C7 yean of dedicated terrlte to a better University, a better itate and a better nation by one of America's great college paperg, whose motto states, "freedom of expression Is the backbone of an academic community." WEATHER Partly cloudly and cold. Monday colder. moderately Complete Iff) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 125 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE a- 20, V Bi--Partisan Head Notes Endorsements Student Council Chairman Kr win Fuller, who chaired the re cent Bi-Partisan Selections Hoard cssion. yesterday released the following statement of clarifica tion and information regarding the Board's endorsement of can- ment. This, however, is not the fault of the Selections Board. It resulted in part from the weather condition at the time of the interviews, .n pari from the poor publicity given the announce ment of the interviews, and in didates for the Men's Honor Coun-; part from the general lack of in til and the Student Council: , k rest and initiative shown by the The action of the Bi-partisan ; candidates. Selections Board has been the sub "The p issage of the constitu ject of some controversy during I Lonal referendum and the subse recent days. S ome students hav Ujuent legislation calling for geo graphically apportioned judicial councils makes our upcoming e lection one of major importance. The need lor experience in and a detailed knowledge of our stu dent judicial system is especially acute in the present circumstanc es, in order that some order and continuity might he provided in the initiation of the new procedur es and practices. "Considering this need for ex perience, the Board gave its whole hearted endorsement to seven students who have preivously ser ved on the judicial councils for which they are currently candi dates and who were required bv iw to seek re-election this sprint on commented that an inadequate number of candidates was endors ed, and it is true that a large per centage of the candidates for judi cial office in this election are running without Board endorse- Deadline Put For Lcccl Beauty how Up What's a beautv contest without girl Nothing. An emergency session of th- i a thapel Hill Jaycees arrived at this;, 0 n.,ain tn(ir curmit scals conclusion last Sunday afternon. So, the (leadline for entering the Miss Chapel Hill beauty page ant has been extended to March 31. Thus far only six girls, rll Car olina coeds, have entered the pageant. At least ten were ex- loi-. "We've contacted lots and of girls and they just seem t.; make excuses for not being in it." j said Bill Sparrow, a member :if the Contestant Committee. "I'm responsible for five dorms. I've j had girls In the dorms working for me. but nobodv wants to en ter." . Kntrants are Jackie Womble, Betty Finley. Carolyn Kelly. Mar tha Hodson. Nancy Wills and Marilyn Zschau. J A $200 scholarship and a com-1 plete wardorbc by Bobbins, in- j their respective councils. Endorsement for the Honor Council on this basis went to Howard Holdcrness. R. V. Fulk. George Campbell, Clem Ford, and Warner Bass; Tony Salinger and Ward Purrington were endorsed for the Student Council for this ieason. "The other candidates endorsed by the Board demonstrated a sound knowledge of the workings of our Honor System, a sincere in terest in serving their fellow stu dents, and a responsible attitude toward the administration of stu dent justice such that the Board felt them capable and qualified to serve effectively as judicial coun cil members." y -V ' - - : ' . . i t S i a -s:; ; V J-T s K ? If : , J7'& f Vi. , ....'. -!-'5' ' , " 5s- f , 4 - ' UBS I o It day s actions paigning COPY IS NOT USUALLY THIS FUNNY but continuity writers Don Schain, Maggie Castelloe and Marion Verner find humor in what Continuity Director Helen Gutridge is writing. Photo by Charles Blumenthal WUNC Bustles In Preparation For Evening Program Start By SUSAN LEWIS Note: This is the second in a six-part series on WUNC Radio. One 'of the busiest rooms on campus is located in me oasemeni of Swain Hall. ! A sign on the door reads WUNC. ; Behind that door bustling ac-j tivitj is the scene every after- j noon. ! Programs are planned, scripts! written, records pulled from the j I five write scripts for the classical, j Symphony by Tschaikovsky. Planetarium To Admit Dates Free To Show Dates will be admitted free to i : - i ciuoing an evening aress. naming lhe -Kaster Awakening" Planetari suit and sports outfit, will be giv- um sW on Mnr,nv T..d anA Masterworks and mood music pro grams; write copy for remote broadcasts and, if necessary, write fill copy. Staffers include Vista Thomp son, Don Schain. Jayne Gardner, Marion Verner and' Maggie Cas telloo. Assignments are made every two weeks and each writer is giv- stacks and readied for play and j en a certain night each week for 6 p.m. WUNC signs on the air. j which he is responsible. Operating Under Program Director Mor- j on the B schedule, assignments ris Godfrey's supervision, five de- j are turned in three days before partments work behind the scenes j it is to be broadcast, before the station can meet its Scripts usually include the com- 6 p.m. deadline. ! poser's background, when the piece The Music Department is head ed by Pat Watson. Work includes scheduling the programs and num bering and cataloguing new re cords. Programs are planned a month in advance. The staff has about 1,000 records from which to choose vhen scheduling music for the programs. Pat Watson schedules the pro gram for "Scliquy," the mood or study music program from 10:15 to 11 every night. Artists heard (See WUNC BUSTLES, Page 3) Hundred Coeds Selected For Orientation The selection of 100 coeds for 1960 Orientation counselors was an nounced yesterday by Mary Stew art Baker, counselor trainer. Selections wrere made after a week of interviewing. There were 175 applications, 100 of which were accepted. "The Orientation committee and I were pleased with the number of interseted girls who applied," Miss Baker said. "The unusually large number of well-qualified applicants made the selection difficult, but we feel those who have been selected will r prove tcv be an enthusiastic and valuable communication with the incoming students," she added. Acceptance of coimselorship will be recognized by attendance at the initial training meeting Wednesday 3-9 p.m.. 207 Vtnable. Those un able to, attend should call Mary Stewart Baker at 8-9104. The new counselors are as follows: Pat Dowden, Barbara Bidulph, Janiel Melton, Jinny von Schilling, Diana Bordon, Ann Landover, Judy Allen, Mel Dickinson, Clare Daven port, Jane Norfleet Smith, Linda Hurt, Neal McKinney, Lynn Hum phrey, Betsy Swain, Stuart Bohan- non; Susan Lewis, Sandy Rogers, Em ily Fritz, Mary Rogers Newberry, Justine Rivenbark, Eloise Cowles, (See COEDS, Page 3) am Candidates Await Results Of Coming Spring Elections Climaxing many weeks of fran tic activity, spring elections will be held from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tues day and polls for the various dis tricts have been scheduled. This year students will be vot ing on Yack and Daily Tar Heel Editors, Senior Class officers, Stu dent Government officers, Student Legislature representatives, Caro lina Athletic Association and- Wo men's Athletic Association offi cers, Men's and Women's Honor Council members, Student Coun- UP Candidates Discussed By Party Head cn to the girl chosen Miss Chilli J riii. I Wednesday nights from now until Aoril 2.1 if students rot tirkotc fnr Any girl from 18 to 28 years old hese Planetarium Ma may cnier me contest, winners are judged on talent, personality, poise and beauty. Chairman of the Judges Com mittee, Roy Martin Announced th selection of judges for the event. Representing the woman's point of view will be the former motion picture actress, Mrs. Georgia Ky er, of Chapel Hill. Other judges arc "Red" Arnold and Edgar Gur fcanus, former president of the North Carolina Jaycccs. Tickets are on sale at any of the sponsors which include Stan cell Motor Co., Town and Campus, Sloan Drug Co., Bclk-Leggctt-Hor-ton. Collier Cobb and Assoc.. Finch Lumber Co., and Ogburn Furni ture Co. A. F. Jenzano made this announce ment yesterday for tlve show which begins each night at 8:30. Guides To Be Chosen For Foreign Students Approximately 60 counselors or advisors will be selected for the Foreign Student Orientation Pro gram taking place September 9-14 and continuing informally through out the year. Interested students are asked to sign up for interviews being held March 23-25 in the Orientation of fice m Graham Memorial or to contact Tina Baensch Co-ordinator of Foreign Student Orientation) at I J591J44. Godfrey's job, which takes eight to 10 hours a week, entails work ing with Station Manager Jack Mayo and other department heads to plan programs, overseeing the scheduling of programs (including remote broadcasts, such as Hill Hall concerts), checking over con tinuity and promotion copy and planning promotion campaigns with the Promotion Department. In the Continuity Department Helen Gutridge and her staff of was written and a little I about the piece itself. Information for this copy is gained from the studio "library." which consists of books on composers, music en cyclopedias and record jackets. All is not aiways smooth in the copy departments mistakes creep in. One copy mistake which has never been forgotten around the station was the time the an nouncer's script read, "Now we will hear Rachmaninoff's Second Author Golden Talks To SSL About South Arnold To Talk About 'State At Symposium Thurma.i W. Arnold, not 1 lawyer, iu:hor, and government official, w 111 present the fourth topic of dis cussion "The State." in the Caro lina Symposium. March 30th. Widely kncn as a competent trust but.T in the late 1930's. he waged perhaps the most formidable as.saull upon monopoly in Ameri can history. i , i - : v ? I vrsr- ' ; ..7l. Dr. Arnold has degrees from Prin ceton. Harvard, Yale, and the Uni versity of Wyoming. He has lectured '..i la v at the University of Wyoming, I has been dean of the college of Law at West Virginia University, and was West Virginia Univre.sity, and was also Professor of Law at Yale. He is a Phi Beta Kappa. I He has published numerous arti cles and books, including "The Folklore of Capitalism," "The Bot tleneck of Business," "Democracy and Free Enterprise," and "The Symbols of Government." At present, he is associated with the law firm of Arnold, Fortas and Porter. Between 1933 and 1943, Dr. Arnold held such government positions as: assistant attorney general of the U. S. in charge of antitrust, and as sistant justice of the U. S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia. A member of the Wyoming House ol Representatives in 1921, Dr. Arn old was the mayor of Laramie,' Wyoming from 1923-24. Dr. Arnold is married and has two children, RALEIGH (.P Author Harry Golden told the integrated North Carolina Student Legislative Assem bly, Saturday, that President Eisen hower's suggestion that bi-ratial conferences no held in the Jsoulli is just i() years late." The question involved in the segregation issue," Golden declared, "is not one of eliminating preju dices, but a matter of stautory rights." He receiv ed a big -applause when he said, "if the NAACP and every other do-good organization disap peared from the face of the earth tonight, the movement would not skip a beat." Golden, author of "Only In Amer ica" and "For Two Cents Plain," spoke at the closing session of the three-day Legislative Assembly. Representatives from seven Negro colleges and 11 white institutions at tended. Tho Senate completed action Sat urday on a bill to ban segregation in eating establishments. The House Friday passed the measure, which was introduced by the delegation from Greensboro's' A & T College, a Negro institution. Steve Brasw-ell of Duke Univer sity was elected president of the Assembly's Interim Council, sue ceeding Charles R. Johnson of High Point College. Charles McNeil of North Carolina College was chosen vit-e president and Jenny Taylor of Meredith, secretary. Golden, editor of the Carolina Israelite in Chtarlotte, said that if North Carolina should end racial segregation by ordinance, it would open up "the largest untapped con sumer market left on the con tinent." He ' declared, "The great con troversy in the South of recent years involves the same principle as that lnvolv-eu rn irceoom 10 wor ship as one pleases." He told the young men and wom en that no laws can stem dislikes or prejudices "or change hearts of men. This is not the issue." He added. The law can "allow Ameri cans equal participation on ev-ery educational, political and economic level as free citizens." Golden added, "There is too much at stake, and we have it here in American within our hearts and within our tradition of freedom to bring this American ideal into ev ery nation of the world." Golden looked ahead to what would happen if racial segregation should end by ordinance. He said, "Our textile industry will advance as never before. The immediate market 'Will double and treble apart from all other markets, domestic and overseas. Bank and real estate and allied investments would ex pand commsenurably with North Carolina's unrivaled resources, so, too, agriculture in all its branches would lead the field." He declared this would result "because we have lifted a great burden from our shoulders." The student assembly failed to take action on a bill sponsored by Johnson C. Smith University to pro vide that state aid be withdrawn from local education boards -which do not integrate their schools. Deadline Nov Today is the deadline for turning in applications for men's orientation counselor, an nounced Jack Mitchell, chair man of Orientation yesterday. The applications may be obtain ed at and returned to the GM Information desk or the Re serve Reading Room of the Li brary. All applicants who are in terested in serving as 1960 Ori entation Counselors are asked to meet next Tuesday at 7 p.m. in 106 Carroll Hall. At that time a test covering the orien tation material in the Carolina Handbook will be given. Student Party Now Out With New Platform Stressing a better, progressive and more efficient Student Govern ment, the Student Party announced its platform for the spring -elections. Jim Scott, Student Party chair man, yesterday stated the above goals of the party and said that the party pledges activ-e and sound leadership, legislation and endeavor in the following areas to the student body: 1) Continued campaign for a new and adequate student union, funds for salary increases and sabbatical , leaves, and a public subscription program for a new indoor athletic plant. 2) Support of academic and cul ' (See SP PLATFORM, Page 3) The following statement is is sued by Don Black, chairman of the University Party. In the last of my articles before the election I would like to dis cuss the candidates that the Uni- ersity Party has running for the top four positions in Student Gov ernment. For President of the Stu dent Government the U.P. candi date is David Grigg. The follow ing is a statement by Charlie Gray, President of the Student Body. "I would like to give my whole hearted support to David Grigg for President of the Student Body. I have long thought David was a most capable person. This opinion is derived from the privilege J have had of working with David for the past three years in Stu dent Government. "The office of President requir es more than the mere knowledge of one . resident group. It requires an overall knowledge of the camp us and the ability to make import ant decisions in many campus areas. "I definately feel that David can handle every responsibility of the executive position. He is fa miliar with all living areas. He is familiar with every phase of Stu dent Government. He is the only experienced candidate for Presi dent of the Student Body. This campus is fortunate to have such a qualified, conscienti ous student as David Grigg run ning for its top Student Govern ment office. If David is elected. Student Government will move I forward with great strides. If he is not, l teel the inttuence and prestige of Student Government (See UP CANDIDATES, Page 3) cil members, and the chairman of. the Women's Residence Coun cil. Location of the polls are: Dorm Men I-Cobb. Dorm Men II-LewK Aycock, Everett, Stacy and Graham. Dorm Men IH-Joyntr, Alexand er, Winston and. Conner (votes in Winston). Dorm Men IV-Ruffin, Mangum, Manlv, Grimes and Emerson Sta- ! dium (votes in Ruffin). Dorm Men V-Old East, Old j West, Battle, Vance and Pettigrew. I Dorm Men VI-Avcry, Parker and -. Teague. Dorm Women I-Mclver, Alder man, Spencer and Kenan (vote in Mclver). Dorm Women II-Carr, White head, Nurses and Smith (vote in Gerrard Hall). All other women vote in Ger rard Hall. Town Men I-Carolina Inn and Naval Armory. Town Men II-Scuttlebutt. Town Men Ill-Graham Memorial and Gerrard Hall. Town Men IV-Victory Village (vote at housing office) and Ger rard Hall). i" "Defense7 Is Topic Of Mock Demos' Meet Dr. Robin D. S. Higham will speak on "Defense" tomorrow night in Gerrard Hall at 8 p.m. This is janotHcr in a series of talks, concerning platform planks, to be delivered prior to the UNC Mock Democratic Convention, April 29-30. Dr. Higham is a professor in the Department of history. He came to, the University in 1957, after re ceiving his Ph.D. at Harvard. Glen Johnson, chairman of the Platform Committee, urged all members of his committee to make a special effort to attend the speech. "Defense is one of the most important planks to the plat form," Johnson said, "and Dr. Higham should be able to clarify any questions we might have." There will be a question and an swer session after Dr. Higham's speech. These speeches on platform policies by experts in each field will continue approximately once a week until April 4. Panelist Named To Speak With Whyte The following is a partial list of panelists which will be featured with the various 196'0 Symposium speakers. Symposium speaker William II. Whyte, former associate editor of Fortune and author of "The Organization Man", will share the stage with four panelists Monday, March 28. The. procedure adopted by the Symposium calls for a lecture followed by discussion bewecn the speaker and the panel. Composing the panel for the Whyte lecture will be: Milton Heath: Professor of economics at UNC, Health came here in 1.925 after holding faculty positions at Harvard, Kansas, Tufts Sax is visiting professor of botany at Yale. He is a menfber of the National Academy of Science and the holder of a Guggenheim Fellow ship for 1960-61. Paul Sweezy: He is the co-editcr of Monthly Review: An Indepen dent Socialist Magazine. Currently visiting professor of economics at Cornell, Sweezy served in World War II with the Office of Stra tigic Service. He has also worked with the National Resources Com mittee. Robert C. Wood: An associate professor of political science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Wood has advanced the con- and Emory Universities. Dr. Heath has published numerous articles cept that the great migration to the suburbs is causing considerable and papers on economic and public policy, and is a former president of the Southern Economic Association. Karl Sax: The 1959 president of the Genetics Society of America, changes in American society and government. Whytc's talk is presented under the auspices of the Faculty Com mittee on Established Lectures and is entitled "The Alumni Lecture". V if-.-: 4 J MILTOVl HEATH KARL SAX PAUL SWEEZY ROBERT C. WOOD t

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