TUESDAY, MAY 21. 1?57 ?AGB POUR THE DAILY TAR KEEL hao I n n lj n v1 t! f- i-i ti li -J U U Of I! aleoteQ t n Mao Cufl.ir-E! Co s i -By PETE IVEY " ' William wanuey Aycock is a man cf talented versatilityi ANNOUNCEMENT BY, Illinois College of OPTOMETRY Applications tor admission to j ' classes beginning February 14, 1957 and September 9, 1957 re now being received. Three iyear course of professional study Leading to x the Degree of Doctor of) Optometry Requirements far Entrance! Two years (60 emester hours or equivalent quarter) hrs.) in pe ci&ed liberal arts (and sciences. WRITE FOR BULLETIN TO: REGISTRAR ILLINOIS COLLEGE of OPTOMETRY 3241 So. Michigan Ave. Technology Center, Chicago 16, III. V COLLEGE DAZE j Most studies of students at college disclose That boys and girls aim at quite'difFerent things. The boys learn new angles add strings to their bows; The co-eds would rather add beaus to their .strings! MORALt Why be high-strung? Relax with tbte BIG, BTZ pleasure of Chesterfield King! More full-, flavored satisfaction from the world's best tobaccos. PLUS King-size filter action ... a better tobacco niter because it's packed more . smoothly by ACCU.RAY! Chesterfield King hat everything! S50 gore to Bob Armknecht, Dartmouth College, tor Au Chester t tela poem. tSO for every philosophical verge accepted for cation. Chester field, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N. Lterxt A Mr an Totwcco Co. From all at WENTWORTH & SLOAN JEWELERS f': sC-"s,,vw y'TSi Come in and see our wide selection of beautiful . . . ...... Graduation Gifts! r 'ft'- - j ,Mf The 41-year old Chancellor-elect of the University cf North Carolina is regarded by colleagues, students and neighbors as both a scholar and administrator, possessing a ccmbin ation of well-balanced qualities. They cite ins'anccs to prove it. "lie's an early riser," said a ifeJlow law professor in Manning Hall. '"He gets, to, work sometimes, a ' couple of hours ahead of anyone else. I remember during one sum mer school when he was undertak ing a new course. He got aip at four or five o'clock in the morning to moke '.sure he was well-prepared." "He lias an abundance of drive ond defcrm nation," said another faculty member, "yet he is relaxed, frienOy and has" a quick smile and ready wit.' His students declare that in teach ing law he is painstaking and lucid. He plunges deeply into the detail ed work of his profession and does not ?pare himself. Yet, he takes the Lme to be a good neighbor and to 1 e publi of US , IV UKIGARETTPC I X "v., Chancellor-elect And Mrs. William Shown above is incoming chancellor .William. Ay cock with his wife B. House as Chancellor of the University of North Carolina in July. in addition to being an established teacher of law and administrator, Star, Bronze Star and Legion of Merit for outstanding performance as devote affectionate attention .to his family. He has sered as. president ci the PTA. k tory." His brilliance as a student is j Mrs. Aycock is the former Grace testified to by his former teachers; Mew born of Snow Hill. She attend his superior intellectual endowments ed Duke University a year and was are Vr.e first " things mentioned in graduated from Woman's College of .ny conversation here about Bill I the University in Greensboro. She Aycock. . f j was May Queen. The Aycock's were His purely scholarship achieve- j married in 1941. Their two children inents are amplified by his prac- f.re William P. Aycock II anid 'Nau tical side. For example, he did cy Aycock. arnica of Lie actual construction work in buih ing liis house in Chapel Hill; he tends a garden in the sum mer. Family Man Once a friend noticed that the grass in the Aycock fronts yard; was net doing ro well because the children had been romping on tlie lawn. Peihaps if Uie thildien stay ed off the lawn awhile, the gras would grow, the neighbor suggest ed. Bill Aycock laughed. "Right now I'm raising children," he said. "When I get through raising chil dren, I'll start raising grass." His devoted family life, as shown by that remark, was reciprocated the day the Aycock family left home .or Raleigh for the selection pro cedure by the board of trustes. It i'ad ibeen stressed to the children that their . father might or might not be named Chancellor at Chapel Hill. Nancy Aycock, 10 years old, said, "It makes no difference what they do. You will always be my Chan ,elior." Judgment Those who know Bill Aycdck best stress his quiet courage and good judgment these combined with abi lity to make quick decisions when i.ecessary. As an illustration they joint to his World War II record. As a training officer at Fort McCel land, Alabama," he helped prepare Japanese-American troops for com 'jt, troops that later performed so notably in Italy. Early in December 1944, he went lo Germany, as a battalion com mander in the 346th Regiment of the 87th Infantry Division. His first combat experience came a few days after his arrival in Ger many. On December 16, 1944, the German Army massed its troops and hurled them at the advancing Allies in the Battle of "the Bulge. I:a the fighting from Dec-ember 16 to December 23 when the "Germans v.ere finally rrpuised. Lieutenant Colonel Aycock "s performance was recognised by the Silver Star medal for bravery in action. Later es an advance infantry unit the degree of J. D. ' of General George Patton's Army ' What has professors thought of ; at the time of the March, 1945, Ids ability was evident in their ac ! break through of the Siegfried Line, tions. He. was invited to join the j orders were issued to Liehtenant i acuity, and he accepted in 1948. ! Colonel Aycock's battalion to stop until everyone else could catch up. He also was decorated with the Bronze Star Medal and the Legion of Merit. Grace Mewborn Aycock . When anost Chapel Hill people mention Bill Aycock they add. "Don't leave Grace out. She's an! important part of the Bill Aycock "The Aycock's are good neigh--4 bors," declared the professor Mho lives next dcor to them. "They don't pry into your business, but if you reed them because of sickness or ether emergency they lare right there to help." Mrs. Aycock has een a den mother in the Cub Scouts and her work with the school Library has been exiceptional. When he came back to school at Chapel Hill to study law after the war, the Aycocks lived at Victory Village, the temporary war-time wooden housing built near the cam fus. Many students expect the new Chancellor to be especially under standing of students housing prob lems, their self-help work and their scholarly as well as their extra- 1 1 viiTicula activities.. . For Bill Aycock has excelled in all of them. A Hard Worker From the time he was 12 years old he has always had a job to do. During his boyhood in Selma he worked in a grocery store, a filling 'station, in a drug store and on a livestock farm. At State College he earned a part of his expenses by working in the college book store. He was President of the Student Body tat State, and was a member of Blue Key and of Golden Chain. He received his bachelor's degree in Dducaon at State in 1936. He was 21 years old. He entered the Uni- ersity at Chapel Hill that same year and in June of 1937 he receiv ed the master's degree in history and political science. The next three years he taught history in Greensboro High School, and during the summers he at tended Duke University at one time .end Harvard University another. Later he was with the State Head quarters of the NYA in Raleigh, help ing to set up vocational projects, and there he remained until he en tered the Army in January, 1942. It had always been Bill Aycock's ultimate goal to study law, and this he did when he was separated from the Army in 1945. He was edi tor of the Law Review, and was graduated m February 1948, with Previously, he had enjoyed a brief ; taste of teaching when one of his professors came down with laryngi- tis and couldn t talk. Aycock taught the class from the notes supplied by the professor. He liked the teach ing experience. "I think teaching, more than anything else, gives a '4 B. Aycock Grace. Aycock will replace Robert The 41 year old chancellor-elect, lists among his honors the Silver an office ir World War II. man a chance to develop his own talent," he says. "You nave more control over your success or failure. ' It's really up to the individual to be a good teacher or a bad teacher. Law is constantly changing and developing, and the teacher . has -to stay up to date. It is a constant VJ TW CT. W lilt U1U Lillet Vfc V . Other 'institutions ' Aycock think" s ' it 4s a ":good idea to teach at other institutions, as well as at Chapel Hill. This year he's teaching at the University of Vir ginia. One recent summer he. taught at the University of Texas. In Texah there is a certain unique custom of surprising the visiting professora on the final day of their tenure. ,'On the last day in class at Austin, one of the students suddenly chal- lenged Professor Aycock on a point of law. , "You say you are right," said the student, "but the book doesn't cgree with you." He read from the book. "Now are we to believe what you say, a visit- ing professor from North Carolina?" Uie student asked. "Well, I believe I am right about it," said Ayeockj "Then,"' said the student angrily, "I suppose wer.,4may as well tear up the book and throw it away.'.' The student tore the book in two, and threw it on the floor. Instaritly there was a icommotion in the class. Two other students al-ose and began shooting revolvers. Then it dawned on Aycock that a joke was being pulled. He had been forewarned that something was (go ing to happen, but he was not cer tain hat it was to be. In furthen ceremony he was given a 10-gal-lon Texas hat. ' Military Law 1 At Chapel Hill, Prof. Aycock. teaches three main courses: federal law, property law and military law. Aycock himself installed the mili tary law course at Chapel Hill. That is what he is teaching at Virginia this year. He' is co-author of a book, "Military Law Under the Uniform Code of Military' Justice," "written in collaboration with Colonel Seymour W. Wurfel, now judge advocate of the Fifth Corps in Germany. He has taught at Chapel Hill 6ince 1948, and during one summer he was personal assistant to Dr. Next Saturday Is Poppy Day Poppy Day, sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary, will be observed in Chapel Hill on Sat urday, according to an announce ment made by Mrs. John J. Keller jr., President of the local Unit, j 'and Mrs. K. T. Maaaen, roppy chairman. On this day, members of the Chapel Hill Unit, assisted by members' of the Y-Teens, will sell poppies - Jtn the streets in Chapel HilL , , L ' Frank P. Graham. United Nation's representative to India and Pakis tan. Last year during the absence of Dean of the Law School Henry Brandis, Aycock was Acting Dean of the Law School. The Aycock's are memebrs of the Ccinmun'ty Church in Chapel Hill. He is a member of the N. C, State Bar, the North Carolina Bar Asso ciation and the American Bar Asso ciation. He has been a member of the Chapel .Hill Zoning Board of Ad justment. " When the trustees of the Univer sity set out' to find a man of bal anced scholarly and administrative abilities, they hoped to discover a man with those qualities, and any thing extra he possessed would be so much the 'better. In Chapel Hill today the consensus is that the President, selection committee and trustees have chosen well, for they have a scholar who has also proved his administrative capacity. Be sides this, his thoroughness in teach ing, his publications activity, his conscientious determination to work hard, his devoted' family life, his WE'LL BUY ALL YOUR OLD BOOKS ' 0 Live Texts We pay top ' prices for texts that will be used again, at U.N.C. O Dropped Texts We'll search the market for a spot to salvage some of your loss .when a text is dropped. 0 Enjoyable Books We can use books you no longer want 6n your shelves. The next fellow that comes along may find them as de lightful as you did a year or so ago. When Exams Are Over, There'll Be Green Money For You At THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 1 , 205 East, franklin St, , Open Till 10 P.M. IS tfie Qradutdes o, We have enjoyed serving you since we rnoved into (Shape! Hiil. We know that you will be a great success in the field which you have chosen for.your life's work. We want to take this oppor tunity to wish you the very best in the years to come. We sin cerely hope that you will come back to "The Hill" often, and when you do, be sure to come by and chat with us for a while. We will miss you and all that you have done in your four years at Carolina. Again, the very best of everything to each and every one of you. and . . . fo each and every one of our wonderful student customers . . . '-' s . " We want to take this opportunity fo wish you all a very happy and wonderful summer, and we-are looking forward to seeing you again next fall in Chapel Hill. It has been our pleasure to serve you in the best possible way. We have made many, many ' friends in the short time that we have been in Chape! Hill, and we certainly count you among our best. If, in any. way, anytime, we can be of service to you, do not.hesitate to call on us. y uw.ui bility to make himself clear are the extras that assure the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill of new and vigorous leadership in the best .radition of the University. William B. Aycock was .born in Ijucama, N. C. October 26, 1915, the on of the late William Preston Ay 70ck and Mrs. Aycock. The family lived in Selma where W. P. Ay ?ock was a lawyer and judge of recorders court. His mother still lives in Selma. , A further tribute to his judgment agility was signified by a law i chocl -colleague who said. "Bill f : 1 COMPLETE GRADUATION AND 1 1 f 3 sense of humor, and his mm mm V4y erk m!Vmm ETVLVJ UjWUU DRUG l t 1957 .. l!!i(()irii(0iinA Aycock is the kind of man v.:.o con be dropped into almost any kin I of situation and land on his feet." George L. Coxhoad U.N.C. '42 Campus Representative NEV YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY it j J 'ft J ' iii S : Mm SELECTION OF FATHER'S DAY CARDS 7 111 STORE oiir sincere. . Mi Tf v?-