WEATHER Thanderfthowert. VOL. LXVIII, NO.,17 UNDER DAVIE POPLAR Somt 166 years ago the University f North Carolina was little more than an idea. Today is it a reality, end Monday the 166th anniversary of the laying of the cornerstone ef Old East will be celebrated. A re-enactment of the laying of the Hickey To Be Present At Pep Rally Tonight Charlie Graham, head chcerlead rr. says that Coach Hickey will be j t tonight's pep rally at 6:30 and will probably "say a few words" to the students. Other features of the rally at Emerson Field will be the football tam. the NC band, and the UNC Men's Glee Club. The cheerleaders will lead the students in cheers and in learning rrw songs for Saturday's game as ' Here Comes Carolina." Cai ravan Deadline for making reserva tions for the caravan to Wash ington. D. C , has been extended to Tuesday, according to Char lie Gray, student body president. Students may register in the Student Government office in Graham Memorial. Gray emphasized that student should check with individual in structors about, cutting, classes that Saturday. The caravan will leave for the Maryland game next Friday r night at 11:30. Student From Germany Is Panhel Guest Barbara Becker, exchange stu-1 dent from the University of Gotten-g-n in West Germany, was the spe cial guest at the first formal meet ing of the Panhellenic Council Wed n?day. Mis Becker will be dinner guest for about a month at each of the seven sororities here during the school year. The council has decided that all frternity and sorority parties are to end 8:30 p.m. during the week. If there are more than six couples present it will be considered a par ty. The Panhel pledge picnic will now be known as the Stray Greek pledge picnic. Near the end of October, the Stray Greeks will entertain the pledge classes. The pledge classes in turn will give a skit to entertain the sorority girls. Carolina Symposium Schedules Interviews Interviews for positions on var ious committees of the 10 Caro lina Symposium will be Oct. 12-15. 2 5pm. in the Woodhouse Confer ence Room of Graham Memorial. Among the committees open for additional membership are thoee dealing with welcoming of speak ers, construction and display of ex hibits on Symposium subjects, com piling the Symposium handbook and general arrangements. Symposium Vice Chairman Jack Lawing, commenting on these in terviews, said "The work done on these committees is vital to the success of the Symposium. It is of great help to the University, and of even greater help to the individ ual who participates. We hope to many students at these inter views mxt week." &uknts interested in these in U.!.C. Library Serials Dept. They Gathered Around Davie Poplar And Founded A University . . . The beginning of UNC, the oldest tate university . . . Planning 106 Offered Here For 1st Time This yar for the first time an introductory course in city plan ning. Planning 106, is being offered to juniors and seniors. George C. Hemmens, Assistant Professor in the Department of City nd Regional Planning, is in charge of the course which is given as general education for advanced un dergraduates and graduate students. oid provides orientation for persons who are considering undertaking graduate professional training in planning. The course deals with the history of urban development and civic de sign, present day urban and region al environmental problems, and the present status of city planning as in art, a science and a profession. Trailer In Steel Lot STo Be There For While i i "The truck trailer In Steele park- j ing lot will be there for three to j four months," says M. B. Mathews, censtruction foreman. The C. T. Wilson Construction Co. of Durham is using the old Colonial Store truck trailer for their offices and storage rooms while they are doing repair work to the windows in the third floor of Saunders Hall. UNC Prof To Inspect Rome Olympic Setup UNC associate professor of physi cal education will go to Rome next wek to inspect Olympic facilities. Clyde E. Pete Mullis leaves Oct 14 by jet for Italy via London. He will be in Rome until Oct. 21. Mullis was adviser last summer to the commanders of U. S. Armed Forces on athletic programs for the military personnel. G.M. SLATE Activities in Graham Memorial today include: Attorney General's Staff, 2-3 p.m., Grail; Academic Affairs, 2 4 p.m., Woodhouse; Graham Me morial Board, 4 p.m. Grail and Petite Dramatique 7:30-11 p.m. Rol and Parker III. terviews may make application at the Student Government offices in Graham Memorial and may get further details on the work of the committees there. The Symposium will be March, 1960, and is to deal with "Images of Man: The Individual in an Ac celerated Culture." It will feature many of the nation's most promi nent speakers who will attempt to solve and discuss problems of gen eral interest through meetings and lectures in Memorial Hall and class rooms. The Symposium is nationally known for its probing and stimulat ing discussions of matters of na tional and international interest. In 1958 such speakers as Harry Golden, Victor Reuther and Malcolm Cow ley came to Chapel Hill to discuss the problem of survival. Complete ffi Wire Service cornerstone will be presented at 11 a.m. at the south side of South Building. The ceremonies will be concluded under the Davie Pop lar, named for William R. Davie, the founder of the University. IDC Completes The Interdormitory Council Wed resday night discussed the ticket sales and final plans for the IDC weekend which features Sam Don ahu and his orchestra Friday after noon and night. Though the ticket sales have been good, they will remain on sale at any dormitory, Y Court, or GM Information Desk. Jim Crownover, student body presidential assistant spoke on be half of President Charlie Gray and urged participation in the caravan to Washington, D. C, next weekend. Crownover also mentioned the bond issue which will soon be voted on. In the near future students will oe asked to send pamphlets, which explain the issue, to their parents. Because of complaints about the loud hi-fi sets, IDC President Fun oerburk told the council that the privilege could be taken away if it was continually abused. He said, "Unless hi-fi owners take upon themselves the responsibility of controlling the volume of their sets, then we may be forced to pro hibit them In dorms." He reminded further that the "dormitories are a place to study," School Board Halts Church Baccalaureates Responding to Jewish protests, the Chapel Hill School Board has decided to discontinue the practice of holding the high school bac- culaureate services in local churches. As of now no new location has been designated other than on the school prmises. Religious services will be continued, but student at tendance will be optional. The action was prompted by z protest from Rabbi Efraim M Rosenzweiger, director of the Hillel Foundation here. He had requested the discarding of the . services, since the sermons would "embar rass Jewish students." Botany Department Seeking Oct. 27 Bond Election Will By BERN1E OHISELIN When the secretary came back from lunch she discovered that the water fountain was leaking again YWCA Head Here From Philippines Miss Nina Wong, National Direc tor of the Student YWCA in the Philippines, addressed the local YWCA cabinet Tuesday. Miss Wong, who is visiting on campus this month, described her work to the cabinet members. She is here as part of the leadership training program of the Foreign Di vision of the YWCA in America. Alter her stay at UNC, she will vis it other colleges and universities throughout the country in an at tempt to become better acquainted with Y work in America. During the Tuesday business ses sion, the. cabinet decided that a nwsletter of YWCA programs and events should be published weekly and posted on the bulletin boards of the dwmitories and sorority houses. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1959 Weekend Plans and it is the students' responsibil ity to keep them quiet. Public Health Seminars Announced The guest speakers for the stu dent-faculty seminars of the School of Public Health have been an nounced for the rest of the calen dar year. The seminars meet in the Assem bly room of the Library at 2:30 p.m Monday, Nov. 2, Dr. Ralf Elias- sen will speak on "The Need for Research in Environmental Re sources on our Modern Society." He is head of the Department of San itary Engineering of the Massachus etts Institute of Technology. This seminar is sponsored by the UNC Department of Public Health En gineering. The dean of the School of Public Health of the University of Cali fornia will speak on Monday, Nov. 16 He is Dr. Charles Smith. His subject will be "New Develop ments in Public Health Epidemiol ogy." The UNC Department of Parasitology is sponsoring this seminar. A noted English medical educa tor and writer will speak on Mon day, Nov. 30. Dr. Stanley Walton will lecture on "Medical Care Pro grams in the City of Newcastle." This program is sponsored by the UNC Department of Public Health Administration. The final program will be pre sented by the UNC Department of Maternal and Child Health. The guest speaker will be Dr. Abraham Horwitz, who will speak on "The World Health Organization of the Americas." Dr. Horwitz, a native of Chile, is with the Regional Of fice for the Americas of the World Health Organization. and so she called a repairman about it right away. Calling repairmen about leaks and broken switches and what not seemed to 'be old hat with her and so it only evoked a brief remark. I told her that I was from the Daily Tar Heel and would like to talk to Dr. Couch about the bond issue. She directed me to his office. Dr. Couch's office furniture con sisted of a laboratory table, a 47 Pledge Professional Interfrater nity Council has released the names of the 47 students who pledged professional business fra ternities during the rush period Sept. 28-30. Alpha Lambda chapter of Del ta Sigma Pi and Alpha Tau of Alpha Kappa Psi are the UNC fraternities in business adminis tration and commerce. Pledging ceremonies were Oct. 2. New pledges will be initiated before the end of the current se mester. Erwin F ullerf PIFC president, Student Legislature Holds First Meeting Of New Year; Quiz Show Contestants Defend Taking Drive' On TV Programs WASHINGTON, Uft Two money winning contestants admitted Thursday that they "took a dive" on the television quiz show "Dot to." Both defended the morality of their action. They testified before a House Commerce subcommitte which already has heard testimony that the "Twenty-One" quiz program now defunct along with "Dot to" was rigged by supplying some contestants with answers in advance. Whether "Twenty-One's" top money-winners, Charles Van Do ren, would testify before the scheduled end of the hearings to rn o r r o w remained uncertain. Some committee members fav ored subpoenaing Van Doren, who won $129,000 in 1956-57, if he turns down an invitation to testi fy voluntarily. Van Doren, now a $50,000-a-year commentator for the Na tional Broadcasting Co., has not been linked with any wrongdo ing on "Twenty-One," which NBC televised. But several witnesses have posed questions which com mittee members say only Van Doren can answer. The "Dotto" contestants who testified today were David Huschle, a New York restaurant manager, and Mrs. Dubarry Hill man of New York. Huschle won a total of $15,300 in eight ap pearances on the show, while Mrs. Hillman harvested $1,460 in five days. Huschle said he was coached on questions and answers in ad vance of his appearances on the show and was told to "take a Kappa Delta Plays Host To North Province Prexy Kappa Delta sorority is hosting the Beta North Province president, Marian Blanton of Charlotte, this week. After Thursday, Miss Blanton will go to Duke, where she graduated, to continue her tour of KD chap ters. She supervises the activities of the college chapters at Duke, Queens College, High Point College, the University of South Carolina and Emory University. straight backed wicker chair, a file cabinet and two stuffed bookcases. He talked long and earnestly and looked comfortable in the little chair. The table was neat and un cluttered. In the capital improvement bond issue the Botany Department is re questing enough funds for a new tuilding. If the bond issue is ap proved in the statewide election the Botany Department will only get UNC Professional said yesterday that the two phar macy fraternities on campus have not completed plans for fall rush. New pledges are: DELTA SIGMA PI J erry Barnett, Carl Bumgarner, Wil liam Crocker, Meb Davis, Mike Davis, Bill Grover, Al Haines, Melvin Hicks, George Mosely, Jim McGowan, Mickey Nelson, Doug Page, Dave Pollock, Lary Sawyer, Jim Shuler, Olen Smith, Jud Spain hour Jim Strickland, Dawson Offices in Graham Memorial dive" on his final contest. By that, he explained, he was sup posed to lose to Connie Hines. "Were you instructed to lose to Miss Hines?" Huschle was asked. "Yes, sir," He replied, adding that the instructions came from Gil Cates, assistant producer of the show. He lost when he was unable to identify a dotted sketch of Prime Minister Nehru of India who was identified by Miss Hines. Asked by Committee members if he considered his action frau dulent, Huschle said he did not. "Do you think taking a dive is fraudulent?" asked Rep. Wal ter Rogers (D-Tex). "I'm not convinced of it," the witness replied. He conceded that it would be wrong for a professional contes tant to do so in football, base ball, boxing or basketball because "these are salaried people mak ing a living out of sports." The difference, he explaind, was that he was not a salaried entertainer. Huschle emphasized that he would not have taken any money if he had believed his action was morally wrong. Mrs. Hillman testified she was coached in advance of her ap pearances in February 1958 by Stan Green, who was connected with "Dotto." "And I am perfectly blithe about it," she added. She said she regarded the show as entertainment and not seri ous as far as the television view ers were concerned. Yack Pictures The following students may have their pictures taken in the basement of Graham Memorial today from 1 to 6 p.m. Sophomores, nurses, graduates snd first and second year law stu dents. Extension for freshmen, public health students and medical stu dents 1, 2, 3 who must pay $1 late fee. Building; Decide half what it requested, but that will be enough to start construction. Dr. Couch said he didn't know where the rest of the money would ccme from. Principle Needs The principle needs can be sum med up in two words space and safety. The department has now grown to the point where further expansion nd development is near ( Continued Page 3) Fraternities Strider, Buddy Talbert, Henry Taylor, Pete Thompson, Dave Webber, George Weaver and Bob Williams. ALPHA KAPPA PSI Dave Brady, Bob Brown, J. D. Davis, Bill Garrard, Paul Glass, Henry Graham, Brent Gregory, Kennis Grogan, Mike Kizziah, Bill Lee, Larry Medford, Rudy Oates, Howard , Partin, Harry Petty, Dick Rodriquez, Rex Rouse, Dan Slate, Barton Tuck, Larry Ward, Dick Warfford, Danny Watts, and Ken Whitley. "They were having a happy time, I was having a happy time, everybody w7as," she explained. A third witness, Edward H. Hilgemeir of New York, agreed that he was the person described by the committee as "the man who blew the whistle on TV quiz show business." Now an unemployed comedian who said he is having trouble finding a job, Hilgemeier was a standby contestant for "Dotto" on May 20, 1958 but didn't get on the show." He said he prepared an affida vit on July 25, 1958, and submit ted it to the Federal Communica tions Commission and the New York City Attorney's office. In the affidavit, he said he was paid $1,500 in lieu of taking legal action against those connected with "Dotto" when he learned that a contestant had been giv en answers to questions to be asked on the show. He told of having identified pages torn from a notebook own ed by another contestant, the pages containing answers to questions. He named the other contestant as Marie Winn, a winner of several "Dotto" shows. Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark) of the subcommittee said Miss Winn is in Europe but had au thorized him to say she has ap peared before a New York quiz probing Grand Jury and cor roborated Hilgemeier's testimony. During an afternoon closed ses sion, the committee called for questioning Ed Jurist, producer of "Dotto" in 1958. Students May Sign Up For UP Membership Now Students wishing to join the Uni versity Party may do so this after noon in the UP office, 2nd floor of GM. It is necessary to join this week in order to participate in the con vention next Tuesday night, accord ing to Hank Patterson, chairman. Three UP legislature seats are still unfilled: one in Town Men's II, two in Dorm Men's III. Carolina Quarterly Urges Students To Buy Subscription By ELOISE WALKER Today is the second day the Car olina Quarterly assaults the cam pus with subscription envelopes. Envelopes will be distributed at various water holes around campus and intellectual students will be picking them up feverishly. Bingham, asylum for mad poets, will be well supplied especially so they can subscribe. If you're a mad poet go to Bingham and sub scribe. If you're not a mad poet go to Bingham anyway. You'll belong. Y Court will be supplied, if you want to go there, and library car- rels and other out of .the "way places. Students will subscribe to the Quarterly because it will indicate their support of campus literature. Campus literature is very impor tant. Anybody who does not sup port it is an anarchist. If you do not want to be thought an anarchist, buy the Carolina Quarterly. Second to the fact that the Quar-1 terly is publishing student artists is the fact that it is publishing a work of Ezra Pound, god of many informed English majors, and Har ry Golden, author of a recent best seller. This fact should attract many anarchists not interested in 67 years of dedicated service to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, whose motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Measure Asks Date Change For Elections By BILL WELLS and DEE DANIELS Paramount on the agenda last right at the first session this se mester of the Student Legislature was a bill altering the Election Laws. Passed under special orders, the bill, introduced by Hank Patterson (UP) and Dave Jones SP), recom mends that the 1959 fall elections be moved from the second to the third Tuesday in November. The. coming elections will be Nov. 17. Also approved under special or ders was a resolution presented by Bob Sevier (UP) to commend the delegates to the 1959 National Stu dent Association convention for their "outstanding work" there this summer. A bill to create two business ses sions of the Legislature per calen dar year was introduced by Gordon Street (UP). This measure directed at lessening the backlog of bills be fore the body. Ed Cox SP), on behalf of the Rules Committee, presented a bill to incorporate the Jim Crownover (SP) and Jones bills into the Leg islature by-laws. Crownover's meas ure calls for compulsory meetings cf legislators with their constitu ents, while Jones' bill allows mem bers to remain acting for two ses sions after moving from their dis trict. . A bill to amend a previous meas ure establishing a Student Athletic Council was profferred by Tom Cordle SP). It stipulated that the WAA president and the DTH sports editor be added to the council. Street proposed the establishment of a Jim Tatum Memorial Award for which all Carolina Athletes would be eligible. A measure to unite the Inter Dor mitory and Inter Fraternity Coun cils through a six member com mittee was presented by Sevier. The committee would be composed of three members from each group as chesen by the sluJent body presi dent. The group would have no pow er of action, but would serve in an advisory capacity to the two Coun cils. On behalf of Davis Young, DTH eitcr, Hank Patterson presented a bill to appropriate $60 to the paper to be used in connection with a spe cial edition, which will push the 344 million dollar bond issue. campus literature. Today when you are handed a modest blue envelope, discreetly marked "Quarterly", do not be a litter bug: be a literature bug. Pa triotically insert $1.25 and mail it or bring it to the Quarterly office. Starving artists on campus will re member and thank you when they are rich and famous. rss'jejtfr-i pcr .'jff:v? TZT i NANCY COMBES . . Quarterly editor , 4 : .1 'CI;;! ' Si i