Mil- SUNDAY, MARCH 10, m? FACE TWO TH1 DAILY TAR SEL CAMPUS STATE WORLD Advice, Judgement Are E xum s Dispensing advice to General College students on plagiarism and how to avoid it, interviewing candidates for Men's Honor Council, presiding over session.,- of the council it's all part of the job for Jim Exum, chairman of the Men's Honor Council. He heads up this important function of student government and juggles a sccre of other interests as well. . A senior from Snow Hill, North inventor and manufacturer of Happy Jack dog remedies. His father makes Happy Jack from his own formula and mixes it in the same Maytag "washer that he used ten years ago when an interest in dogs prompted the enterprise. From 'this ccmes Exum's nick name, "Happy Jack." He claims that the mange medicine is just as beneficial to the human scalp as it is ; to dog hide. Exum's interest in campus affairs is characterized by his participation in the University Party. Until his Honor Council job removed him from the pol itical scene, he was an active UP worker. He was floor leader for his party in Legislature during his sophemore and junior years, and he received the UP nomination for student body president in last year's spring elections. Early in the semester, Exum was placed in the position of defending the Honor Council and its policies after a suggestion by a Tar Heel columnist that the H oil of ; System be abolished. Of the Honor Council's im portant judiciary function, that of upholding the Honor System, Exum says, "I think that the Honor System is the most won derful possession the students have here. It is synonomous with th Carolina way of life. Probably none of us will realize how much it has meant to us until we Jeave Chpael Hill." Of his own position, which along with the other members of the Council, bears the weight of reprimand, probation and su spension for violators of the Honor System, he says. "My ex perience on the Council has been interesting but hard. ' I feel a great hurt every time the Council has to take severe action against any student, but I feel that such action is necess ary if the system is to be en forced." Exum is a Morehead Scholar. He is justly proud of his presi dency cf the Carolina chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. In addition, he holds membership in several honorarics, the Order of the Old "Well, the Order of the Grail, and the Order of the Golden Fleece. He is chairman ofthe Interim Committee for the Carolina Sym posium, the organization which is Appropriation To Library: If May Be A Little Higher There is an indication the University's library appropria tion which has been the cause of quite a bit of disturbance here may not be so low after all. Gov. Luther Hodges, speaking last week, said Advisory Budget Commission recommendations for library books and journals here aije 3Batlj Wat fteei The official student publication of the Publications Board of the University of North Carplina, where it is published daily except Moo day and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Entered as second class matter in the post office a't Chapel Hill. N. C, under the act of March 8, 1870. Subscription rates: Mailed. $4 a year. $2.50 per semester; delivered,, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester. Editor . FRED POWLEDGE Managing Editor CHARLIE SLOaN Night News Editor Night Editor . THE DAILY TAR HEEL Staff Writers V- Big Jobs Carolina, Exum is the son of the 5 F -. . . . ... X x i, - J '--.if I ; JIM EXUM '. . . advice and Happy Jack s responsible for bringing a "prom inent group of speakers to Caro lina biennially. Exum is a Sigma Nu, and he holds the office of vice president in his fraternity. Exum is an ardent sports en- , thusiast and a basketball fiend. ' He likes to go down to the gym and: watch the bays work out. He does weight lifting, but a budding career cn the wrestling team was cut short for him' by an untimely accident. While showing some element ary holds to a new grappler, the hefty man sat down on and con: sequently broke Jim's back. In the summertime, Exum is a counselor at Camp Sea Gull on the Carolina coast, and he claims that it's the "most outstanding sea faring camp for boys in the South." He loves to sail, and is a member of the sailing staff of the camp, with racing as his specialty. Exum teaches a Sunday School class cf sixth grade boys weekly at the Episcopal Church. Exum doesn't like the prospect of leaving Chapel Hill for good this spring, and he's thinking s?riously of coming back some day to live. An English major, he is con sidering entering law school in the fall, either here or at Har vard. But there's another opening waiting for him. He'd also like to "go home an help daddy make Happy Jack." may have ben cut a little bit too thin. ' ' To some University observers, there -is' no doubt that appropriations-have been cut too thin. Head Librarian Andrew Horn. ' who will resign at the end of this academic year, has been quoted as saying if he had not already -decided to leave he would now, after learning of the budget cut,; Charlie Sloan Graham Snyder WEEK IN, REVIEW Joey Payne, Charlie Sloan Highvay . Reshuffle Is Likely A bill to reorganize the state's highway system sped through the ; Senate and appeared headed for General Assembly approval' last week. If the bill passes both houses, it will be a triumph for Gov. Luther Hodges, Capitol Square observers were saying. It will prove what many state .leaders have thought for a long time, they say: That Luther Hodges sym bolizes the strong-governor idea in state politics. The bill was drafted by the Governor's Highway Safety Com mission. Its main provisions are these: Reduction of the State Highway Commission from its present strength. of 15 members to seven A policy-making body, com posed of the seven commission ers, which will form policies fci the state's entire road system not just a division at a time. Appointment of a Director of Highways, a career pff Lcialj ' '; J ; A part of the. bill, termed the; "no-politics" section, would have banned highway employees, from, soliciting political cordributions; . ; '.::.-v::.v Back? racking i On School Pay Gov. Luther Hodges last week backtracked on an issue which he helped create increase in teachers' pay. The governor, who had rec ommended strongly a 9.1 per cent budget increase for North Carolina schoolteachers, told his weekly press conference: "I feel that during this sess ion of the General Assembly we will have to realize the short-term necessity of raising : teacher,, and. sttar employees'., "' bir ' bvond 'tfiU,i&Mi tireomUlnl mended by the Advisory Bud get Commission and myself. The State Board of Education," viewing the proposed 9.1 percent increase, had requested 19.31 instead. State -and highway em- ployee associations hd ..Kt. ed a 15 percent raise; the, bud get commission and thi' gover nor recommended eight ;percentV The governor explained his change of mind thb way: . . my tendency is to try to think in terms of long-range progress because my experience has been that emphasis on a short-range need can sometimes prejudice, a long-range improve ment. However, it is well-known that in dealing with government al'problems involving millions of people and their ideas and feelings.- we must sometimes place, emphasis on a short-term necess-. ity and adjust any long-range plans to the short-term empha sis." . ' while on duty, along with other provisions. The section has been deleted by legislators. - Also in the General Assembly, legislators: Got a bill providing for su spension of a driver's license if he is convicted of two speeding or reckless driving charges with in a year. Got a bill to lower the mini mum voting age in Nofth Caro lina from 21 to 18 years. Considered a bill allowing the use of unmarked patrol cars for the State Highway Patrol. The bill passed in the Senate after considerable debate, and was sent to the House. ' ' Elsewhere in the state, Ital- : eigh to be specific, 16 N. C. Stafe ? ' College students got suspended ; sentences and fines following an ' c""1' -morning riot at the college!: " They were part of 27 students : arrested on charges of rioting and ' d:sorderly conduct. The riot came : near men's dormitories ani Rey nolds Coliseum, whers the At lantic Coast Conference basket ball tournament was in prog ress. The students apparently re volted because spectators' auto mobiles blocked parking at tha dormitories, police theorized. Tear gas and prison buses were used to quiet the students" "who threw ' rocks at police cars and slashed tires. Judge Doub heard the students Friday, then handed down his sentences: 30 days on the roads suspended on payment of $25 fines and costs of court. IN THE WORLD: 1'eY Edith MacKinnon Israel created an atmosphere of relief over, the ebbing of the crisis in the. Middle East when' Prime Minister Pavid Ben-Gur-. ion ordered Israeli troops to get out of Gaza' and Aqaba. coastal , areas last Monday. - ; "" ! '' - The Israeli order : called forth' a chain of mixed 'reactions: In 4 f me? - i- it, ( s. ,,JL. 11 ' !1t i i i U O i III W it iti 1 lit 1 miil-i ,iluhi : i t I ' ' Despite the-rain'and! cold weather and sore-throats, things were beginning to shape up on the vernal qufno'x front." TharcOed Oorls Adklns Ihspectin-g f lowering shrubbery in the Arboretum- Staff pho tographer W-oody. Seart-'caught the picture between rains. . ; - . .q, tijc r AfPMC. 1"' ' K fasBusy .; At U N G Politics Dominated Last week was a very busy one for folks in Chapel Hill. "Chrono logically, it went this way: , On Monday, student politics get underway even more when the Student Party elected more candidates for Student Legisla ture jobs. The next' day, the , .University Party . picked legisla. -Uiro v candJa,tcs ; - and George r Ilagsdale .-s its. choice. for senior class, .preside it. . The. parties will t continue, this, weekjrit;)- the high . pressure ..n:.uunatlons; r Top stu ,d?it,ba(Ui, oflices.and the editor : slupoKtfie aily JaJ Heel, . . (bliafges vycre droppeu against three students following a cdm ' bi nation i. parity.' raid-rally the Fri day, before. One student was found guilty and - charged 'with costs of court for disorderly con duct. . . A report had it that the Camp- L'it Abner 1 t&xvhmC 1 1. IT WAi DURiNG INTiRM!S,3iON AT THE OPfKPtA-AND SUDDENLY, tA v piAvioND - Studded I iy ir Pogo I ON YOU 7 i . vi S EvSZTHINa l ... IE fjfjHM?w!lTl!flf hn?-J he Jerusalem, Israeli students and police clashed when the students set up a demonstration against : the new agreement. With shouts of "Stop the withdrawal," the "rioters expressed the feelings of 1 many in Israel who oppose this -la'test "step' toward, the ending of ' the Israeli-Egyptian conflict. - The' battling Israeli Prime Min ; ister faced a storm of ridicule. . t v' .. i ' i ': t ' ; . - ' It Was Spring Just A r ?.t: us Christian-Council is consider ing offering scholarships to worthy white and Negro students in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area. Dr.. S. T. Emory, 60, chairman ,of the UXC Dept. of Geology and Geography since 1951, died Wed . nesday aftrr a serious illness. Moreheid ' scholarships were -awarded to 32 North Carolina high schoof' seniors. The Student Legislature, in its Thursday rtight session, approved measures:' . Appropriating : $750 to the UNC Band " for ' transportation 'charges' during the band's spring tour. , Approving "a look-see Into the feasibility of a new campus hum or magazine to replace Tarna tion, wh'icTiMied a year ago of a serious pocketbook condition. gglM'AS WAY &MQHWA IT WOULDN'T PM TO IOOK. 4 if up, wouio rrt'"6v&5 IU HAV6 TO 5gT AUONS WITH TMIS ONg " ITS CUT OP TUNE 1 , .fc. ; - v THE FAMOUS l PINCHED y J BEAN FORT KNOX AT THE T UNOUESTKDNABLV WRIST WATCH ?- j OPERA, THE WORK OF WORTH A f 'J -rup 1 ! , EH ? f THAT MUSIC-LOVING I Midde sarcasm and protest in his own Parliament Tuesday night when he defended his position on the Gaza situation. But Ben-Gurion was expected to win out over the opposing threat of no-confidence when he stated that Is rael's' .October k invasion had achieved its goal ol delivering the country from danger rather than conquest. :'. ' " " -jr jk Little ( A Trio Of Wins ' A basketball fever 1 running rampant over the campus Veen-' tering around UNC and the num ber one Tar .Heels, finally cul minated in the hectic three day ACC tournament. It was a clean sweep for the Tar Heels; 81-61 over Clemson, 61-59 over Wake Forest and then the buggyride victory and the crown over South Carolina, 95 75. A disturbance on the Lenoir Mall front shaped up after sev eral student workers at the University-run cafeteria protested that they weren't being paid cor rectly. Director George Prillaman ol the cafeteria called his workers together Wednesday night and told them such a request was out of bounds. He also spoke against student workers who wrote let ters on the subject to The Daily Tar Heel and against The Daily Tar Heel itself for printing the letters and editorials on the sub ject. CNZSAN'&UPA WTTL2 WITH H5Z A SONSy go i -A I - I 1 i i S. I " 7 i n In Egypt the press moved for ward to declare that Egypt had gained a point in the Mideast fracas by the failure of the Is raelis to withdraw promptly from the contested areas. Press spokes men maintained that Israel would lose many friends by appearing: to hesitate on a solemn pledge. The United States was drawn into the picture when an Egyp tian paper accused her of en couraging the Israeli stubborn ness in the withdrawal. Following the declaration made by the Israeli Foreign Minister before the UN General Assembly, Al Ahram came out with the statement that "there is some sort of agreement between Amer-' ica and Israel regarding the fut ture of the Gaza Strip and free dom of navigation in the Aqaba Gulf." But the Israeli announcement was not made without reserva tions, it seems. Israel is still pre pared to fight. Speaking bef or the United Nations, Israeli For eign Minister Mrs. Golda Meii warned that Israel will go to war against the Arabs again in the future if Israeli security war rants such a move. ' ' Now that the Israelis are tech . nically out of the Gada area, con trol has been turned over to the UN Emergency Force troops, which began moving into the strip Thursday. Hopes for the speedup of Suez traffic came about as one of the ' first noticeable results of the Is raeli announcement. The Egyp tians, who have been slow in clearing the important channel following its blocking during the height of the conflict, were urged to get moving on the clearing pro cess. Secretary of State Dulles warried; Egypt to stop "dragging its feet," and begin the- opening immediately. - Still dealing with the Mideast 7 problem, President Eisenhower ' won strong approval for. his fight-jf-we-must resolution in both the Senate and House this week. The doctrine, subject t :much' debate, is designed to halt : Communist aggression in the Mid "east area by military" force if deemed necessary by the Presi dent." Authorization was also given to the President to use at his discretion ' $200 million in eco nomic aid to the area between now and July'l. WHITTAKER If the nomination made by President Eisenhower is confirm ed by the Senate, Charles Evans Whittaker will be the first Mis sourian to serve as jurist by ap pointment on the Supreme Court. Whittaker, a Republican, was nominated by President Eis enhower for the Supreme Court position to fill the vacancy left by the retirement of Associate Justice Stanley F. Reed, a Dem-' ocrat. Eisenhower's nomination puts two of his Supreme Court ap pointments before the Senate Judiciary Committee. New Jer sey Democrat William J. Bren nan is now before the hearings of the committee. Granted Sen ate approval, the Supreme Cout will then be made up of five Democrats and four Republicans. By A! Capp RELAX.- I KNOVV WHERE OF CUF. LOWESr PA. FLATFEET TO FljMDHIM.7 i will now pinch the PINCH ER- e.UTHE'SUSERV OH THESE DANGEROUS OO&S ( - By Walt KeUy ONVf ON & T5KN9 TyNT r.3 ex& rr Ajn't eo much Uow "MOiTVtl Ikes Cough I I Qtsisfing James Rcston The New York Times WASHINGTON President Eis enhower 'finds himself in an un usual position today. Instead of being criticized for leaving Washington too much, he is being urged by his associates and even by his critics to go away into the sunshine for his health. The President has been try ing unsuccessfully to shake a cough for ix weeks. Despite constant medication, he has been barking and straining his system during most of thistime, and his hearing has been impaired by an inflammation of the left ear." - This was all so apparent at the President's news conference today that the reporters almost forgot all the great issues in the world and questioned him main ly about his health, the kind of water he drinks (bottled, tap, fluoridated, or otherwise) and on a variety of thirialities. He had boned up on a host of questions about Suez, Anglo French relations, the future of Germany, disarmament, etc., but his health was. on everybody's mind.; And he. either wasn't ask ed the big questions, or forgot about them himself when he was asked for his estimate cf the sit uation in the Middle East. . When he was asked about go ing away for a rest, he left no doubt that he would like to do so,, but explained in a throaty voice that with Vice President Nixon in Africa and - Secretary of State Dulles in Asia, he could not do it. Behind this poignant personal situation there is a serious prob lem 'of Government The Admin istration has not been organized properly to deal effectively with the mounting problems of gov erning under a President who must guard his health and spend a , considerable time away from the capital. " ' - General Eisenhower him sell ha3 defined this problem more accurately than anybody else, He was perfectly candid wtih the people "before he was nominated and re-eiected. "It would be ndle to pretend that my health can be wholly restored to the excellent state in which the doctors believed it to be in mid-September (1955)," he announced publicly in January of 1956. "My future life must be carefully regulated to avoid ex cessive fatigue ." When he announced hii can didacy for a second term, he told the nation: "Readiness to obey the doctors out of respect to my present du ties and responsibilities is man datory in my case. I am now doing so and I intend to con tinue doing so for the remainder of my life, no matter in what capacity I may be living or may be serving." Since then he has made a re markable recovery, but these limitations naturally and prop erly remain. Meanwhile, the pe riod since the November election has been one of constant crisis in the field of foreign affairs. Far from disengaging the na tion from some of its commit ments overseas, as some offi cials hoped the Administration could do, the United States has taken almost sole responsibili' ity for pacifying the Middle East, and is now getting more deeply involved in the problems of Africa. This trend toward total in volvement in the affairs of the whole wprld may be inescapable, but the cumulative effect of all " this on the President and on Secretary of State Dulles, who has had to carry the main bur den in the Middle East, is be coming increasingly obvious. Mr. Dulles was asked a ques tion at his news conference on Wednesday about the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization meet ing Australia. His reply indi cates the problem created by an overwhelming work-load that "Mr. Dulles does not seem to be able to share with others. I am not aware of that," he said. "I have not as yet had a chance to study the agenda for the SEATO conference. I am leaving for that tomorrow, as perhaps you know, and my docu mentation is going to be on the plane. I am not yet quite fully versed as to what may come up 'there."

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