r
i
(4
(0T Klr jj i-n Till P ((f lir 'M fPff
WEATHER
Continued cloudy and cold, with
chance of rain this afternoon.
ABC STORES
Todey is the day. See page 2.
VOLUME LXVII NO. 83
Complete (J) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1959
Offices in Graham Memorial
PAGE FOUR THIS ISSUE
funradou
ham
romeoii" system
By STAN BLACK
Student Body President Don
Furtado urged a thorough reor
ganization of Student Government
in a speech delivered to a gather
ing of Student Party members in student problem, deferred rush,
the Rendezvous Room last night,
Among other problems discussed
by Furtado were traffic control,
discriminatory clauses, the foreign
Crockford Chairs
Chemistry Dept.
Dr. Horace D. Crockford. professor Dr. Roe, a Kenan professor, has
o( chemistry, has been named act-1 joined the National Science Fowl
ing chairman of the Department of dation in Washington, D. C, to aid
Ci e.-nistry here while Dr. Arthur Roe
i on an 18 month leave of absence.
Chancellor William B. Aycock and
Doan J. Carlyb Sitterson of the Col
lege of Arts and Sciences announced
the selection of Dr. Crockford, who
has been on the UNC faculty for 37
years.
'T
DR. H. D. CROCKFORD
subbing far Dr. Arthur Ror
Responsibility
Will Bo Topic
Of NSA Meet
"Student Responsibility" will be
the theme of a regional NSA educa
tif.nal affairs conference here Feb
27-20. according to plans drafted by
the campus National Student Assoc.
committee yesterday.
Students from 40 regional schools
in N. C. S. C. and Va. will gather
lor the conference which is set to
start with a keynote address Friday,
Fcbrary 27 by either NSA national
executive Reginald Green or a fac
ulty member from Randolph-Macon
College who has recently been ac
tive in developing student responsi
bly.
Campus NSA cor-ordinator Ed
Ixvy outlined orientation, the school
of education, course evaluation and
high school training as four major
areas in which the conference might
1eal. Levy said the conference's pur
pose's "to emphasis the student's
potential, obligation and role in his
own education."
NSA regional vice-president Frank
Elkin, in charge of educational af
fairs, noted that letters to various
members of the University admin
istration have drawn expressions of
interest in the conference.
Elkin also stated that having the
conference here was practically a
last report. The conference original
1 was scheduled for Charlotte, then
charge to Davidson, but both lacked
facilities for a gathering of the size
Anticipated.
in improving content of mathematics
and science courses in the nation's
colleges and universities.
A teacher of physical chemistry
courses on both the graduate and
the undergraduate level, Dr. Crock
ford has been a leader in promot
in;r science interest among North
Carolina high school students.
He is also well known in local
Navy circles, having directed the
Naval Reserve Officers School in
Durham, and holds the rank of cap
tain. During the period from 1930-
40 he was associated with the staff
of the Naval Research Laboratory at
Washington.
Dr. Crockford is state director of
ti e science fair program, which will
bo climaxed by the N. C. Science
Fair here during April. In March he
will have charge of UNC's partici
pation in the second annual N. C.
Junior Science Symposium, to be
held in the Raleigh-Durham-Chape
Hill area for 300 select high schoo!
students.
Another major post which Dr
Crockford holds is director of the
1959 Summer Institute for College
Chemistry Teachers, to be held at
JSC on June 8-JuIy 17 for some ,
r0 persons from throughout the na
tion.
A native of Philadelphia, Pa.,
Crockford was graduated from N. C.
State College, and took his master's
and doctor's degrees in chemistry
here, beginning his studies and
teaching duties in 1921.
Dr. Crockford has written some 40
research papers published in var
ious journals; a laboratory manual
of physical chemistry and "Funda
mentals of Physical Chemistry,"
which will appear in a second edit
ion in May.
He began his Navy service in 1936
when he received a reserve com
mission as a lieutenant. During
World War II he was on active du
ty in connection with various train
ing programs. For two years he was
in charge of instruction in mathe
matics and physics and later celes
tiaJ navigation at the Navy Pre
flight School here.
and student control of employees
Concerning, reorganization of
Student Government, Furtado said
hat the projected growth of the
University in the next five years
would necessitate expanded and at
he same time more efficient oper
ations to provide the student body
with necessary services.
"We should anticipate setting up
in the near future a cabinet type
structure to deal with difficuties
arising in various phases of camp
us life." ,
It is also likely, Furtado added,
that we will need to request
raise in student fees supporting
Student Government to take care
of the increased functions.
Another project that should be
undertaken soon is a revision of
the Constitution to further clarify
recall procedures and judicial or
ganization. A committee is present
ly studying the entire judicia
branch with that ultimate end in
mind.
One of the most pressing needs
according to President Furtado, is
student realization of the purpose
of attending the University. He
noted Carolina's reputation as the
"Country Club of North Carolina
in connection with this point.
Concerning discriminatory claus
es in fraternity and sorority char
ters, Furtado said that the Univer
sity has decided not to try to force
established organization to change
their charters, but that it is likely
that no fraternity or sorority with
such a clause will be allowed to
come on this campus in the future.
He said of deferred rush only
that its feasibility should be stud
ied, as some of Its benefits are
obvious. It is a question of whether
he harm to the fraternity system
would be too great.
Virginiq
i
Integrates
Peacefully ;
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL j
RICHMOND, Va. (51 Racial in
tegration imposed by federal courts
came yesterday to unwilling Virgin
ia and seven of her public schools.;
A few Negroes walked in unhind
ered. A few white pupils walked out
rather than accept them.
Police stood guard, alert but un-
needed. The historic shift took place
without incident or disorder.
Yet it was with grimness and dis
content that the Old Dominion watch
ed the ancient ramparts of segre
gation start tumbling down in a
state which once paced the south
land in massive resistance to the
mixing of races in the schools.
Through the gaps 17 Negro young
sters filed into six junior and senior
high school in Norfolk, the state's
largest city. Another four entered
Stratford Junior High in Arlington
County, a prosperous suburb of
Washington.
So for the first time in Virginia's
history, Negroes and whites began
attending public schools together,
limited though the scale of inte
gration might be at the outset.
Here in this capital of the Con
federacy during a war fought over
another racial issue, the legislature
rang out with continued cries of
segregationists.
"This," said Del. Sam E. Pope,
"is one of the blackest days Virginia
has faced since reconstruction."
"The rape of our constitutional
rights is an accomplished fact," said
Sen. Mills E. Godwin," also from
the Southside, the area most heavily
populated with Negroes.
Segregationists in the legislature
still hunted hopeful, but with slim
chances of success, Jor some new
device to bring integration to a halt.
One rallying point, w a new scho
(See SEGREGATION, Page 3)
CL. ,n, 2
if 1
VP
n n n
r
if .
t
i
Mi t -w
I
I ft
i
CiW if
WW
I 1
nvestigation Nets
nly One Student
One student will go on trial Wed-1 Robinson and his staff failed to
nesday night as an alleged accom
plice in a possible cheating ring.
The student was indicted last
night, after several days of investi
gation by Attorney General Dick
if
' .
W i -
t
I
A , LOT OF BRASS Diziy Gillespie, left, 4.! J. Johnson, center,
and Kai Winding, right, team up in a recent concert. Gillespie and
Winding will be featured in Winter Germans. Chris Conner will also
be1 on the program.
Straight Publicity Story:
Winter Germans Near
Dining Hall Committee
To Take Poll In Lenoir
"We feel that since Lenoir Hall i food, (2) cleanliness of silverware
is for the students, the stuoenis and cashes, personnel, and tables,
should be accorded some say in the
administration of the dining estab
lishment," said Hobart T. Steele,
Jr., chairman of the Student Dining
Hall Committtee.
Steele announced yesterday that
questionaires for student opinion on
dining facilities will be placed in
Lenoir Hall later in the week. Stu
dents may pick up the forms in the
south lobby and deposit the com
pleted forms in a box there.
The forms ask for comments on
(1) wholesomeness, tastiness, at
tractiveness. and variety of the
Newspaper Editorial Men
To Attend Affairs Meeting
G. M. SLATE
Activities In Graham Memorial
today Include:
2-4 p.m.. Symposium, Grail; 4
i:Z3 p.m., Debate, Grail; 7:30-9
p.m.. Young Republicans Club,
Grail; 2 5 p.m.. Student Party In
terviews, Roland Parker No. 1;
71 p.m.. University Party, Roland
Parker No.l ; 1:15-3 p.m., Student
Party Advisory Hoard, Roland
Parker No. 2; 4-C p.m., Campus
Chest, Roland Parker No. 2; 1-3
p.m., Ways 4c Means Committee,
WoH.houe Conference Room; 4
f :39 p.m.. Freshman Cabinet In
terview, Woodhouir Conference
Room; 7 3 p.m.. Women's ItesU
i!fnc Coanell, student Govern
ment Office.
Eight newspaper men, represent
ing the editorial staffs of as many
outstanding state newspapers, have
accepted invitations to attend as ob
servers the ninth annual North Car
olina World Affairs Conference here
Feb. 11 and 12.
A ninth newspaper editorial writ
er, Holley Mack Bell, of the Greens
boro Daily News, is a member of
the conference program committee
and will preside over one of its gen
eral sessions and one of the discuss
ion groups.
All of the newspaper observers
h;.ve also agreed to attend a session
which will be held a week following
the conference in order to evaluate
the program in preparation for plan
ning the 19G0 conference.
The editorial staff observers in
clude the following: C. A. McKnight,
Charlotte Observer; A. D. Jones.
Greensboro Record; Tom Wicker,
Winston-Salem Journal; Sam Ragan,
Raleigh News and Observer: David
Gillespie, Shelby Star; Thomas Las
siter, Smithfield Herald; Roy Parker
Jr., Hertford County Herald; and
II. C. Bradshaw, Durham Herald.
Special area advisers will be Dr.
John B. Honingmann, professor of
ar thropology, and Dr. John Gulick,
assistant professor of anthropology
and sociology, of the University faculty.
The conference will bring to Chap
el Hill to keynote the conference
theme, "East and West A Search
for Perspective," C. Vaughan Fergu
son, Jr., of the United States De
partment of staff, who will speak
Thursday morning, Feb. 12, and
Brigadier General Millard C. Young
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who will
speak at an orientation session Wed
nesday night, Feb. 11.
3) adequacy and courtesy of the
service, ana 4) a question lor em
ployees only asking their opinions
on working and pay conditions.
The Student Dining Hall Commit
tee, established by a Student Legis-
ature bill introduced by Dave Jones,
was given full investigative power
and authority to make positive rec
ommendations to Lenoir Hall and
he Student Aid Office.
"We hope to correct conditions
that need correcting," said Steele.
He listed as examples of conditions
needing correction the one cent
charges for extra lemon slices and
margarine which have been calcu
lated to bring the cost of margarine:
up to $1.20 per pound and to make
lemons cost approximately 25c each
The questionaire idea was used
Steele asserted "so that arbitrary
decisions wouldn't be made by the
committee."
Other members of the Student Din
ing Hall Committee are Dave Jones
representing Student Legislature;
Molly Short, representing Carolina
Women's Council; Tom Mehl, repre
senting the Inter Dormitory Council;
and David Brooks, delegate-at-large
from the student body.
Better start making plans be
cause it will soon be time for Win
ter Germans.
This winter the Germans Club will
feature Kai Winding, his trombone
and Septet; John Birks "Dizzy Gil
lespie, modern jazz trumpeter; and
Chris Conner, famed jazz and pop
ular vocalist, for the Saturday after
noon concert on Feb. 14. Kai Wind
ing will also play for the dance Fri
day night, Feb. 13. , , ,
Winding has risen to prominence
in the last 10 years as one of the
greatest exponents of modern jazz
trombone playing and stylization.
Leonard Feather, in his "Encyclo
pedia of Jazz" said that "Winding,
who plays in a brittle yet volatile
and emphatic style, ranks with
Johnson as one of the two major
trombone products of bop, a pace
setter in 1945 and still a major in-
luence." The danceable and jazz-
oriented Septet is a further measure
of the greatness of Kai Winding.
He first received national notice
m 1947 when ne joined the Man
Kenton Orchestra as a featured soloist-and
section trombonist. Among
his most popular recordings with
Kenton were Collaboration, m
Bolero, in Boogie" and "Artistry in
Fercussion." In 1948 he left Kenton
ta play briefly with Charlie Ven-
Festival and was generally felt to
be one of the high points of the en
tire festival.
Winding's three "Trombone
Sound" albums have been successful.
One of the albums, "Trombone Pan
orama," is a humorous and inform
ative history of jazz trombone play
ing, with impressions of such peo
ple as Glenn Miller, Jack Teagar
dern and J. J. Johnson. Winding is
expected to perform, this panorama
during his Saturday afternoon con
cert here. His most recent release,
"The Swinging States," is a series
of Jazz impressions of famous songs
saluting some of the 49 states.
Symposium
Interviews
Start Today
Interviews for prospective mem
bers of the Carolina Symposium
General Committee will be held to
day and Wednesday.
Al Goldsmith, chairman of the
Symposium's Interim Committee,
said yesterday any student interest
ed in working with the Symposium
may be interviewed today from 2
to '4 p.m. or WTednesday from 2 to
5 p.m. Both interviewing sessions
will be held in the Grail Room.
Approximately 15 people will be
named to the Symposium General
Committee.
The interviews will be conducted
by the present committee members
Kezziah Named Chief Clerk
Student Body President Don
Furtado has announced the ap
pointment of Mike Kezziah as
chief clerk of the Men's Honor
Council.
Kezziah, a junior, will replace
Jack Raper -who resigned from
the post because of a . pending
operation and to devote . more
time to YMCA activities. .
The new appointee has served
as clerk in the Honor Council for
the past semester.
yield further indictments other than
hat made last night.
Investigation sprung from a report
given Honor Council Chairman Hugh
Patterson that exams were for sale
in Cobb Dormitory. Two students re
ported the fact.
In order to get the information,
the Honor Council commissioned the .
two students to make an offer to
the student supposed to be selling
the examinations.
The pair offered the student $50
for examinations, but received none.
However, shortly before the end of
the examination period, the ts stu
dents were given a key by the stu
dent, but the key would not open
the office lock that it was supposed
to, although it opened other locks
in the classroom building.
The student who sold the key is no
longer in the University; however,
on trial is his roommate for com
plicity in the potential cheating
ring.
Further complications of the case
that might enlarge the cheating
ring into something more than a
one student enterprise have failed
to develop, but investigation is con
tinuing, j
The last big cheating episode ia
the Universtiy history haDnened
three years ago, when an ex-student
was alleged to have stolen exami
nations and sold them.
As far as investigators have been,
able to ascertain as the present time,
no examinations were stolen.
The accomplice will be tried for
failure to report an honor code of
fense and complicity in the cheat
ing scheme.
Vending Machines
Taken Out By Mistake
The vending machines which were
removed from Avery, Parker and
Teague dorms will be replaced soon,
according to Rudy Edwards, IDC
president.
The machines were taken from
the dorms when the store opened in
Avery basement last week.
In a meeting held yesterday after
noon Edwards, J. A. Branch, busi-
Abernethy House Going Down
To Make Room For Staff Cars
The Abernethy House, next to
the Ackland Art Center on Colum
bia Street here, is being torn down
and the property used as an exten
sion of the grounds and landscap
ing for the art museum and also
to provide parking for members
of the UNC faculty.
The property was recently ac
quired by, the University from Mrs.
Abernethy, widow of Dr. Eric A.
Abernethy, long the director of
the University Infirmary. The
house was built in 1905, and many
University students have lived
there.
The use of a portion of the prop
erty as a gravelled parking lot will
add about 60 new parking spac
es to help relieve the parking and
traffic problem on campus and in
town.
The front of the Abernethy prop
erty, facing on Columbia Street,
will retain the trees and shrubbery
at the front to blend with the land
scaping of the adjacent art center.
Entrance to the parking lot will
be from Old Fraternity Row which
can be reached from Cameron
Avenue near Swain Hall.
About 65 parking spaces were
eliminated here in the new con
struction at Phillips Hall, to house
the Univac 1105, and the additions
to Peabody Building.
However, the loss of those spac
es is more than made up by the
addition of about 30 spaces be
tween the Peabody parking lot and
the Naval ROTC headquarters
where a greenhouse was removed
tura, lead combos of his own for a
year and branch out into studio
work with personalities such as Pat-
tie Page.
The Winding success story was
given greatest impetus by his join
ing another great trombonist, J. J.
Johnson, in 1954 to form the now
famous two-trombone team of "K.
and J.J." They remained together
for two years, making recordings on
the Columbia, Bethlehem and Sa
voy labels.
Their performances of Broadway
show tunes, as "It's All Right With
Me," Lover" and "Mad About the
Boy," became jazz classics. They
separated in the summer of 1957
immediately after a successf al ap
pearance at the Newport Jazz Fes
tival to form their own groups. They
still make occasional appearances
together.
Upon his separation from Johnson,
Winding organized three trombones
to complement his own bristling
sound, a rhythm section, ami went
on the road billed as "The Trom
bone Sound." The group became im
mediately popular at college dances
and concerts, and toured the entire
nation.
In the summer of 1957 "The Trom
bone Sound" was featured at an af
ternoon concert of the Newpcrt Jazz
Phi Society
Plans Bill
On Germany
Protection of West Germany's in
tegrity will be debated at the Phil
anthropic Society meeting tonight at
8 on the fourth floor, New East.
Tonight's meeting will be the
first meeting of 1959.
The Phi was one of the first or-
gsnizations of student government
here and has since become a de
bating society in which bills of na
tional, international and local in
terest are discussed and voted on.
Visitors have been invited to Phi
meetings.
ness manager, t. it. Kitcnie, ai-
rector of University Book Stores,
and Jim Crownover, chairman of
he Campus Store Committee, agreed
to install a soft drink machine
which will dispense three drinks, a
candy machine and a cigarette ma
chine in each of the three dorms.
"We hope the machines will be
installed in about 10 days," said
Edwards.
He said the machines had been
removed by the business office when
the store opened because of a mis
understandins between that office
and the Campus Store Committee
Both the store and the vending
machines will be kept, according to
Edwards.
If it turns out that the vending
machines seem to be keeping the
store from making a profit a poll
will be taken in the three dorms to
decie whether students want the
store closed or the vending ma
chines removed.
According to reliable sources, the
defendant did not consider the sale
of the key as a serious transaction.
but considered it rather as some
sort of joke.
IDC Executive Group
Will Meet Tonight
The Executive Committee of the
Interdormitory Council will meet
today at 5:30 p.m. in the upstairs
dining room of Lenoir Hall.
AH members of the conimittee
have been urged to attend
AFROTC Makes Awards
To Six Student Cadets
Military achievement awards and
the Cadet of the Month Award were
made in ceremonies of the Air Force
Reserve Officers Training Corps at
UNC.
Five cadets receiving military
achievement awards for outstanding
participation in activities of the
cadet corps were: Evan E. King,
Harry A. Usher, John H. Summey,
Michael F. Smith and Kenneth Sty-
ers.
The Cadet of the Month award
was presented to Frederick F. Wolf
er Jr. of Portland, and Philip B.
Nash of Bristol,- Va. A board of
five cadet omcers maae the se
lection in an interview of the ca
dets competing for the award.
German Table
Is Conducted
In Lenoir
In order to help students who are
taking German to gain more ease
in speaking the language, a German
Lunch is held every Tuesday and
Thursday in the back room up
stairs over Lenoir Hall.
Native German speakers Ger
mans, Austrians and Swiss meet
with the students twice each week
for lunch and conversation in Ger
man. Everyone from beginners to na
tive speakers is invited to attend
the lunch. Food may be taken upstairs.
Iren Marik Plays Franz Liszt
In Piano Recital Tonight At 8
Iren Marik, Hugarian-born pianist
noted for her interpretation of the
music of Liszt, will play two Liszt
compisitions in her piano concert
tonight at 8 in Hill Hall.
The Liszt numbers will be "Ber
ceuse and vaiiee a UDermann.
Miss Marik has performed in such
European capitals as London, Bel
fast, Berlin, Budapest, Vienna, Ven
ice, Milan and Prague.
A graduate of the Franz Liszt
Royal Academy of Music, she stu
died with the late Bela Bartok and
also with George Woodhouse in Eng
land, where she made concert tours
and performed on programs of the
British Broadcasting Company.
In this country she has given re
citals in Town Hall, Constitution
Hall and the National Gallery of Art
in Washington, D. C.
In addition to the Liszt pieces, she
will play "Organ Prelude in G Mi
nor oy i$ach-suou; bonata. Op.
Ill in C Minor" by Beethoven;
"Images, Book H" by Debussy; and
"Suite, Opus 14" by Bartok.
This concert will open the Tues
partment of Music for the spring
day Evening Series of the UNC De
semester. The program is open to
the public without charge.
INFIRMARY
Students in the infirmary yester
day included:
Barbara Burkhardt, Carol Louise
Yeager, Jane Elizabeth Moore,
Mary Lindsay Polk, Hamilton Ta
tum Sparger, William Grant Hen
dren, Marlon Lee Martin, Ralph.
Bradbury Brown, Boyd Harvey
Cannon, Oren Reid Manning, Lloyd
Benton Smith and William Arthur
Neustadt.