tl.tt.C. Library
Seciala Dept.
Box 870
Chapsl Hill, N.C.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy and cooUr with
thanct of afttrnoon and tvtning
thundtrthowtrt. N
CLOSED STUDY
The editor says closed study
worst of all proposed freshman
:oed rules. See page 2.
VOL. LXV NO. 148
Offices in Graham Memorial
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1958
Complete ( Wire Service
FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE
m a m m
Football Story-Teller
Herman Hickman Dies
WASHINGTON', M Herman
Hickman, the rotund football coach
who became a radio-TV personali
ty, died yesterday of a complica
tion of internal ailments.
Hickman was 48. His home was
at New Haven, Conn.
Ho had been in Providence
Hospital since March 28. after suf
fering an ulcer attack at La Plata.
Md.. while on his way to Florida
with Mrs. Hickman to visit his
mother.
An operation was performed
last Monday and Hickman appear
ed to be progressing until yester
day evening when an acute hem
orrhage in the esophagus sot him
back. Attending phvicinns said
severe liver and kidney complica
tions made his condition critical.!
He laped into unconsciousness
this morning and c'.icd at 4:15
p m.
Mrs. Hickman and his mother
were at the bedside, along with
New York restaurateur Toots
Shor and Dave Driscoll. a bui
nes associate.
Hickman
at Yale several years ago. His
Tennessee drawl, wit and broad:
knowledge qualified him as a tele- j
vision performer in fields other ,
than sports. He could quote poetry j
for hours and wrote verse. !
He conducted sports programs1
on both radio and television and
wrote articles tor magazines.
i )
: i
SPONSORS
U.N.C. SPRING GERMANS
Tennessee
a star
retired a.s
lineman at
head coach
Undergrads
May Arrange
To Pre-Register
i
Appointment books will be,
available for all undergraduates '
listed in General College to sign
up for pre registration appoint
ments Monday, April 27 through
May 4. The books will be in South
r.uilding.
Pre registration will start May
5 and continue until May 17.
Sam Magill
Will Speak
At SP Meet
Monday night at 7:30 Sam Ma-,
ill will speak to the Student;
Party on the new freshman advisor
system planned for the lower
quad. After hLs speech he will
inswer any questions from the
floor.
'This is a very important issue
and I feel that students should
:u-quaint themselves with the pro
posal, "said Leon Holt. Student
Party Chairman. '"We would like
!o extend a special invitation to
those who arc going to be Orienta
tion Counselors next fall."
This is another one of the pro
grams presented by the Student
Party to educate students to cam
pus affairs. The meeting will take
place in Roland Parker Lounge I
and II.
V
, ' s'
x s 5; i ,
Educator From South Africa
s
Compares Notes On Race Issue
By CHARLIE SLOAN
Africa isn't all dark continent,
Mau Mau and movie sets.
Dr. Violaine Idelette Junod. a
lecturer in Native Administration
at the University of Natal in Dur
ban, Union of South Africa, visited
the Carolina campus Thursday
Today Is Parents' Day
In School Of Medicine
GERMAN SPONSORS Starting with the top row, left to right, the lovely young ladies are Miss Ginny
Dawson, Snow Hill; Sue Buchanan, Asheville; Ccnchita Rodriquez-Lob, Havana, and Sara Williamson,
Darlington, S. C. In the second row are Miss Kay Musgrave, Lexington; Crockett Rader, Macon, Ga.;
Susan Riddle, Chateau, N. J.; Anita Louise Edwards, Raleigh, and Linda Flynn, Salisbury. In the third
rcw are Miss Shan Helms, Monroe; Linda Weaver, Greensboro and St. Louis, Mo.; Ann Norton, Atlanta,
Ga.; Gayle Shaw, Miami, Fla., and Eleanor Warren, Mt. Airy.
The second annual Parent's Day
will be held today at the UNC
School of Medicine.
Over 400 parents, -students and
faculty members are expected to
attend the day-long event which
is sponsored jointly by the UNC
Medical Parents' Club and the
School of Medicine. Registration
will begin at 9:30 a.m. in the lobby
of N. C. Memorial Hhospital. This
will be followed by tours of the
hospital and the School of Medi
cine. A business meeting of the Med
ical Parents' Club will be held in
the Clinic Auditorium at 11 a.m.
Malcolm B. Seawell, attorney gen
eral of the state of North Caro
lina and representative of the
State Administration, will bring
greeting from Governor
Hodges
G. Herring Jr. of Goldsboro, presi
dent of the club, will preside.
Dr. W. Reece Berryhil, dean of
the Medical School, will speak on
the activities of the school. A mo
tion picture, "The Medical Student
at Work," will be shown.
This will be followed by a
demonstration of an artificial
heart-lung machine. This machine
used in delicate operations in the
heart and on the major arteries
leading from the heart.
The election of new officers for
the club will be one of the items
on the agenda during the business
meeting. Aside from club officers,
regional officers also will be
elected. For adinistrative purposes,
the state is divided into five re-
Luther : gions.
I A barbecue luiicheon will be
UNC Chancellor William B. Ay-1 served on the campus near -.the
cock will welcome the parents and . hospital at 1 p.m. This will be fol-
visitors to the annual event. V.
Woody Ends Weekend
With Big Concert Today
This will be
for fall semester.
prerrgistration
Launching Postponed
Woody Herman and his Third
Herd w ill move into Memorial Hall
today at 3 p. m. to give the Spring
Germans concert.
The appearance of Herman and
his band will close out the final
Germans Weekend for this school mum of space for dancing.
Vl''r' Appearing with the Brown band
; Appearing with the Third Herd were Butch Stone, Stumpy Brown
new vocatlist. Laurie
YDC Chooses
Next Year's
Top Officers
the
CAPK CANAVKRAL. Fla,
(A?) Technical troubles ytistcr-
day prompted the Air Force to presented at intervals
postpone a scheduled launching of Herman concert.
the Homarc ground-to-aid missile,
the key weapon in the U. S. air
defense arsenal.
will be the Al Belletto Sextet, and their
one of the top ranking combos in Johnson.
nuisic business. They will be
during the
own entertained at the Germans
llnnp -a1 nioht from Q-l.
The Young Democrats Club
Woollen Gym. the scene of the elected George W. Coggin, of Star,;
dance, was decorated similarly to president for next year at a meet
the way it was for Winter Ger- ing of the club Thursday night. '
mans, with tables arranged around others elected include Johnny L4
the dance floor to leave a maxi- Whitley, first vice president; Sam
uel H. Poole, second vice presi-,
dent; Elizabeth Coppin. secretary
and Larry McElroy, treasurer.
The club endorsed Robert Man
gum. Wadesboro, as a candidate
for statewide YDC offices.
Modern Venus Contest
Heads Sigma X Derby
Seven sororities on campus and j Carolyn Myers, Raleigh: Sue Voigt,
the Nurses dorm will compete in j Manhasset, N. Y.; Bonnie Richard
the Sigma Chi Derby Tuesday t sen. Atlanta, Ga. ;
lowed by additional tours of the
hospital and .Medical School.
Regional meetings of the club
will be held at 2:30 p. m. in vari
ous location in the hospital and
.School of Medicine. These meet
ings will be followed with tours
of the UNC Medical Center.
according to Derby co-chairmen
Dennis McCoy and Jerry Long.
Nancy Evans, Ashville; Linda
Watkins, Charleston, S. C: Martha
Six events will be included in the ' .. , ,,
The Grand 1 ago cveny . tuiorein,
Stedman; Hilda Hoit, Greensboro;
Official .said the shoot was
"scrubbed" at 12:53 p.m. (EST)
because of an undetermined mal
function in the launching equip
ment. .
One featured instrumentalist of
the Third Herd will be Bill Harris,
for ten years winner of the Dorm
Beat poll as top trombonist in
ja.z. In recent years he has toured
the United States, Europe and the
Far East.
Les Brown and his Band of Ren-
Plans Finished For
APO's Parents' Day
I'.v KAY.MOND FLET( MF.K GKAY
Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity will
sensor its eighth annual Parent's
l;iy on the LNC campus Sunday
aftcnnii. May 4. j
Lee Kittredge said esterd.iy that ;
'iine PK) invitations had been sent
to the parents of freshmen and j
sophomores, but all parents are
welcome.
Beginning at there will be
a faculty reception in front of South
Building, followed by a speech by
former LNC Chancellor U. B. House
iid a band concert.
Kefreshments will be served all
afternoon bv coeds in each of the
women dormitories and exhibitions i
and displays will be presented by;
(lilterent departments throughout
I h campus.
The Playmakers" Museum in 101
Saunders will feature animal and
liti.in.-in masks made by studrnts
and a model of Foit'st Colony at
Itoanoke Island.
Other Playmaker relics will be
Professor Kovh's pipe, a small li
brary of books donated by Roland
Holt, interesting Russian puppets
and Chinese shadow puppets. Vic
torian costumes, dolls from the
Pliilippims, and scenes from Paul
Greene's first play "The Last of
the Low nes."
In addition the playmakers will
ivlubit photos and paintings of the
arly playmakers Paul Greene
and Archibald Henderson, and col
lections of play posters and news
paper clipping at far back as 1918.
There will be exhibits and dis
plays in the oology, geology, li
biary. chemistry, and physics mus
eums. Other buildings and places that
v. ill be open for public inspection
v ill include: The radio-TV depart
ments in Swain Hall. Consolidated
University Offices in the old Insti
tute of Government building. Pear
son Hall's Art Gallery, Coker Ar
boretum. Forest Theater, the Sun
dial, Battlepark, Kenan Stadium,
and the Circus room in the Mono
gram club.
The More-head Planetarium will
present several shows during the
afternoon.
The UOTC Air force will have a
drill and a bugle corp. The Naval
Armory will be open to inspection.
v' 1 !
Y" .: !
s i
i SlWQSr - - i
ur ltr. i
AW
; '.r y r
WOODY HERMAN
, , a sivingin'' end to Spring Germans
Restaurant Segregation
Challenged In Virginia
ALEXANDRIA, Va., (AP)
A Washington Negro has filed
a suit in U. S. District Court here
i aimed to crack Virginia laws and
customs of racial segregation in
i public eating places.
i Charles T. Williams filed the
I suit yesterday against Howard ! mittee on Art Education
Johnson s Restaurant here on
Wa.shington Street, saying in the
complaint that the restaurant re
fused to serve him on April 20
because of his race.
The suit asks $500 damages' The Carolisa participants join
each from the restaurant, the ' with some 100 other art education,
manager and a waitress. ' history, directorial and instruction-
Two Members Of Faculty
At Art Education Meet
Derby. A relay race.
National, will get things under way
at 2:30. The hit the 'deck contest,
a pie throwing contest, the race to
the flesh, the secret event, a skit
given by each group and a Miss
Modern Venus contest are the oth
er events scheduled.
In addition to the Nurses dorm
the Chi Omega. Delta Delta, Pi
Leta Phi. Alpha Gamma Delta,
Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Delta, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma sororities will
have entrants in the contests.
Last year's winners were the i
Chi Omegas and the Kappa Deltas.
Miss Judy Dockery won the Miss
Modern Venus Contest.
This year's Miss Modern Venus
v. ill be given a bathing suit which
was donated by a Chapel Hill cloth
ing store.
Chapel Hill merchants have don
ated articles wliich will be given
away as gifts to spectators.
The Derby w ill begin with a pa
rade which will start at the Sun
Dial and proceed down Franklin
Street to Columbia Street, down
Columbia to Cameron Avemie, down
Cameron to Raleigh Street and from
there to Kenan Stadium. The pa
rade will start at 2 p.m.
Twenty-two girls are entered in
the Miss Modern Venus contest.
They are Misses Bobbie Madison,
Washington, U. C; Patsy McCau
ley, Rocky Mount; Dottie Bull,
Montgomery, Ala.; Susan Tuggle,
Charlotte; Gad Willingham, St.
Petersburg, Fla.; Mary Cabel Car
Ian, Candor;
Dorcen Greenfield, Venezuela;
Ruth Hoffman, Fort Wayne, Ind.;
Nan Schaeffer, Tallahassee, Fla.:
Betsy Miller, Coral Gables, Fla.;
Lynn Merchant, Ashville; Cathy
Garden, Burlington and Anne Mar
tin, Atlanta. Ga.
McCoy said the judges for the
contest will be Coach Frank Me
Guire, Joe Augustine of Stevens
Shepherd, Miss Jo Ann Aldridge of
the English Department, former
Miss Chapel Hill, and Miss Lu Ann
Thornton, personal advisor to wom
en in the Dean of Women's Office.
Foreign Student
Advisor Posts
Open For Fa
DAVIE POPLAR
May 5
Source Of
Migraines At
Last Isolated
Advisors are needed for foreign
student orientation. The program
will be September 13-15. Some 60
advisors will be needed.
The purpose of this program is
to help foreign students to adjust to
their new environment, to learn the
mechanics -of the University, to get
seme acquaintance with the Amer
ican way of life and to form a per
sonal relationship with the student
community.
filling students in on a lot tbey
didn't know about South Africa and
even some things they hadn't
thought about in the United States.
A pleasant women with a clip
ped British accent, Dr. Junod was
born in Portugese East Africa. Her
father was a Swiss missionary and
at present is National Organizer of
the Penal Reform League.
At a late coffee break at YM
YWCA staffer Anne Queen's house.
Dr.-Junod got her first opportunity
to talk informally with students.
She has already visited the Univer
sity of Chicago, the University of
Michigan, and spent some time in
New York.
She left Chapel Hill early yester
day morning for a swing through
the South to the West Coast.
Eventually she hopes to settle down
and spend what's left of her sab
batical leave studying conditions
in a Southern Community. ,
During her short stay in Chapel
Hill she was kept busy in a full
schedule of lectures and meetings,
yet at the end of the day she was
bright and cheerful she joked and
chatted with the students at Miss
Queen's house as if she were a
student herself.
"Our Little Race Problem"
"After hearing about the situa
tion in South Africa, you almost
feel thankful for our little race
problem:," wa& one comment heard
ifter Dr. Junod completed a lec
ture before a Sociology class. Yet at
no time did she attempt to compare
the relative magnitudes of the race
problem in the two countries.
The Union of South Africa docs
seem to have a racial situation that
makes the United States' look a bit
puny.
To a population of two and a half
million whites there are ten mil
lion Africans, one million colored,
the African term for mulattos, and
350 thousand Indians.
The two and a half million whites
are the only ones who have the
power to vote and the control of
the government.
Segregation is carried to its great
est extremes, she said, and added
that racial bars are expected to be
tightened even more by the Afrika
aner controlled government.
Under this policy of apartheid the
government agency comparable to
(See HISTORY, Page. 3)
Top Military Men
Discuss Security
PHILADELPHIA, (AP) The
By J. M. ROBERTS
Asscoiated Press Nercs Analyst
Differences among the three mili
tary services over the best ap
proach to national security have
seldom been more clearly focused
pain chemical that apparently i than by the tnree top leaders wno; Wnen there
causes migraine headaches has ; addressed the American .ewspa
been isolated, a New York re-! per Publishers Assn. Thursday,
searcher said yesterday. i Gen. Curtis Lemay, Air Force
Vice Chief of Staff, called "mu
tual deterrence" a myth and said
the danger of general war is in
creasing along with the rise in
Russia's striking potential.
He thinks the Air Force would
Professor John V. Allcott and
Associate Professor George J.
Kachergis of the UNC Art Depart
ment are in New York this week,
April 24 27, for the 16th annual
conference of the National Corn-
Sponsored by the Museum of
Modern Art, this year's sessions
are scheduled under the general
title, "The Art in Art Education."
appraise and analyze almost every
phase of art and education in
terms of present day expansion
and direction in the field at large.
Evaluations and critical review
Navy Plans
To Launch
New Carrier
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Navy yesterday announced its
The chemical, dropped on an. '
open human blister, has produced
pain.
It may also have a relation to
the shifting moods and the dif
ficulty in thinking that migraine j have to do 90 per cent of the re
sufferers sometimes experience. ! taliatory work.
Common salicylate or aspirin is j , Gen. Maxwell Taylor, Army Chief
capable of blocking the action, of of Staff, said that under mutual
the pain chemical in laboratory ; fa(0mic deterrence the danger was
tests. So reported Dr. Loring Chap- j from limited war, and emphasized
man, experimental neurologist at i the need for manpower,
the New York hospital Cornell . Admiral Harry D. Felt. Naval
of methods as relating to aesthetic ; fourth super sized aircraft car
experience for the individual are rier, the Independence, will be
balanced by considerations of the Jaunched June 6 at the New York
school child's art experience as an ! Naval Shipyard,
aid to his crative growth in all Mrs. Thomas S. Gates Jr., wife
areas. ! f Ihe Secretary of the Navy, will
Professor Allcott. as chairman ; christen the 60,000 ton warship,
of a discussion meeting, will intro- j The Independence will become
duce the featured speaker, John waterborne by flooding the huge
McAndrew. professor of art at Wei- j dock in which she is being built
Medical Center.
The pain chemical was put into
a basin with the uterus of a raf.
The uterus contracted, much as a
muscle might during pain. But
aspirin added to the basin seemed
to block the action of the pain
chemical.
Little had been known about
how aspirin worked in the hu
man body except that it was an
effective inhibitor of pain.
The pain chemical was describ
ed as a polypeptide fractions of
Vice Chief, said missile-firing na
val units, especially submarines,
would provide better forward de
fense than Taylor's and Lemay's ex
pensive foreign bases.
Each man was speaking from
the background of the traditions
and interests of his own service.
Each has his own job to do and
his own service to sell.
Each probably figures he can
rely, upon the others to look after
themselves, so that in the end all
lay plans, within the limits of Con
gressional appropriations, for at
taining them.
Coordination is supposed to be
provided through civilian heads of
' the military departments, a part
! of the general executive system.
are differences in
concept among all three groups
as to the conditions which most
urgently need to be met, condi
tions develop as they are today,
leaving the uniformed groups to
compete for appropriations.
Under her former general staff
system Germany made great use
of such war resources as she had,
but became anathema to democratic
systems.
The Democracies have never dis
covered how to have a staff of mili
tary experts free from the predic
tions of the individual, services, to
run the services with one hand
and also cooperate fully with the
civilian executive to make the anili-
tary fit within the general economy,
j If the military invades politics
j there is disruption. If politics in
! tiltrates the military there is trage
' dy, as in France in World War II.
j Yet the new war is one of econ
I cmics and politics behind fought
against the background of military
1 threat.
It asks also for a judgement ; al experts and with practicing art- j lesley College and director of the instead of being launched in the
that a restaurant situated adja- j ists in a serjes of concentrated dis-: Farnworth Museum, Wellesley, normal manner of sliding down
cent to an U. S. Constitution. i cusions groups and lectures which Mass. . 'the ways.
i thrpp sprviros will hp ahlp to nro-
protein produced by an enzyme in j vWe the nation wUh the broad
i capabilities it needs.
) There is here, however, a differ
; ence of political evaluations as well
i as military concepts.
Under the American system. Con
gress and the executive depart
ments are supposed to lay down
military objectives, and the mili-
the brain.
, The polypeptide acts to enlarge
blood vessels and enable them to
carry more blood to the brain in
moments of stress.
In some cases the polypeptide
seems to get out of hand, leaking j
into the area around te skull ,
where it causes pain by its action
IN THE INFIRMARY
Students in the infirmary yes
terday included:
Misses Jenny Graham, Jane
Moore, Martha Oliver and Jane
Westbrook, and Richard Alls
brook, Lacy BUday, Boyce Dav
is, Frank Inman, William Lytle,
Russell Norman, Willard Ramsey,
Edward Riner, and Henry Simp-
on nerves.
j tary departments are supposed to son.