrah To Give Talk North Carolina humorist Dave "Torreh will spek to members of he UNC Pres-s Club Monday night t 7:30 at the home of Dean and Mrs. Norval Neil Luxon, Mt. Bolus Rd. Morraht whose backyard Germaa ppears in his Saturday Evening Pest postscripts and several books, vorks primarily as public relations rlirector for Guilford College. An ther siide'.ine fcr Morrah is writing Sunday column for the Greens boro Daily News. Though his most popular and well known work is the backyard Ger uan, Morrah has admitted not -nowirg a word of German him self. At the Press Club meeting, Mor rah's l;opic will be "Free Lancing," Morrah . completed his undergrad uate WGrk at North Carolina State Co'lege. While there, he edited the humor magazine and w?s a mem ber of the wrestling team. sity research ijroup, but the offi cial cause of the fire was not yet J -"!. chairman of the Clinics and known at press, time last night. Exhibits Committee of the Ameri- Firemen worked hard to keep the fire from ratting the lower por tions of the building, a wooden frame house, and succeeded in keeping damage to the lower por tion of the building at a minimum. The total damage to the building from both fire and water is still to be determined by University of- can Dental Assistants Association, that dentists from Mexico, Japan, Switzerland and England voiced in terest in and approval of this' dent al assistants course at the Ameri can Dental Assistants Association meeting in Dallas, Texas. Inquiries were made concerning possible translations into Spanish and other languages. - -: ' .t INFIRMARY Stvrdents in the Infirmary yes terday were: Su Mead Summerson, Rosa Catherine Dickinson, Judith Ann Radar, Jeffrey Lawrence, Wilson Ccoper, Samuel Teace III, Tcrre Smith , Raymond L. TwidCy III) George Haddad, Jr., Sherrill M: Lineburger, Harold E. RussilJ Terrtnce F. Carmody, John L. Muller, Jr., Andy Green Woods Ralph Sott Jr., Frank F. Yar borough, Ronald W. Hyatt, Mel ford A. Smyre, Jack B. Cum minc(5, Vedula Murthy, Lee At exander, Phillip Mash and Rwt sell G. Owens.- 1 1 jJ4ftkr4vl4kMt""M4K