tj.tt.C. Library Serlal3 Dept, Box 870 ""cfiafel Hill, H.C. 17 yean of dedicated service te a better University, a better state and a better nation by one ot America's great college papers. hoe motto states, "freedom of expression Is the backbone of an academic community." WEATHER Sunny and rather windy with temperatures in the low 40'$. Offices in Graham Memorial 2 19S0 FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 106 Complete ifl Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1960 ! w m. i i fcitaa . . jitw ft i i ' - ii Your Symposium Hospitality Committee Aids Symposium Guests By MARY STF.WAKT BAKKR Jinny Aldige and GiGi Ayers to ut' hT operate tiie affairs of the Social and Hospitality Committee for the Carolina Symposium, - the organization responsible for the comfort ami speakers and officials participating in the program. Miss Avers, from Akron, Ohio, is a 'fliior, who i majoring in Poli tical Science. She transferred to l'C from Northwestern University where she was a member cf Delta Gamma social sorority, and she is a S.ray Greek here. In estru-curricular activities, Miss Aycrs Is co-chairman of pub licity for the YWCA cabinet and fche also works with the W.A.A. Ginny Aldigc. originally from Netf Orleans, La., lives in Durham now. She is a senior majoring in International Studies. .Miss Aldige's activities include work with CCU.V and the Newman Club; she is also an editorial as sistant for the Daily Tar Heel, so cial chairman of the Stray Greeks and a member Of the Mademoiselle College Hoard. The Social and Hospitality Com mittee deals with all arrange ments for the guest speakers. Ar rangements are made for trans portation of the speakers, re servations at the Carolina Inn and ail meals. Information about Chapel Hill and Carolina is also provided for the speakers as well as a special Symposium week banquet and various receptions. Many of the committee members will greet the speakers as they ar rive and t.erve as host or hostess during the Symposium week. Dorm Residents Plan New York Trip In March Definite plans were made by a group of dormitory men for a three day New York trip at a meeting Wednesday nighf in Cobb. The trip will be the first of a series spon sored by the Y.MCA and the IDC. This group, which anticipates about forty members, will leave here Thursday evening, March 24. Before returning to the campus late Sunday night, they will have seen two Broadway plays and vis ited places of interest. Some of the places they will visit include the Museum of Modern Art, the United Nations, Greenwich Vil lage, the Guggenheim Museum, Car negie Hall, the Metropolitan Opera, the Statue of Liberty, Rockefeller I I I i i Center and some television shows. picnic, rewriting the orientation The cost of the trip, which in- i manual, the planning of library chides transportation, tickets, lead-j tours, planetarium tours, merch- .r ami hotel, will be $30 to $33. An's (la'- etc- Representatives from the Y and! ..j ft0, that a position on the IDC will be in .loyner, Lewis. Win-1 Orientation Committee gives the ston and Cobb on Monday, Tuesday j student an opportunity to use his and Wednesday evenings to contact j0wn initative," said Jack Mitchell, students in those dormitories who orientation chairman, "for new have indicated an interest in the ideas and plans are always wel trip but were unable to attend the corned into our ever-expanding meeting last week in Cobb. program." Dormitory r THE SOCIETY OF JANUS INDUCTS This term's inductees into the Society of Janus are: Pete Thompson, Tommy Williams, Pat Morgan, Bob Bontempo, Swag Grimsley, Bill Sayers. Mr. Arthur Beaumont, Jamts Parker, Dean William Long, Bob Thompson, Dave Alexander, Charlie Gray, Jack Raper, James Kinney and Tom Mehl. Photo by Charlie Blumenthal 1 1 4 j -jS I VIRGINIA AYERS CAMPUS SEEN Student determined to remain dry during Thursday's drizzle pa rading around campus beneath a multi-colored beach umbrella. Couple on study date in library both sound asleep behind the same book. Orientation Leaders Will Be Chosen Twenty-two men and women students will be chosen Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to guide next fall's Campus Orientation Program activities such as; the W. ! C dance, the activities session, Honorary 4 Xi ? 1 I i" A A ' 'i GINNY ALDIGE i ; i -t - " ' ; . -.. X - : i I feuiiiiiii r i niiMnMnaaiBMi wmm I ilffe ; aX Editorial Page Plans Outlined By Yardley "The editorial page of the Daily Tar Heel should be a sounding board for opinion from -every sec tor of the cappus," says Jonathan Yardley. The candidate for the editorship of the Daily Tar Heel gave his views on editorial page policy and plans yesterday, placing greatest em phasis on the need to draw more fully upon the '"great resources of! writing talent in the student body . that are presently neglected." Yardley said that he is parti- I cularly interested in making monthly surveys of campus prob lems on the editorial page. He plans to make these studies the products of extensive research and hopes, through doing them, to of fer possible solutions to problems which face the students and the University as a whole. "1 would also like to see more recognition, on the editorial page, of achievements made by faculty members and students of the Uni versity," Yardley said. "1 think that the editor has a great obliga tion to his readers to do more than present opinion; he must also pre sent the facts from which construc tive ideas may be formed." j The junior En;:l;sh major reiter- ated his desire to obtain the serv I ices of a nationally syndicated col- umnist, preferably Walter Lipp- mann. "A columnist of this stature ! would add immeasurably to the ! .-.cope of the page," he said, "and would give students greater insight into pressing national problems." Yardley said that he hopes to find a student cartoonist to do occasional cartoons, "of profes sional quality," on campus events. "Cartoons and drawings add a great deal to the color and life of an editorial page," he said. Reviews, the candidate said, would be directed either by the editor or an arts editor, and would be handled by various students and faculty members who are con sidered proficient in the particular subject to be criticized. "There are a great many cultural elements in Chapel Hill which the Daily Tar Heel is ignoring, such as the Ack land Art Museum showings and the Music Department programs," Yardley said. "The Tar Heel should give these events full coverage if it is to be truly a campus paper." Science Fraternity Inducts 7 Students Seven students were initiated into the Alpha Alpha Chapter of the Sigma Gamma Epsilon Society at its February meeting. A honorary earth science organ ization. Alpha Alpha admits can didates on the basis of scholastic achievement in both general and earth science courses. Those initiated were: Wallace Fallaw, William Mallory, Ben jamin Morgan, Thomas Pickett, John Smith, Ranjit Tirtha and Nicholas Woodas. Inducts 15 'f - i' I 5 An if 0 o vr Ty Boyd Prepares To Auction 4 I A ' 1 Hl ?f A "WHAT AM I BID ... for dates with these young ladies?" cries Ty Boyd, WCHL radio announcer, as he prepares for his role as auctioneer at the Campus Chest Drive auction which will be held in Gerrard Hall, beginning at 7 p.m. The drive itself will be conducted the week of March 2-9. The two coeds above are Susan Woodall and Carolyn Kelley. Campus Chest Aids By SUSAN LEWIS "Your drive, your goal, your re sonsibility." And part of this responsibility includes supporting (through the Campus Chest) the Goettingen Ex change Scholarship Program. Next year two UNC students will study at Goettingen Univer sity in Germany. This scholarship, provided by the Campus Chest fund (30 per cent of the total), pays the recip ient $450 for travel to and from Germany. Goettingen University pays the holder the equivalent to i $75 to cover room, hoard and tu-1 ition. i Generally the student attends a two-month session at a language j school at his own expense. There are only seven months of instruction at Goettingert from November to July, with a spring vacation of March and April, plus holidays. Being centrally located in Ger many, 4he student will be well situated to see Europe. Must one lose this year aca demically? Robert C. Noble, one of last year's winners, says that credits from non-science courses are more easily transferrable than others; but that the student is re sponsible for requesting exams in Goettingen, since they are not normally given at the end of each course. "Perhaps the greatest benefit from a year in a foreign country Legislature Meeting Is Reviewed By EDSEL ODOM Nature and man collaborated Thursday night to present the Stu dent Legislature with a whip lash ing tempest. Mother Nature sup plied rain on the window panes, while legislators contributed thunder and lightning in the chamber. The whole mix-uo centered around the ratio of dorm to frater nity members on the Men's Coun cil. Were the dorms to have an eight to four majority or a seven to five? That was the question. The original bill called for four fraternity members, but it was amended to give them five. When the bill in its entirety came up for a final vote, Rep. Boh Nobles (SP) called for a quorum, but was not recognized by Speaker David Grigg. The bill was passed. Rep. Hank Patterson (UP) mov ed reconsideration on the bill. He did this because, under the by laws, a bill can be reconsidered only once. He urged defeat of his motion, which would conse quently clinch the bill's passage. Nobles gained the floor and charged Grigg with "flagrantly ignoring" a call for a quorum, and again called for a quorum. He and others of the Student Party stag ed a walk-out to prevent the meet ing of a quorum, thereby leaving Patterson's motion for reconsider ation hanging until the next meeting. , f " 1 i 'urn 4- 5 "1 M 1 7 Goettingen Scholars is the reorientation which one's sense of values undergoes, "Noble explained. "After seeing the pro blems facing students in European countries, one begins to see life at UNC in an entirely different light," he said. Only student support of the Campus Chest makes possible this opportunity for UNC scholars. oiTdown DTNKers move To Conference Tables But Protests Continue By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Negro student movement against segregated lunch counters has reached the conference table in the Carolinas. But the sitdown protests have not been abandoned. There were demonstrations Friday at two var iety stores and a drug store in Henderson, N. C. In Orangeburg, S. C, Negroes picketed a variety store where they were refused lunch counter service Thursday. Picketing continued, too, outside variety stores and drug stores in Raleigh. The demonstrations were with out violence. In Shelby, N. C, whites and Ne groes met together to air views on th racial impasse. But they found no solution. In Greensboro,. Mayor George H. Roach appointed a nine-member advisory committee to study the problem of race relations in the city where the protest move ment was born Feb. 1. In Rock Hill, S. C, whites and Negroes are organizing separate ly, the one to defend segregated eating customs, the other to de stroy them. The emotional intensity of the movement and its resistance produced comments from the leaders of both races. "No one can be forced to serve someone he doesn't want to serve," said State Sen. Marion Gressette, chairman of the South Carolina Segregation Committee, in an address to the organization al meeting of the Rock Hill Citi zens Council. The council form ing as a consequence of the Ne gro demonstration, has more than 350 members and its proponents are seeking more members from among the leading white citizens in civil affairs, business and in dustry. "We are 100 per cent in favor of the movement," commented the Rev. C. A. Ivery, a Negro min ister, in calling a mass meeting of Rock Hill Negroes for Monday night. "We haven't actively en gaged in any activity so far, but we feel they (the student demon strators) now need adult assist ance, morally, spiritually and per haps financially." The students are not seeking social integration, said the Rev. Dr. T. X. Graham, a Negro min ister, at the Shelby meeting Thurs day night. "What they want is Tar Heels In Final Pre-Tourney Tie For ACC First YMCA Officer Applications Now Open Jack Raper, president of the YMCA, announced today that in terviews for those interested in being nominated to run for the YMCA executive cabinet for the coming year will be held in the afternoon Monday, through Fri day, from 2 to 5 p.m. in the Y. Those desiring to be interview ed should fill out a form available in the Y office and sign the ap pointment schedule there. A nominating committee, com posed of all senior members of the present cabinet will' select nominees for the offices of presi dent, vice president, secretary, treasurer, program chairman and miembership chairman of the or ganization. The election for these offices will be held March 15. Raper urg ed all interested in applying for or learning about any of the of fices to sign up for interviews. equal treatment in public estab lishments," he asserted. "We felt race relations were so good in Shelby, we would be served," a Negro student com mented, in reference to a demon stration at two variety stores and a bus station lunch room Feb. 18. He and other students declared they will resume the protests. "Mob action," a white - lunch counter operator replied. And he and other merchants said they would not break segregation cus tom. Shelby Mayor Harry Woodson, although expressing sympathy with the students, added: "It will be a long hard road before you achieve what you are seeking here." The Orangeburg pickets, 15 or 20 young Negroes, marched out side the S. II. Kress store for a short time, then dispersed quietly when Police Chief Howell Hall in formed them that they could not demonstrate without a city permit." Playmakers" 'Volpone7 Extended To Monday v.tf Vt 45 ' tffef-f fAA - AT tA ' V; ,-.t -' - WV isU X A-& - S t ' AAA'AJiTA ' 'AA A"j 5&v ; - - fA ' a ft vki " r " - liyi l If Wa ) o vi- , A-AAA. .z " " 'V : . . , O Ben Jonson's famed comedy, "Volpone," has been received with such enthusiasm that it will be held over until Monday, Feb. 29. Tickets are still available for Monday night only at the Play makers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall, and at Ledbetter-Pickard in Chapel Hill. Face Blue By ELLIOTT COOPER If what happens twice happens thrice then Carolina will close out its regular season basketball schedule tonight in Durham with at least a twenty point victory over Duke. In their two previous meetings this season the Tar Heels have walked away with easy victories both times- The rivals met in the second round of the Dixie Classic and the Tar Heels belted the Blue Devils. 75-53. ; In the conference game played here two weeks ago Carolina triumphed by an even greater margin as it won 84-57. With a victory tonight the Tar Heels can finish up their ACC slate at 12-2 and achieve a tie with Wake j Forest for first place in the league. Duke 7-G In ACC The Blue Devils currently stand at 7-6 in conference competition and could end up in a tie with South Carolina if they lose tonight and the Gamecocks defeat Mary land this afternoon. Since the loss to Carolina, Duke has split its last four games win ning two from Virginia and bow ing to Maryland and Wake Forest. Over the last pair the Blue Devils have been led by 6-9 forward Doug Kistler who tossed in 22 points on both occasions. Despite these two high scoring contests Kistler's average is just a shade over 10.0 a game. The top marks on the Blue Devil club be long to Howard Hurt and Carroll Youngkin who both have 13.3 aver ages. Tar Heels Win Finale The Tar Heels , enter tonight's frey after scoring their most im pressive victory of the season in the home finale against Virginia. Five Carolina seniors took the floor at Woollen Gym for the last time Thursday night and helped to crush the Cavaliers 97-53. The scoring of Lee Shaffer and the passing performance put on by York Larese were major factors contributing to the Tar Heel triumph. The combination of La rese's passing and Doug Moe's shooting accounted for several of the most spectatular plays of the INFIRMARY The following students were in j little, Baltimore, Mdr., social chair the Infirmary yesterday: Nancy man. Bradner, Alice Forester, Sara Kar raker, Charlyne Grines, Tony Harrington, James Thomas, Hubert Stoneman, Spottswood Robinson, Barry Adler, John Barefoot, Jam- es Jerrell, Linda Rehm, Henry ! vice president; Leo Kendall, cor Harris, Everett Hassell, Kenneth responding secretary; Richard Fet Baucom, Dorsey Hart, Robert Da- zer, former president, alumni sec vis, Chandler Van Orman, and retary; and Robert Cannon, trea Robert Grubb. j surer. Devils Tilt; At Stake evening. In addition to this trio Coach Frank McGuire will start captain Harvey ' Salz and Ray Stanley against the Blue Devils. Although kept on the bench more than usual so as not to aggravate his rib in jury, Salz still managed to tally 11 in the win over Virginia. Pre-Sasoii Favorites Billed as one of the pre-season favorites to capture the ACC title. Duke has failed toflive up to its rating. Coach Vic Bubas' team has yet to win a game from a confer ence team that stands ahead of it in the rankings. It has lost twice to Wake Forest and Maryland and once to Carolina in league play. The Blue Devils other ACC defeat came at the hands of N. C. State. Bubas has tried to find a winning combination all year long but has yet to settle on one. After Young kin, KLstler, and Hurt the Duke coach has four or five players to choose from to fill the other two spots. Forwards Fred Kast and Buzz Mewhcrt make often appearances as do guards Johnny Frye, Jack Mullen, and John Cantwell. Frye and Mullen have the best average of this group at 9.0 and 5.0 respective ly. During the half tonight Wallace Wade will receive the "Service To Sports Award" given each year by the Atlantic Coast Sportswriters As sociation. The award is given to a person, ' for long, distinguished and unselfish service to amateur athle tics in the area embracing the ACC." Fraternity Officers Two honorary fraternities elect ed officers in meetings this week. , Pledges of Delta Sigma Pi, pro fessional business fraternity, elect ed the following officers: Lee Al exander, Monroe, N. C, president; Larry Benfield, Mooresville, N. C, secretary-treasurer; and Bill Doo- The Alpha Rho Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, national mu sic fraternity, elected the follow ing: Junior Jay Lambeth, Greens boro, president; Ralph Eanes, Jr.,

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