I ; .I hii WEATHER CS-rl mJb' John Foster Dulles harassment in the final hours 1 Continued warm. High 76. VOLUMNE LXVII, NO. 141 Complete Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE f I Gray Announces Openings For Government Interviews Positions; Start Wednesday More than 1,7) appointments to stu dent government positions will be made within the next several weeks. Student Body President Charlie (I ray announced Thursday that in terviews for the various positions v. ill begin Wednesday from 2 to 5 p in. and continue every afternoon, except weekends, until further no tier. Application blanks for the offices are available in the .student govern ment office. Y Court and the Re ference Bourn of the Library. The.se applications mu.Nt be turned in bc ftre Monday. April 27. Appointments sheets Tor the inter views arc po-ted in the .student gov ernment office Gray ured sludrnts to apply for the position., available, .saying. "Th re is inutb sun k to he done in student gocrn;nent for the coming ar For student government ta run as .Miioothiy as possible, the cooperation of the entire student I !' us necessary," The following position are opn fi.r students, with the number of vacancies in parentheses: Attorney (irnrral who is re- sptnsible for the functioas of the attorney general's staff, for render ins opinions en the validity of or ganizational actions and other duties i'.s named by the president. Attorney General's Staff no set number of both men and ccds, v.hich is responsible for investiga tion of violations of Campus and Honor codes, for serving as counsel ftr the defendant and for assisting the attorney general as needed. Associate Director of the Merch ants Ansoctation 1. who .sit-4 in a rt n-vot;ng capacity on the Associa tion's Hoard of Directors. U a liasion between students ami merchants and hcaL the Student Bad Check Com mittee. NSA Commitlre UO and coordina tor, which works as a liasion be tween the campus and the national and international student community and notifies students of available scholarships and .study program. Traffic Advisory Commission (7), which evaluates and investigates motor vehicle problems and submits recommendations for solutions. Traffic Court Investigation Staff 7, which presents all needed in formation concerning a ca.se to the Traffic Court and sends summons. President's Cabinet (no set num ber , which discusses current prob lems, suggests goals and provides the president with information and advice. Student Council (1 coed, on which the cool wills it in on all cases in volving appeals and constitutionality presented to the council. Campus Slorrs Committer (3. which meets with t lie administra tion and faculty committee to dis cuss operations of campus stores. i Venning mat nines ana book ex change; controls profits and rep resents student opinion. Student Traffic Court (7), which tries all violations of regulations concerning motor vehicles. Library Committee (7), which works with the administration on student grievances concerning Li brary policies and programs. Audit Board (5), which is respon sible for the proper administration of the $2,000,000 handled annually by the Student Activities Fund Office and formulates financial policy. Honor System Commission (2), which studies the Honor System, makes recommendations concerning judiciary reforms and maintains stu dent concern in the Honor System International Students Board (11), which plans programs for improve ment of international understanding. administers the Gocttingcn and NSA scholarships, publicizes available scholarships and brings American students in contact with foreign stu (See GRAY, page 3) N. C. State College Carnival To Be Featured On CU Day "' ' i-fcV " ' ' ''..' -v. ', vv.v. ..'.v. -.t.- -. y- V t, 4, 1 s v. WUsJL A' " ,S-: V -3 S i 's f - "a, 4 , X - V- r t i, US- J6w $ 1 KATARINA REAL , . grad student performs in Carolina Folk Festival Carolina Folk Festival Will Feature Students ..egislature Installs Officers; ourteen Bills Introduced Congressman Jonas Speaks At Tonight's Grail Banquet State College's Carnival activities i will be a featured attraction during Consolidated University Day at the State College Student Union Satur day. Students from the three branches of the Consolidated University UNC. WC and State College-may participate in the events planned for the second CU Day this year. Tom Ixmg, president of the CU Student Council and chairman of the UNC delegation to the council, said around 8.000 attended a similar carnival held last year at State. Although CU Day Is Saturday, of ficially, a free dance for students is being held tonight from 7 to mid night in the State College Union. Jimmy Capps Will Be Here From 1 p.m. to midnight Satur day, organizations from here, WC and State will be sponsoring such carnival games and booths, as bin go, ring pitching and roulette wheels. Long guaranteed that all who played games at the carnival would win prizes. Such attractions as the old fash ioned German brass band at last year's carnival are expected again Saturday. Climaxing the CU Day activities Saturday will be a dance from 8 p.m. to mianignt. lianas will pro vide music for both the dances to night and Saturday night. n 'Our Best To You For Spring Frolic Nearly song requests were made when WI'TF announcer Jim my Capps broadcast his "Our Best To You" record show from the UNC campus several years ago. Capps will dc here again Friday. April 21. under Davie Poplar for a "lawn party" to follow the Inter dormitory Council's Spring Frolic dance. UNC students may make song re q jests for Capps April 21 program by filling out a blank which appears in today's paper. These blanks must bo mailed to Capps by Sunday. In addition to the records on "Our rst To You," local talent will also be ued for the April 21 radio pro gram. The Spring Frolic dance will be hrld from 7;30 to 10:15 pm. Origin n'ly j,rt for the parking lot at Hancs Hall, the dance will be moved to another location because of a con cert in Memorial Hall the same Many of the 70 to 80 letters re- night. The new location will be an nounced later. ' A combo will furnish the music for the dance. Free refreshments will be served. "Our Best To You," one of the best known of Itadio Station WPTF's shows, was started in 1947 by Capps. ceived each day for the show come from college students. Before joining the WPTF staff, Capps worked for radio stations in Columbia, S. C, and Greenville, S. C. He says that his idea for "Our Best To You" came from his ex perience in Greenville. A group of UNC athletes and a graduate student will perform dur ing the 11th annual Carolina Folk Festival here Saturday in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. The UNC students will be joining in with a program of square dances, Scottish country dances and High land exhibition dances, guitarists, fiddlers and Negro folk music. During the program, a Flam- borough Sword Dance which ori ginated in England will be per formed by a group of athletes in cluding Ben Hammett, Bruce Crump, Tommy Saint Sing, Harvey Salz and Mac Turlington. Firey native dances of Brazil will be presented by Katarina Real of Rio dc Janeiro, graduate student in anthropology hete. The Folk Festival is being spon sored by the N. C. Folklore Coun cil. Tickets will go on sale at the door one hour before the program at 8 p.m. Other features during the festival will be Scottish dances from Char lotte and Greensboro, who will join with folk singers, fiddlers, guitarists and square dancers in a salute to the folkways of Tar Heelia. Also, 'Cilc Turner, interpreter of Negro folk music, the "Dixieland Square Dancers" of Raleigh, bag pi ppcr Jack Smith of Winston-Salem and drummer John Strickland of Grifton will perform during the eve ning. Dr. Norman Cordon, head, head of the N. C. Music Program, is chairman of the festival. As explained by Miss Sally South erland of Charlotte, director of the "Queen City's Own Scottish Dan cers," Scottish Highland dances in clude the well-known Highland fling, sword dance,' 'shean trews" and Flora Macdonald's Fancy, dances which commemorate some military victory or honor some famous per son. Highland dances are done sing ly as an exhibition by a solo dancer. By contrast, country dances are reels and strathspeys, social dances which involve groups of four or more persons. Many of the present day American square dance evolved from figures in Scottish country dancing, Miss Southerland explained. (Biloio is a blank with wfiich studants may request numbers on disc jockey Jimmy Capps radio show, "Our Best To You," which trill be broadcast from Davie Poplar April 24. The blank should be filled out and mailed to "Our Best To You" Radio Station WPTF, Iialcigh, before Sunday.) PLEASE PLAY . Rep. Charles Raper Jonas of the 10th Congressional District is ex pected to arrive here between 5 and 6 p.m. today for a banquet honor ing new members of the Order of the Grail later today. Jonas- is expected to remain in Chapel Hillf or at least another day and return to Washington sometime Sunday. Jonas, who is North Carolina's only Republican in the U. S. House of Representatives, was elected last November to his fourth consecutive term in Congress. In connection with his career as a congressman, Jonas announced this week that he is currently decid ing whether or not to run again in 1960. No decision had been an nounced Thursday. Jonas told a Charlotte Observer reporter that he would like to retire to his law prac tice in Lincolnton. Jonas was first elected to the House with the Republican sweep of the presidency and Congress in 1952. He was re-elected in 1954, '56 and '58. In his student days at UNC, Jonas was active in various extra-curricular organizations. He served as student body president and was tapped into the Order of the Golden Fleece. His only prearranged appearance on campus will be at the banquet tonight at 6:30. The banquet will be in honor of 13 new members of the Grail who were tapped early Wed nesday morning. The new Grail members are the following: Lawrence Byron Austin III, James Edward Crownover Jr., Walter Erwin Fuller Jr., Charles Dowd Gray III, George Wallace Grayson Jr., David Lee Grigg, Pren tis Harold O'Tuel Jr., Hugh Lester Patterson, Julius Rowan Raper III, James Martin Scott, Norman Bar rett Smith, Wade Marvin Smith and Jack Holland Spain Jr. BULLETIN WASHINGTON, April 16 (P Christian A. Herter has undergone a pecial medical checkup at White House suggestion to determine whether he is physically capable of taking over as Secretary of State. INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yester day included: Jane Newsome, Gordon Street, Dorothy Carter, Jane Westbrook, Linda Moore, Elizabeth Van Wagen- er, Fred Robinson, Robert Lindsey, William Wardlaw, James Noyes, Oscar Simpson, James Barnes, Lewis Hawley", Arthur Lynn, Frank Huntley, Franklin Jones and James Breslin. merican Geological Society e Range Of Topics HasWid Topics ranging from the formation of Grandfather Mountain to a pos sible means of disposal of radioac tive liquids occupied the agenda of the opening session of the South- limestone for road material in the past may be available for future A paper dealing with the oldest known rocks in North Carolina which had been prepared by F. Donald FOR FORM On April 24. UNC r : ; 4 ) . l v . , f . J ' 'J J s '-.fx;!- i .Vw ft'' ',..:. , 'f' 4- y - - f fj : 1 Oak Ridge Physicist Leads Mountain Retreat An Oak Ridge physicist will lead a retreat for Episcopal students April 25 and 26 at Camp Vade Me- cum in the Sauna Mountains near Winston-Salem. Carolina students who will be at ending the weekend spring retreat lave been asked to contact the Rev. Robert Insko or Miss Barrie Neal at the Episcopal parish house by Sunday. "Those Strange Words: Judgment and Salvation" will be the topic of the retreat to be led by the Rev. Dr. William Pollard, physicist at Oak Ridge, Tenn. In addition to Carolina Episcopal students, representatives from Duke, Wake Forest, Woman's College, State College ad High Point College will also attend the retreat. Other clergymen who will be pres ent for the weekend retreat are the Rev. J. A. Vivrette, the Rev. Ronald Woodruff, the Rev. Joseph O'Brien and the Rev. Mr. Insko. Cost of the retreat has been esti mated at $4. Transportation will be provided. eastern section of the Geological ; Eckelmann, Brown University, Pro Sciety of America (GSA) meeting here. Approximately 300 delegates from 11 states are participating in the three-day meeting which began Thursday, according to Dr. Roy L. Ingram, head of the UNC Depart ment of Geology and Geography and chairman of GSA. vidence, R. I.; J. Laurence Kulp and Leon Long, Columbia Univer sity, Lamont Geological Observa tory, Palisades, N. Y. was also presented. JIMMY CAPPS brings radio show to UNC dance Khrushchev's Latest Published In Moscow MOSCOW, April 16 W A new book by Niklta Khrushchev has been published here. It is entitled "To ward Victory in the Peaceful Com petition With Capitalism." The book, issued by the State Pub lishing House of Political Literature, includes various speeches made by Khrushchev and also texts of his con versations with foreign journalists and the like during 1958. Structural features of the Grand father Mountain area in northwest ern North Carolina were discussed by Bruce Bryant of the U. S. Geo logical Survey from Denver, Colo. The Grandfather Mountain area in the Blue Ridge, he said, is in an area where rocks have been moved great distances. One mass of rock has been moved completely over another rock group, Bryant reported from a study done jointly with John C. Reed Jr., also of Denver. After this tremendous movement, he continued, erosion has exposed underlying rocks through the great overthrust sheet. Grandfather Moun tain was developed as a conse quence of these phenomena, the speaker concluded. A detailed study of ground water disposal areas at the Savannah River Plant in Aiken, S. C, by Stan ley O. Reichert of the University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla., showed that rocks tend to decontaminate the groundwater as the liquid pecul ates through it. Reichert noted that certain rock types are more efficient than oth ers. Detectable radioactivity travels no farther than 125 feet before being decontaminated by soils, he said. The study, he revealed, gave a useful picture of physical and chem ical properties of various soil strata important in predicting the direc tion and rate of migration of low level radioactive liquids. Stephen G. Conrad of the N. C. De partment of Conservation and De velopment in Raleigh reported on the occurrence of crystalline lime stone in McDowell County. He states that there is a possibility that this rock sequence which has yielded operation, The speaker stated that the oldest known rocks in North Carolina which have been measured to date occur on a line from Spruce Pine to Tardee Point. At Pardee Point, he said, an age of 890 million years is recognized. Other ages, he pointed out, show that mountain building occurred at least three other times at later dates in this area. This latest large scale mountain Duumng event in this region occurred around 225 mil lion years ?go, he estimated. Other subjects and speakers heard during the Thursday sessions in cluded a study made at Ore Knob, N. C, by Henry S. Brown of State College, Raleigh; an unexplained magnetic distrubance near Beau fort, S. C, by Glenn A. Burdick and H. W. Straley III, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. An evaluation of highly weathered rock on the basis of its water con taining abilities by J. T. Callahan and J. W. Stewart, U. S. Geological Survey, Atlanta, Ga ; a report on the relationship between broken crystals found around Spruce Pine with the earth thrust movement found at Grandfather Mountain by By STAN BLACK The Student Legislature reorgan ized itself after the swearing in of new members last night by the newly installed speaker, David Grigg. Newly chosen officers and com mittee chairmen are Jim Scott (SP), speaker pro tempore; Maxine Greenfield (UP), clerk; Bob No bles (SF), Ways and Means Com mittee chairman; Gordon Street (UP), finance committee chairman; Linda Biser (SP), filing clerk; and Bill Lamm (SP), sergeant-at-arms. The "Big Four" officers of stu dent government, Charlie Gray, David Grigg, Sue Ann Wood, and Bob Bingham, were sworn in as the first order of business by Stu dent Council Chairman Erwin Fuller. Incoming student body President Charlie Gray outlined the program his administration will follow in the coming academic year in a "State of the Campus" address. In his comments Gray covered every major1 area of campus activities, pausing to discuss several more fully. Outgoing Speaker of the legis lature Ralph Cummings was pre sented a gavel in recognition of his fine efforts in presiding over the past two sessions. The body gave him a standing ovation upon his acceptance of the award. Fourteen bills were introduced in a flurry of new business at the opening of the session, ui tnese bills three were passed under spec ial orders. A bill introduced by Bob Nobles (SP) commending the outgoing stu dent body executive officers for their "devotion and dedication to the best interests of the student body . . . and their spirit which has unified us and led us to great er accomplishments . . . "was passed under special orders. Jim Crownover s (SP) bill to authorize a referendum among women dormitory residents con cerning the collections of social and activity fees was also passed after consderable oppostion by Rep. Don Dotson (SP). Durham Union To Hold Rally On Saturday Several hundred Durham folks are expected to turn out Saturday afternoon at three o'clock for a public rally at the Durham County Court House. The purpose of the rally, which is officially sponsored by the Durham Central Labor Frank G. Lesure of U. S. Geological Union, AFL-CIO, is to express pub- Survey, Knoxville, Tenn.; and a dis cussion on rocks in Stokes,, Surry, Yadkin and Forsyth Counties which indicated deep sea deposits by Jas per L. Stuckey and Stephen G. Con rad, N. C. Department of Conser vation and Development, Raleigh. International Open House Held By Cosmopolitan Club By DAVE JONES The Cosmipolitan Club's seventh annual International Open House will be held Sunday at the Hillel Hall, 210 West Cameron Ave, from 3 to 5 p.m. This annual exhibit will show na tional costumes from almost all countries represented at UNC, as well as objects of art and rare items that represent the countries' culture and history. Entertainment for the two hour long open house will be provided by the Shades. Alan Costa, Cosmopolitan Club president, calls the International Open House "an opportunity for ev eryone to gain understanding." Cos ta said the exposition will have con tributions from many students from foreign countries as well as from Chapel Hillians. who have traveled abroad and are displaying souverirs of their trips. Hawaii, the 50th state, will be the highlight of the display headed "USA." Other areas represented will be Latin America, the Middle East, Switzerland, Germany, France, Sweden, Estonia, India, Korea, Japan, Israel, Greece, Aus tralia, Italy and Bali. The chairman of the exposition is John Casparis. Mrs. Rachael Salim, Marci Klingel and Kitty Allen are in charge of refreshments. Every year the Cosmopolitan Club sponsors three major campus events. They are the International Open House, the International Picnic and the International Dinner. This year's International Dinner featured food from 10 different countries and had over 200 paying guests. Chancellor Emeritus R. B. House referred to it as the most successful International Dinner he had ever seen here. Scheduled for early May is the In ternational Picnic to be held at the farm of Dr. J. P. Gillin. Here the foreign students will have an oppor tunity to show off their countries' games and dances. The food will be prepared American style. ic support for the striking Hen derson textile workers. Feaured speakers for the rally are Allan Kistler of the national staff of the AFL-CIO in Washing ton and Boyd Payton, Carolinas Director of the Textile Workers Union of America and chief union negotiator in the strike. Kistler is personally representing AFL-CIO President George Meany. W. Mil lard Barbee, North Carolina AFL- CIO President, will also address the gathering. Plans for the rally were drawn up by a Rally Committee headed by Robert Holifield, President o the Durham Central Labor Union, and UNC graduate Bob Pace, Edi tor of the Durham Labor Journal, as co-chairmen. The Central Labor Union represents forty-two Durham area AFL-CIO Local Union and a membership of fifteen thousand. Gov. Luther Hodges, who has been roundly criticized by labor leaders throughout the state for his action in the strike, has been invited to attend and address the rally. No reply has been received from the governor by the Rally Committee. G. M. SLATE Today's activities in Graham Me morial include: GMAB, 1:30-3 p.m., Grail; IFC Rush Committee, 2-4 p.m., Roland Parker I; Orientation, 2-5 p.m.. Woodhous; G. M. Board, 4-6 p.m.. Grail; Dance (The Saints), 8-12, Rendezvous; Alexander Dorm, 8-12, Cobb basement; Student Legislature Officers, 3-4 p.m., Grail.

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