Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 18, 1959, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
WEATHER Football Weather! (CD hi 4 of RE-RUN ... a rt-run of the freshman editorial page for old students, & page 2. o 3Si Complete Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS ISSUE P zy sy Panhel Reception Starts Rush Week Tonight's annual Panhellenic re option for all undergraduate non Mrority women students interest ed in participating in formal so rority rush will officially kick off this year's Hush Week. At the reception, slated for 7- Wednisday will be a day of rest. The second round, scheduled for Thursday and Friday, will consist of visits to three sororities on both clays. Saturday and Sunday, open If i f---- 1A i I " lli ' 4, . H p m. in the Graham Memorial houses will be held. Touring be l.ounge, rushees will receive invi-jgins at 2 p.m. Saturday and ends tations to the first round of parties 'at 2:30 p m. Sunday. and sign a guest book which will Ir the official rush list. Begins Monday Hush Week begins Monday with 0 round tt informal parties and continues through Tuesday. Rush- es will v;sit all seven sororities J'l-ur Monday from 6 to 10:25 p.m., and three Tuesday from 6 - 9:45 p rn. I - i EDWARD L. FOSTER NROTC Officer Named Captain The executive officer of the NHOTC unit has been promoted fn.m the rar.k of Commander to ('..ptain. U. S. Navy, it has been ai.nrunced by the Chief of Naval 1'ersonnel. ( iiilr. Edward L. Foster, also as fcoeiate professor of naval science at I'NC. is a native of Chattanooga, Tenn , where he graduated from Cuitral High School. Ho atterxled Iloanoke College in itltm. Va.. and is a graduate of tht University of Maryland. He is a graduate of both the Naval Gen ual Line School at Monterey, Calif., ikJ the Naval War College, New-l-oit. It. I. A naval aviator, Fester was eom ii:ssioned in 1940 and served in the .North' Atlantic and Pacific Thea ters during World War II. Prior to his present assignment, he t-ted as Commanding Officer of the Navy Hurricane Hunter Squad ion based in Jacksonville, Ha. He reported to the NUOTC Unit itter 18 months as Navigator of the attack carrier USS Lake Cham-, plain. Foster is married to the former Mary Mailory Davis of Yorktown. Va. He resides with his wife and three children at 211 Fleinington Koad. Chapel Hill. Round four consists of visiting four houses Monday. This ends the informal parties and rushees will choose thre of the four sororities. A formal progressive dinner constitutes round five and consists of each house entertaining the rushees for an hour beginning at 5:40 p.m. and terminating at 9:40. This will be the final round before bids are Issued. Attend Parties Rushees must attend parties of all seven sororities on the open ing days, eliminating one sorority each day until the final night of rush. Invitations will be handled by Stray Greeks and through Miss Isa- belle MavLeod's office in South Building Invitations may be pick ed up in the Roland Parker Lounge in GM on Wednesday from 12:30 3:15 p.m.; Saturday from 9:15-11:15 -.m.; Monday from 9:15-1 p.m., and Tuesday from 9:15 - 1 p.m. Signing for bids will take place in the office of the Dean of Wo men. Wednesday, September 30, from 9 a.m. to 1 p m. O Policy Offers Full Coverage For 12 Months : r -v a - - - i I , J ' .v y.. kfoMt te. .. uml. a ' - '..! . y . .... J - .J. VI H ' i ii i ii i i . : ?4-, V Plea For Unity 2$ r ittri Si ' t$h nhitn Loco Presbyterian Center Completed, Ready For a Ix)cal Presbjterian students are , Street, and will tie in with the new Use now meeting i:i the new Prc.sbvter ian Student Center and Fellowship Hall 'picture above) which was; completed during the summer. The ; oi.icial dedication is .et for Octo- ber 18. j The center is the result of years oi -planning and caii.aigning across i the state and among Chapel Hill Presbvterians. With act aaily ; drawn before the destiuction of the ; sr.rctuary by lire April, these facilities fill the b.ck and side oi . the church's lot on Mast Franklin rctuary to be begun this fall. inclufie-d in the educational wing and center is church school space. There is also an administrative Need Job? Are Uncle salary ear? you interested in serving Sain abroad at a starting of not loss than $5,225 per wing containing the church office and library, pastor's study, and of fices for the Director of Christian Education and Campus Christian Life staff. In the student wing are a library, lounge and hi-fi room, council and j workroom and a small prayer chap j el. Furnishings and symbols for the J prayer chapel have been specially i designed by Margaret Rigg, an art- i isl Here's the announced schedule for tomorrow for Russian Prem ier Khrushchev during his tliree day visit to the city: 8:30 a.m. leaves Waldorf-Astoria by car for Hyde Park, N. Y., 70 miles to the north. 10:30 a.m. visits with Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and goes to the grave of the former pres ident. 11:30 a.m. leaves Hyde Park for New York. 3 p.m. arrives United Nations Headquarters to address a meet ing of the General Assembly. 5 p.m. meets Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York at the Waldorf. 5:30-7 p.m. (Open for possible sightseeing tour of the city.) 8 p in. attends dinner given by Dag Hammarskjold, secretary general of the United Nations, in the U. N. delegates lounge. NEW YORK UP) Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge today told Ni kita Khrushchev that "I hope and believe that we and the Soviet Union are united in our common de sire to be destroyed by another war." Speaking directly to the Soviet premier at a commodore hotel luncheon shortly after Khrushchev's arrival here, Lodge said: "In particular do we believe that this must be true of you. Chair man Khrushchev, for you are not Khrushchev Lodge Dr. Heusner Prescribes Big Dose Of Plain Common Sense By ROBERT H. BARTHOLOMEW A large dose of hard headed com mon sense has been prescribed for University students by a physician I of the University fac ulty who is a in Nashville who is managing j 8Cj10ar f note. An insurance policy which pro tects the holder 24 hours a day is being offered again this year to all University students. Cost for an entire 12-month pe riod is $8 per student, $1 less than last year. Coverage becomes effective the date the student's premium is paid trd terminates at 12:01 a.m. Sept. 1. 1!10. Insured students will be covered for up to $1,000 for loss of life and up to $200 for surgical benefits. Payments will be made in case of death within 90 days of an accident. Woollen Gym Danco To Feature Embers The Kmbers. a sev n man com bo, will provide musical . back ground for aa all-school danci Saturday night from eight o'clock to midnight in Woollen Gym This first dance of the school year is sponsored by the Order of the Grail. All proceeds will be used by the Grail for its scholar ship fund and other worthy cam pus projects. Admission will be $1 stag or couple. ( ecus wno desire to come in groups will be admitted free. The Embers, headed by Hobby of all kinds. The policy will be effect during Haas, is a combo of wide spread periods when students are travel-; reputation in the Chapel Hill area. Jng to and from Chapel HiU, during They are kntmn fur lheir M)Il vacations and summer breaks. The insurance plan is made avail able through the Pilot Life Insur ance company in Raleigh. For the married student, there ire Blue Cross and Blue Shield pro grams at a special group rate. They offer the married student coverage for himself, his wife and all un married dependent children under 19 years of age. Students who wish to purchase this protection may mail premiums to Student Insurance Plan, P. 0. Box 1058. Chapel Hill. If so, your application to take the Foreign Serxice Officer exam ination must bo filed by October 19. This one-day comprehensive writ ten examination in English express ion, general ability and back ground, and foreign language pio liciency (French, German, Span- . Lishw. or Russian), will be given -ai i December 5, 19.i9. in approximate ly C3 testing centers throughout ! the United States, j To be eligible to take this exam ination, candidates must be at least 21 and under 32 years of ac: !as of October 19, and American I citizens of at least nine years' standing. Persons 20 years old may i apply only if they hold a bachelor's degree or are seniors in college. editor of Motive magazine. j The speaker was Dr. Price Heus- There is also a large fellowship ner, professor of anatomy at the hall, ktchen and adult classiooms. VKC sdl0cl oC Medicine, a Rhodes Scholar and an honor graduate of ithe Harvard Medical School. I Dr. Iku.'ner was speaking before : first year medical students at a meeting of the UNC .Whitehead Medical Society. The meeting was Franklinton Franklinton folks j hold in connection with this week's Topsy Turvey Flag Causes 2nd Looks wondered "what's up" when they ppotted Old Glory flying over thf orientation program for new stu dents. The Whitehead Society is coniuosed of UNC medical st.i- Iceal post office Wednesday. It was ; (cns upside down. What Dr. Heusner said, how- They wondered if it was a dis- ivcr, would apply equally to all ,.;,.i ... ,.,k ....-..Kr. .,J college students as well as the do with Khrushchev's visit, or may be the mail men didn't know which end was up. After several hours, it occurred to someone to inquire. A red-faced Application blanks and addition-j post office worker hastily straight I information may be obtained )v writing to the Board of Exam- and flowing music as well as a l iners for the Foreign Service, De- wide range of good dancing music partment of State, Washington 25, j tars an Stripes and sent it back D. C. ened things out. Just a mistake, he explained, as he hauled down the up, right side up. students of the public schools. The UNC physician warned the students that their work would not be light and that success would not come easily. "You dare not set a goal for merely getting by. you must set your goal much higher than this. Work is the magic word in med' cine as it is in all fields, but it must be done properly. Blind plod ding is of little use." Dr. Heusner outlined three im portant points of the education process: method, thoroughness and the relationship between the various branches of knowledge. "Method and system are import ant within the classroom and, per haps, even more important on the outride of the room. A certain amount of time should be allotted each day for the study of each sub ject. Devise the system that suits you the best. Take care of today's tasks today and those of tomorrow will take care of themselves." The professor stressed the im portance of being thorough. He said that above all other virtues, thoroughness will sustain the stu dent when the various inevitable problems arise. He also stressed the use of dictionaries and other books by the student, although not necessarily assigned him. only the Chief of State with all the responsibility that entails, you are also the father whose son laid his life on the altar of sacrifice in World War II and thus symbolizes the bravery of the Soviet army in that struggle." Then, continuing his speech, Lodge delivered a miid but firm lecture to Khrushchev touching on the faith and the faults of Amer ica as a nation. Lodge, this country's ambassador to the United Nations, spoke of ra cial discrimination and continued: "As long as one individual is dis criminated against, a situation ex ists which we cannot condone. We work without respite to solve the problem, and there is no doubt at all that regardless e)f local obstacles, legal segregation will completely disappear." Again addressing Khrushchev Lodge declared: "Mr. Chairman, we are a diverse country of many climates and oc cupations, containing people of many races and religions. The United States cannot be simply de scribed by a reference to the econ omic system, and that system, with its intense competition, its wide sharing of earnings, its ever chang ing character, and its enormous government welfare program, can certainly not be accurately summed up in the one word 'Capitalistic.' " Lodge spoke of the pioneer spirit of the American people, then grave ly assured Khrushchev that "we are a nation under God." The amhasador pointed out that American ideals have become dim ir. some periods because of the one time remoteness of this country be tween its two great oceans. He added: "I hope you will believe me when I say that you, sir, have waked us up and have made us more consci ous of the great ideals on which our country rests and we sincerely appreciate that." Carolina Outing Club Holds First Meeting Thor-Able Rocket Fails To Orbit New Satellite The outdoor type student - male cr female will find a home in the Carolina Outing Club, which holds i. first meeting Monday night at 8 ao in room 301-A. Woollen Gym. spokesman for the group an- tn.unccd. Last year this informal group had a juries of meetings along the or ganizational lir.e, in addition to a Cxok out and trap shoot at the Phy ieal Education Department staff's lake and a combination cruise, Cook-out and water skiing session fat Carr Lake. The Outing Club co-sponsored the LiK Four RikI and Gun Field meet v i h the Intramurals Department. The meeting Monday night is to five the club an opportunity to plan activities for the coming school year and to welcome interested INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yester day were: Sara Blair, Gary Thomp nn Itandall, Cecil Holmes Hand, Samuel Carricgton, Alien Simpson llI William Fox. people to join. Anyone can come down and get acquainted without being under obligation to join the club. Plans for this school year al ready include an outing to Carr Lake in October, a bow and arrow deer hunt to the Uwharrie Preserve during the first week of the bo.v season, and possibly a surf fishing trip to the coast. The Intramurals Department has purchased two complete four-man camping outfits, including tents and , slet ping bags, and several hunting bows and arrows. The Carolina Outing Club is af filiated with the Intercollegiate Out ing Club Association. The only oth er such organizations in the state are at WC and N. C. State. Officers of the club say its pur pose is basically, "A means of bringing together those students on campus who are interested in boat ing, camping, sailing, hunting, fish ing, hiking, and all outdoor activi ties." Membership is open to all stu dents in addition to interested facul ty members. ' 1 - - - 'v-j: v-rJ ' t . fi-rz v .y- -Kv-.f I " . , : . ;. ' .. , . , . i .' t ' - ' . ' .- . . J'fci. : i-; 'w . ,. v'i;-. .'I I i it it fclii ft I ) T ll 1 1 r ' -rf.., ..... - - - mi -niag-r TurArt iffi r 'lfn ft 1 i --- - - . .3 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. The United States failed to orbit a na vigation satellite today and added another black mark to an em barrassing week lor American space efforts. The 2GG-pciurtJ satellite, called Transit I, rode skyward atop a three-stage Thor-Able rocket. It was designed to study the possibility of using satellites as navigation sta tions in space. But the rocket's third stage did r.ot ignite and the satellite apparent ly met a fiery doom in a plunge through the earth's atmosphere. Another U. S. space shot fizzled yesterday when a Jupiter missle carrying mice and frogs exploded 1,000 feet above its launching pad. The Jupiter was to lift the tiny animals and other biological spe cimens 300 miles up in an experi ment that could help prepare the vay for manned space travel. Earlier this week, the last of the anguard satellite rockets failed to get off the ground because of a faulty ignition system. Another at tempt will be made soon, possibly tomorrow, to launch the Vanguard ard its 100-pound scientific satellite. There was one bright note on the space front today. The rocket plane X15 made its first powered flight over the California desert. The X15 is expe-cted to carry a man 100 miles high at a speed of 4,000 mdes, an hour. The Cape Canaveral failures, came at an inopportune time, prop-, agandawise, for the United States. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev li in the country basking in the limelight of last Sunday's success ful Russian moon shot. However, Khrushchev may learn something from the failures: that tht United States makes no effort to hide missile flops. U. S. officials claim the Russians fire many faulty rockets but don't tell about them. Earlier this week Vice President Richard Nixon said the Soviets made three unsuccessful shots at the moon before hitting the bulls eye. He did not disclose his source. Khrushchev offered to swear on the Bible that this is not true. Meanwhile, it was announced that an operational type Atlas intercon tinental range war rocket launched here -last night successfully drop ped a simulated warhead on an impact area near Ascension Island, 5,500 miles away. Gifts To Students Total $250 PEP RALLY SLATED To get the first home football game of the year off to a good start, UNC cheerleaders (above) will present a pep rally and bonfire tonight at 6 o'clock on Emerson Field. Head cheerleader Charlie Graham emphasized that the rally will be over by 6:30 p.m., half an hour before the Panhellenic re ception. Included with the popular cheers will be this game's slogans, "Claw Clemson," and "Hold That Tiger." The UNC Marching Band will present "Here Comes Carolina" and "Aye Zizza Zoomba." Leading the cheers in Kenan Stadium for football games this fa!! are (first row, left to right) Sue Wood, Jody Guercio, Jenny Elder, Nancy Wills, Kathy Fulenwider, Carol Tieslau, Margaret Thompson; (second row, left to right) Tim McKay, Allan Clark, Bob Foxworth, Charlie Graham, Dick Rhyne, Walt Keck and George Ricks. Twenty students walked away with $250 worth of gift certificates, distributed by the Merchants Asso ciation of Chapel Hill, following the merchants' Welcome Student con test helj Monday. From more than 500 entries, the winners received gift certificates good for $10 in merchandise. Also five $10 certificates were distri buted by Jim Crawford, of the Orientation Committee, at the acti vity session held Tuesday at the Tin Cn. The following are requested to pick up their certificates at any member firm of the Association at the Merchants Association office as soon as possible. They are: Fred M. Biles. Ernest Carraay, Sandra Cross, Myra Edwards, Glenn W. i Glaser, Larry Golub. Bobbv Har well, Susan Henderson, Lynda Hirt. David Honigmann, Faris H. Jones; Bob Moore, Becky R o b b i n s. Thomas R. Shepherd, Mary Shu gart, Walter W. Tuthill, Cary H. Wliitaker, Roy Whiteseil, Louisa 1 Vi illiarr.s, asd J sunes Ycuiit
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1959, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75