CHAPEL HELL, N. C. SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1952 NUMBER 73 DrjGraharn 1 AiIf Deliver,':; i Inauqural . jtu.Tvsu.vd. xwiuuu vXiaiUUU, chancellor of Women's College will deliver the inaugural address to "the Dialectic Senate this Tues day night in their hall on the third floor of New West. John' Sullivan, Chapel Hill senior in the Business Administra tion school, will he installed as president of the Senate. He will replace Bob piampitt, St. Peters burg, Fia. Sullivan is a member of JPhi Eta Sigma, freshman honor society. Phi Beta Kappa .and Beta Gamma Sigma, commerce honor society. He served as chair man of the Carolina Political Forum and is a former member of the Carolina Forum and State Stddent Legislature. Before coming to Carolina he served in the Merchant Marine and the U. S. Navy. Also to be installed Tuesday night are Ed Smith. Matthews succeeding Gene Cook, Fayette ville as president pro-tem; Bill Walker, -Charlottesville, Va., who replaces Ed Smith as critic; Ken Penegar, Gastonia, replacing Heath Carriker, Eilerbe, as clerk; Charles Huggins, Durham, who succeeds Gerald Parker, Silver dale, as sergeant at arms; Wayne Thompson, Mooresville, who re places Bob Smith, Kutherfordton, as chaplain. Jim Maynard, Burlington, will continue in office as treasurer. There is no quarterly change in this office. Marines Interviews and physicals for the officer training program, set up by the Marine Corps will be held Monday through Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. except on Wednesday at the NROTC Armory. ATI nnllitAa cf 1 1 rT C with th- MJJ. fa'- enw.vM -' - exception of students in pre-m edi eine or pre-dentistry are eligible Anyone interested please see Ma jor F. C. Caldwell, Marine Offi cer Instructor of the NROTC Unit, or if he is absent, M-Sgt. Wheeler. Professor, Seven Students To Attend UNESCO Meet Seven students of the Con solidated University and one pro fessor will journey to New York at the invitation of the State Department to attend the .third biannual meeting of the National Conference of the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO sche duled for January 27-31.. With 2500 delegates, the Greater University group will participate in the college youth section of the meeting to consider the in ternational role of the American student community" and formu late a program for taking part in world affairs. - Delegates from universities, business and labor will attend the meeting. Part of the conferenze will be held at Lake Success while other sessions wiU be held at Hunter College. A tanqust at the -Waldorf .-.-Astoria hotel vill A Will: Visit On Goodwill I our A good glimpse of Austria-from music to costumes will be in store for Carolinians when 20 Austrian students and teachers come to Memorial Hall Friday night, February 20, Dick Murphy, one of the sponsors of the group, an nounced yesterday. The Austrians, on their good will tour," will entertain with Viennese music, folk songs, yodel ing, and slap dancing in Alpine costumes. Their performances have been likened to those of the Trapp family. y - - Besides UNESCO, of which Murphy is the student representa tive, the National Students Asso ciation, Edward Panziger, pro prietor of Danzigers restaurant, the Trapp family, and two United States senators are sponsoring the tour. The group usually performs for colleges and universities, hut has given performances for several towns in this country. At present they are touring Canadian Col ! leges. When visiting New Orleans paper commented, "Thirty-two young Austrian students invaded Loyola and turned the campus into a colorful Austrian folk festival." Visits to Yale, Harvard, and California "were termed "tremendous successes." 1 Lf. Comdr. Edwards Named NROTC Executive Officer Lt. Comdr. Frederick Lee Edwards, USN, has just been named Executive Officer and asso ciate professor, of naval science in Naval KOTC unit here, it was announced today by Captain John S. Keating, commanding officer. He succeeds Comdr. William J. Manning who last June was assigned to sea duty with the Atlantic Fleet. Since Comdr. Manning left, the post of Ex ecutive Officer has been filled by Lt. Comdr. Joseph A. Mathews. A native of Kinston, Com- close the meeting. Representing the Greater Uni versity are Professor Walter Spearman of the journalism school Dick Murphy, National Student Association member of the Na tional commission; Barry Farber; Mel Stribling; Bill Carr, Bill Wolfe; Banks Talley, assistant dean of students at State College; and Martha Lohr, Woman's Col lege. - . The National conference of UNESCO (United Nations Econo mic, - Scientific, and Cultural Organization) is held every two years. Other meetings have been held in Philadelphia and Cleve land, : Among scheduled speakers are Senator William Benton (D-Corm), Luther Evans, Congressional librarian, ; and university : pres idents. - nconsf iTUTions Campus FIOWS An unconstitutional "Honor Council" has been established by the , Dental SchooL President Henry Bowers told a Student Party dominated legislature Thursday night as he delivered ; his slat e-of-the campus message. This illegal court is indicative of a destructive force now de veloping within student govern ment here, a force born of the I University's rapid expansion and specialization and a student apathy toward student control, he explained. 'The whole campus seems to be A constitutional amendment making legal the new unautho rized Dental School "Honor Council" rausi be passed or the court will have io he abolished. President Henry Bowers said yesterday. A third alternative. Bowers said, would be io combine the court with the already-existing Medical School Honor Council. That the dental students had set up an illegal honor council was revealed by the president Thursday night in his siate-of the campus message to the Legislature. "They have no con stitutional basis upon which to establish an honor council" he said. "It's just a little honor council sitting off there." mander Edwards graduated from Wake Forest College in 1939 and entered the Naval Reserve in September, 1940, receiving his commission the following June. He served as assistant first lieutenant on the destroyer Eberle in 1941-42 while the vessel was on North Atlantic patrol and as first lieutenant 1 and damage control officer to J tine 1943, par ticipating in the invasion of North Africa. r r' He was awarded, the Navy Cross for boarding, a Germani blockade runner in. the South Atlantic in March 943. ' , 4-. Commander Edwards was later assigned to the destroyer Gatling, serving as executive officer and as commanding officer during the Catling's deactivation in 1946. During-his tour of f duty on the l-Gatling, he participated in the Marshall, Caroline, iew Guinea, Mariana, Leyte, Luzcn, Iwo Jima, Japanese mainland and Philippine sea campaigns, an4 after hos tilities, participated :in the oc cupation and demilitarization of Japan. ; j In 194&-47 he served as com manding : officer of1 ? the USS Moore and later the USS Cogswell in the Charleston Group Atlantic Reserve Fleet from tJuly 1946 to February 1947. In 1947-43 he was engineer officer of the Sub Group Three of the Charleston Group. After attending the General Line School in Newport, K.L, he was executive: officer of- the USS Compton :mn& last, year-was ' com manding officer - ot tha USS Loeser. DETrsI isuiiify going off in different directions,' Bowers remarked. He warned that '""before long we're going to have the law school, the medical school, and all of the other schools here estab lishing their own little student governments. If we don't solve this problem soon, (we will) be Radio Center Receives Gift O f TV Sets The University's Communica tion Center can now boast of hav ing what is believed to be the largest television picture screen in tow This was made possible by the donation of two television sets by the Wesiinghouse Corpora tion. These sets are to be used in conjunction with - the depart ment's television courses. ''We are certainly most grate ful to the Westinghouse Corporation-for . these sets," said Earl Wynn, director of the Communi cation Center. rWe needed them badly and didn't have the money to get them with." The larger set has already been installed in the Center's Studio A, and the smaller set, to be in stalled soon, will be available to the general public ' Wynn Appointed Earl Wynn, director of the Communication Center, has just been appointed to a national committee of 11 educators and representatives of public school systems and institutions of higher learning to map plans for a national network of all educational television resources. Wynn has just returned from a one-day national meet ing in St Louis, Mo., which was called by Major Joseph t M. Darst at the request of television officials of St. Louis and Chicago. Purpose of the session was to discuss the organization of a national educational network. Gamble Replaces McLeod As IDC Court Chairman I feel that we have the pos-l sibility of bringing the life in the dorms to a new level if the IDC, and all its parts, will as sume the leadership which it has been endowed with," Ed McLeod told the Judicial Council of the IDC when he resigned as chair man last Wednesday night. Dick Gamble, junior' from Sum merfield, was elected to replace McLeod at the same meeting of the Council. ; , "Until all men in the dorms realize that it is their responsi bility . . to enforce the social rules of -the dorms . . . the coun cil can expect t j have cases come before It," McLeod added. But 1 look forward to-, the day when tha Council will be a court with f! Cil V just a liberal arts studasit govea merit." He indicated that tJdi tsnd&ro of the campus to go oS in dif ferent directions'" could easily wreck the forms of student ernment now practiced he. He could propose no certain solution to the problem, but sug gested that the legislature con sider as a possible alternative &n ''all-campus student government' in which the students of each col lege or school elect representa tives to a consolidated legislature. Elsewhere in student govern ment great strides toward provexneni sad increased ef ficiency ere being taken, Ssut ha urged the legislators ta work to ward combating whs he term ed the "greatest problem," stu dent apathy. He urged the leg islators to evaluate student gov upon seeing how necessary it was, to make an effort io sell it to disinterested students here. In the student judiciary, a re vision in the appeal system is now being made to solve problems which have plagued the courts since 1945, he said. In addition he suggested that the student coun cils hold regular joint meetings to work toward standardizing their procedure. Bowers voiced his opposition, however, toward the proposed opening to public attendence of the student courts. "I continue tS be opposed to an open court sys tem," he said. The courts here do not operate upon a legalistic basis, as criminal courts. Instead, these student courts deal with "the sons and- daughters of citizens of this and other states", and opening them would lead to a legalistic system, he added. Honor is a difficult thing to codify," the student president said. Basically, the system we have here now is the best." Some headway is being made :n the field of faculty-student rela tionship, Bowers said, but he ad mitted that it was "a very dif ficult problem." The faculty doesn't seem t want to associate with the stu dents except in class, "and vice wersa for the students, he added. (See BOWERS, page 8) out a case." The council heard two cases concerning violation of dorm so cial rules. One student accused of repeat ed disturbances in his dorm dur ing the fall quarter. He entered a plea of no contest as-he was un able to remember what he was doing on the night of the stated offense. He was found guilty and sentenced to one quarter's proba tion with an official reprimand. The other student was accus ed of causing a disturbance dur ing exam week of the fall quar ter. A plea of guilty was entered by him and stated he would not let.it happen again. He was sea tenced to a quarter's' prcbti:c; . ( See COUNCIL pc-e 4) ' '"

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