Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 24, 1958, edition 1 / Page 1
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v fi . m ' ' ' ' ' .. yf SCOTT WEATHER Wirmr, bceminf rather windy with increasing cloudintss. The editor says Senator Ken Scott will be missed more as time passes. See page 2. ' rAim OAce Tuie if rnr VOL. LXV NO. 14 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1958 Complete UP) Wire Service Additional UNC Offices May Be Put In Steele UNC has made an application to Atlanta. Ga.. office of the HHFA. use Steele dormitory for office , and has bevn sent to Washington space next year. J. Arthur Branch. I for approval. UNC Business Manager disclosed ; Branch stated that the applica Wcdncsday. ' tion was not final, and the proposed Branch said University officials mov depnds upon the approval have applied to the Housing and ; Washington. Home Finance Agency to use Steele No rooms have beon assigned to take care of some of the depart- n Steele for next fall. If the ap nients to be dispossessed when proval dws not come, men will be building is started on the proposed i assigned to the dormitory later. Addition to Phillips Hall. j The University borrowed two The application has cleared the million dollars from the HHFA to . , build the three new men's dormi Noted Educator Rosenstengel Is Dead At 61 tories and the recently completed wing to Spencr dorm. WRC Elects Officers T o V i:c i's Residence Council ice ed officers for next year in its MCubr meeting Tuc.sd..y night toll-wing t. e spccinl open meeting on lt l.s changes for freshmen wo- Dr. William Everett Rosentcngcl. til, professor of Education at the University since 1311. tlicd sudden ly yesterday morning. The cause of Ids death was not immediately know n. He was s-iricken at his office jrsterday shortly after 10 p.m. He men students. went home first, said the School Annie Lr.wiie Gird, a junior of Education office, and then was from Elizabeth City, was elected tukv-n to Memorial Hospital. He vice chairman, and Linda Howard, died bcfo:e doctors were able to a j.micr from Alexandria. Va.. rpcrrtc. was elected secretary of the body. Funeral arrangements arc incom- The new treasurer will be Maty l.lclc. pending the arrival of his Montgomery, a junior frcm Lewis sin. William Everett Rosenstengel. hurt:. W. Va. Ji. from Kins Mountain. Lillian Shannonhouse will con- He is survived by Mrs. Rosen- tinue as chairman, that office not stengrl, his son, and three grand- being up for election, daughters. The WRC. after its open meeting. Before coming to Carolina. Dr. discussed the proposed freshman IkisonMcngcl was professor of edu- coed regulations, but did not reach cation at Northeast Missouri State a decision on the rules. Teachers College. He had been The Council will carry considcra- ery active in Missouri chools. tion of the new rules over to their Laving served once as school super- next meeting, probably early next 4 t .i'i'S - , " tf 'J ' k , '; -v i . IT J . . V j . Uy f ; '; ' : , X '. :, - -i . k ( f - t . , 1 . ' , . - ' 1 V I .. . .4- . - i . ..v. , 1 till lilt IDG Hears Dean W Counseling System Proposal I -S. .V- I-4 1 i $1 t i 1 . it.tcndent. w eek. Flying Upside Down Upsets UNC Middies Br PAT DOOLEY with lectures and tours of the By STAN BLACK Dean of Student Affairs Fred H. Weaver addressed the Interdormi- ! tory Council Wednesday night about i the proposed "counseling system." ! which: "of" affects what is now ' known as the lower quad. The dormitories affected are Graham, Stacy, Everett, Lews, and Aycock. The dormitory counselor system as outlined by Dean Weaver pro vides for fifteen graduate students who would serve as advisors on each floor of the five dormitories I in the quad. Dean Weaver said ' that "any graduate student should, ; by his mere presence and example i on the floor, encourage responsible ! self-government,." The counselors i would function purely in an advis- cry capacity without disciplinary f authority, for the? purpose - of "talk J ing to freshmen about any sort of i problems that might come up." "They can assist in special cases. for instance psychiatric problems or boys iWhp have serious unexpected fmanical difficulties. There is a spec , 1 1 ial fund at the discretion of the I Dean Of Student Affairs that could ;) j be used in just such cases." 1 1 The advisors would serve as "a j natural concomitant of the General 4 i College Advisor program. Wrhen pa. j rents - ask the General College Ad- , visor about a boy's scholastic condition, the dormitory counselors could be asked to check personally with the boy" to se if some solution to the problem could be worked out. The counselor system "cannot be regarded as a legitimate arm to the General College, but would sup plement the duties of the General College Advisor." Dean Weaver emphasized that there would be "no conflict between the counselors' duties and the duties of the IDC Representatives- in the dormitories." to power in a military coup in ; concerning me promem oi now to ' The Dialectic Senate walked off He concluded by saying. -If 1952 he lias used force ana sus- ; .."- -. . ;,, the Forensic Council trophy a,d Cas.ro every U,e insurrection- .elocUo., to stay in fllce " nTuX Tiipsriav niont bv winninz ine an- 11 irom Mexico u iu .if'"o ! nual Di-Phi Debate. i lower quad will be evicted. The ro- will, probably remain about the tio of freshmen- to other students same. Don Furfado Appoints Brooks Pres. Assistant nnn vurtadn nrpsident of the; He was speaker pro-tern during student body, announced Wednes-jhis sophomore year. He is a mem day that he has appointed John Brooks as presidential assistant. Brooks, a junior from Green ville, has served on the Student Legislature, Graham Memorial Board of Directors, the presidents cabinet, orientation committee and the stores committee. IT'S COLONEL JOHNSON NOW General Co'iUge" Dian Cecil S. Johnson is shewn receiving a cer tificate appsinting him an honorary colonel in ths Tar Heel Air Force, an honorary organization of the UNC Air Force ROTC unit. Dean Johnson is receiving the certificate frcm Cadet Colonel Thomas C. Farrll of Durham. Di Wins Debate For Coveted Trophy Of Forensic Council ber of the Golden Fleece, the Or der of the Grail, and is a More head Scholar. In a statement announcing the appointment, Furtado said "It is a great privilege for me to be able to announce that John Brooks has consented to serve during the coming year as my presidential assistant. The position is not an official position, but one of such a nature has been badly needed during the past few years in order to cope with the expanding dz mands of the presidential office. "In essence, John will serve a3 a second vice president, attending the Chancellors cabinet and other executive meetings, and filling in at various meetings which neither Ralph Cummings nor myself will be able to attend. His experience and dependability will be a great contribution to the executive of fice of student government. "During the past three years, w 1 Ml A 1 - 1 tv,; njn,tin,, nrn . Jonn nas lliusiraiea corumuuuMy gram is conducted at the Fieldston j his resourcefulness and ability. I Encampment Applications Available At Y Miss Anne E. Queen, of the YMCA-YWCA staff, has announced that applications for the Encamp ment for Citizenship program are available in her office. The en campment will be held in New York from June 29 to August 9 and in Califoriha from June 22 to Au gust 2. IW ED ROWLAND actions have indicated." have the greatest confidence in John, and I am looking forward to working with him in the com- will seek aid from us." Ren. Bill Willis declared Castro T1"" a - . . V i , , , would be no separation ot iresn- ... . . , , r... . . , . . . Takin the attirmaiive on me, ien uary ureer ueiuien a' i 0 Klymi' upmcIc down, the ofti-1 naintcnance hangars where planes lawin. me c ., ! ,,A lc , h,ff ann ., ccrs' club, and 5 o'clock rcvill, ; are made "better than they wer, topic of Amencan a.d to tne re- i as "not necessaruy arm - . e said in " rvin arc memories for 36 Carolina I when they left the factory." vo.utionaries of Fidel Castro in ; money, but ,t may be tleng ; a d me Cubans he is destroy ng Midshipmen now after their three During their- short stay the i Cuba, the Di won 'by a 2-1 vote money and arms and food. .to. "r,' e?r titans SvelhoSi Mlow" day tour of the Pensacola. Fla. ; group practiced escape from ' a j of the judges. Judges were Dr. Wil- ta's government He saul he d U Naval Air Station last week. simulated plane, called the Dil- Ham Ger df the history department, not advocate act.ve a.d to Castro .ng a scotched earth The annual trip is designed toibert Dunker, which had ditched in Mta Joanne Aldridge of the Eng-! ,"We should remain aloof hrough , Sen. R,ck loiter urged the United ,lv local officer candidates in- the water, and escape from a i lish department and Dr. Earl Wal- ! the Monro, Doctrine" but he sa.d : states to assume this role of moral Crested in Navy or Marine Air ! parachute after hitting the water. ! 1 of the political science faculty, j we should fail to aid Batista leader of the world. Any docta- proams. a closer acquaintance' All was not work and skull ses- i After the debate. John Brooks , Rep. Dave Matthews charged j torial regime is evil he said, with the actual duties involved in sions however. One of the nights i presentd the trophy on behalf of , that Castro's followers are mainly ; "and we should act decisively to Ihcsc branches of the service. 'off was spent by a large part of the Forensic Council to the Di's professional revolutionaries, Com-; crush one, especially on our door The enthusiastic middies ic-jtho group at the officers' club. I team of Rick Wolfer, Gary Greer, I munists and non-Cuban. He cited I step " . lihwa . t .i e Pat Arimc nnn navp ivt'ici. rv rpnrp nrmt'mi i v lhhilc i it tine me - v.v., romDanicd bv Mai. L. C. Norton Marine officer here at the NTiOTC . was sung by the group ied by unit, left the Ralclgb-Durham air-iM.3.C. Wr. R. Bagwell. port at 9 a.m. last Monday. I They returned late Wednesday. vmc more enthusiastic, some less enthusiastic, some a bit green, and all well acquainted. Members of the group were in dividually taken up one morninrr j for an hour hop in T-3t training j planes. breakfast tr -i Brooks also presented the Phi- Di Award to Claude Teague for the two debtine societies. Full Schedule Planned For CD A Festival 1776 is not a dead thing, but some thing that is still alive to the cries A new Dlav bv Bernice Kelly ! of the oppressed." mi 1 1 ir iui nun - - . i ! ..... . i i..i.. .alll -barf! Harris. "Pale's Sidinc" will be!4 Keid asked. Was it not through ' riiv'p cnanl urcsented tomorrow night at 8:3oja small group of people working mfu and the art of flying upside ; in the Haymakers' Theatre. The I for sclfdetermination against tyran down were demonstrated by in Mexico city on a raid on Castro's John Brooks presented awards to headquarters there as proof. the Phi's outstanding senior, fresh Sen Pat Adams said the United j man and debator. They were given DavK Reid. former attorney cen- States had aided revolutionaries in to Jim Toibert, past president, erai. oi t.e Muutai Uouy a,u cr- Cuba in 1898 "in the most popular William Fachert, current clerk, rently a law student, summed up of our wars" as proof that w- have j and Warren Coolidge, current chair ll.e Di's arguments by saying:" "We j intervened before. He said Batista : man of the Ways and Means Corn must show the world that our re- J i3 so unpopular that after he came mittee. volution (against Great Britain in men under the plan. "We will not move anyone into the quad. There will be 1300 entering freshmen next year who can easily fill the dorms." On the other hand, no body who wants to remain in the Counselor Interviews Beinq Held Last Time i Today will be makeup day for men who have not yet had their orientation counselors inter ' views. The Orientation Committee j will interview from 4 until 5:30 I this afternoon and from 7:30 ur-.il 9 tonight. This will be the last day of interviews and anyone who has not taken the test or had an inetr view has been urged to cor-'.act the orientation office at 9160. School in Riverdale, at the north ern edge of New York City. This year a new unit will be held at International House, Berkeley, Cal ifornia. Anyone between 18 and 23 may apply. Two Carolina coeds, Misses Sipra Bose and Virginia 'Pooh' Jones, have alreadv aDDlied to attend thz camp in New York. Miss Nancy Revelle, a graduate student here, has attended one session and is rninc trt Yi- on the staff of the o O - , New York unit this summer. Miss Queen said that students ,V r T-v mi c-1t o t trr H oH tVlA Willi UOVC icviuuoij auv.uu,v i-- - . t? mant fr riti7nch; h.vp Dial and proceed down Franklin obtained an unusual experience and j Street to Columbia Street, down j--t t- A. irnnxn have been very grateful for the I mmoia w , v-hiuh opportunity. Allard Lowenstein, a! down Cameron to Raleigh Street Carolina graduate student who at-! and from there to Kenan Stadium. tended the six-week session in New; The parade will begin at z p.m. York, said that it was one of his ! There will be six events m the best summers. , Derby. The Grand National, a re- The cost is S350 for the six lay race will get things under way weeks, exclusive of traveling and : at 2:30. The hit the Geek con oersonal expenses. Both partal and , test, a pie throwing contest, the full scholarships are available. ! race to the flesh, the secret event. Those who are interested should a skit given by each group and contact Miss Queen in the YMCA- ( the Miss Modern Venus contest YWCA office. I are tne other events scheduled. Sigma X Derby Is Scheduled Seven sororities on campus and -the Nurses dorm will compete in the Sigma Chi Derby next Tues day according to Derby Co-Chair-man Dennis McCoy. The Derby- will begin with a parade which will start at the Sun Nine Beauties Vying For ' Miss Chapel Hill' The beauty queen of the Uni-ja public school teacher. She is a structors. All but one of the jrrouo wer? sufficiently interested in the ex perience to go up again that aft ernoon at the eicpensc of possibly losing another meal. The middies were occupied every minute of the working day GM SLATE The following activities have h.en scheduled for today at Gra ham Memorial: Knrptions Committer. 1-2 P "1 (.ri Room ; Rule Committee. -3 p. m.. Roland Parker lounge I; Ways and Means Committee, Ml p.m.. Roland Parker Lounge 11; S'linVnl Council. 7-11 p.m.. irail Room; University Party. :30-7 p.ni..Ro!and Parker Lounge I. and. :M-7:3 p.m.. Woodhouse Conference Room; Student Party Caucus. 7-7:30 p.m., Roland ParUrr Lounge I; Chess Club. 6:0-11 p. m., Roland Parker Lounge II; Orientation Council Interviews. Z- p.m.. and 7:.V10 p m., Uoodhoune Conference Room; Women's Honor Council. :t.V9 p.m.t Council Room: Uni versity Party Caucus. S-7 p. m.. flrall Room; Dance Lesson. 7-8 P .. Rmdrrvou Room. production is being done by the I nical opposition that we won inde UnifUhnrn rnmmunitv Plavers as Ptndence?" He added that Fidel a part ol the Carolina uramauc Association Festival. Admission for the Firday even ing, session of the festival is fifty cents. Here is'the schedule for tomor row's Festival session. 2:00 p.m. Durham High School presents "The Last of the Lowries." Broughton Little Theat re, Raleigh, presents "Balcony Scene." Myers Park. Charlotte, presents "The Slave With Two Faces." Rocky Mount High Sch ool presents "The Le prechaun." 7:30 p.m. Appalachain State Tea chers College, Boone, presents "Tooth or Shave." Atlantic Christian Col lege, "Wilson, presents "This Property is Co ndemned." Appalachain State Tea chers College. Boone, presents "Smokescre en. North ' Carolina Stale College, Raleigh, pre , sents "Frankie I Alhert." Castro is trying to accomplish the same result in Cuba now. Rep. Bill Jackson told the audi ence that "support to Castro would be illegal, imprcudent and imprac tical. Cuba is sovereign and the U. S. must stay out, as our past Wesley Week Main Speaker Is Dr. Beach Dr. Waldo Beach, professor of Christian Ethics at Duke Divinity School, will be the main speaker at the Wesley Weekend Sunday Theme for the weeked is "Who is My Neighbor?" The schedule of events for Sunday is "What Doe? the Bablie Say About Race? a dis cussion in the basement of the Uni versity Methodist Church at 9:30 a.m.; a sermon by Dr. Beach, "And Who is My Neighbor?" at 11 a.m. in the Church; Lunch and discus sion with Dr. Beach in Lenoir Hall upper room at 12:30 p.m. and a student panel on "What Can Be . . . - - - T . ; - r K ; ( '5 s.- , ' . . s " : , .V-- ' '-s ' i " N -pihn m i versity community will be crown -V.1 Hill" 4Vio DVD ed iUlaa viidyci inn nio v- j ning in the local eliminations of the Miss America Pageant. i s-. My- it,1 -i ' 4 a i l f vV.'.UVA'.tEMV. .V&. -j&br .W.'i Vying For "Miss Chapel Hill" Title Receiving a few tips from the current "Miss Chepel Hill" UNC English instructor Joanne Aldridge (right)at last evening's final rehearsal for tonight's ninth annual Jaycee-sponsored "Miss Chapel Hill student panel on "What Can Be j Pageant are the 10 lovely entrants-(seated, left Jo r.ght, Jean "T :Z9U.,.' 'aUw reive her Master of Education de-! Frank Inman. WUliam Lytle. Rea Done to Better Race Relations in' Ruth Hoffman. (Standmg) Lou.se Crumbley, Pat McAuley, wail J " SiTTh Chanel Hill sree at the end of the Summer! Miller. Henry Simpson, and Mi- and the South " in the Church base-j Diana Johnson. The puni.c s invited to attend tne pageam, TO G,. -- . shp is D,annin2 t0 become chad Tanner. men( j High School auditorium. Eigi-.t of th 10 entrants are Carolina coeas. rw.vr t "Miss North Carolina" Dur ham's Elaine Herndon, will be on j hand for the ninth annual Jaycee sponsored Miss Chapel Hill Pag eant. She'll be 'one of five judges who will name the winner from a field of nine entrants. The public is invited to attend the admission event, which will begin at 8 p.m. in the Chapel Hill High School Auditorium. Pageant 4 Co-Chairman Lyman Wilkins em phasized that the program ana judging will be run strictly on the rules for the Miss America selec tion, with each entrant being judged on evening gown, bathing suit, and talent appearances, in with the judges at a pre-pageant banquet. The entrants are Kay Proctor, UNC coed from Chapel Hill, Ann I Riggsbee and Jean Neville local I secretaries, and the following Uni i versity of N. C. coeds Diana Johnson of Asheboro, Pat Mc i Auley of Rocky Mount, Louise ; 1 Crumbley of Charlotte, Ruth Hof f-1 I man of Fort Wayne, Ind., Gail Minnich of Atlanta, and Heln Ad cock and Pat Lamm of Oxford. Miss Lamm yesterday became the final entrant in the Pageant. A graduate student who will re former student at East Carolina College and has been an entrant j for the title of Miss Oxford in her home town. For her talent she will sing. ' Judges for the affair will be N. C. Jaycees President Jack Sharpe of Kannapolis, Mrs. J. D. Brame of Durham, Fast N. C. Jay cees President Bill Henderson of Raleigh, Raleigh newspaperman Charles; Craven and Miss Hern don. The reigning Miss Chapel Hill, Joanne Aldridge, is a University graduate student and freshman English instructor. She placed among the 10 finalists in last year's Miss North Carolina Pag eant. She and her runner-up for the title last year, Judy Dockcry. will act as entrants' advisers in tomorrow evening's selection. . ' The winner will receive a S20i) college scholarship for the college of her choice, a wardrobe, and will represent Chapel Kill in ihz Miss North Carolina pageant in Charlotte this summer. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yes terday included: , Misses Ruth Andrews. Shirley llamrick, Jeti Lasitter, Martha Taylor and Elizabeth Stack, and Richard Allsbrook, Shelton Austin, Vincent Coilura. Leter Julian,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 24, 1958, edition 1
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