CLiilJljifiiTiTi ((111 Mtt" ff fpf WEATHER Fair and hot with 92 high. B A School of Business Administration ded ication is today. See stories col. 6 and 7. VOLUME LXl, NUMBER 157 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY jfe7, Roberts, Sanford, Kraar Are Commended Winners of the Press Club's quarterly awards to Daily Tar Heel writers have been named and. will receive certificates of merit at the club's second outing at Hogan's Lake tomorrow night. Honors for the current quarter's best contributions to the paper 6&(cflripu$ Tp Figures Do na ;- r n5N. no BysGimess -will be presented to Editor Rolfe Neill for "timely and well-writ- Mary Myers Is Next Year's Council Head Mary Kit Myers, Tri-Delt from Greensboro, will be chairman of the Women's Honor Council next year. Council clerk will be Sara Rose of Chapel Hill. Miss Myers is treasurer of Delta Delta Delta sorority, a member of the Y Cabinet, and a member of the Honor Council since last Fall The council consists of Lillian Youngs, Mary Fran Allsbrook, Pat Smith, Jo Demming, Nancy Shaw, Carolyn Johnson and Marilyn Ha- bel. A report of the council's ac tivities for Fall and Winter Quar ters includes 16 violations tried There were 14 social rule charges, in several instances involving more than one charge, three Cam pus Code offenses, and two Honor Code offenses. Of the two Honor Code cases, one was acquitted and the other was found guilty of indirect lying involving a serious social rule and Campus Code violation. This case did not result in suspension. There were two removals of pro bation. Trustees Here For Regular Spring Session The full Board of Trustees meets in Gerrard Hall tomorrow at 11 a.m., to hear, among other things, a report from the com mittee on selecting a new State College chancellor and a provost for the Consolidated University. The session will be the regular Spring Commencement meeting. The Board will elect new members to fill standing com mittee vacancies resulting from the recent expiration of some trustees terms. Also on the agenda are rou tine reports from President Gray and the three chancellors, and a statement from Controller W. D. Carmichael Jr. on the Consol idated University's budget for the biennium 1953-55 as approv ed by the state legislature. Luxuriant growth of poison ivy beside the Public Health Building. Coed poppy hustlers barri cading the YMCA door, with, purchase of one of the red flowers required for entering or leaving the building. Voice, Brass, String To Be In Concert Faculty members of the Music Department will be heard in a con cert of chamber music tonight at 8:30 in the auditorium of Hill Hall. The concert will feature music for voice, for brass ensemble and for string quartet. There is no charge for admission ,and the pub lic is invited. The program will include J'Two Ricarcari for Brass" by the con temporary American composer, Willson Osborne; a Bach aria for baritone, flute and piano; a setting of Matthew Arnold's "Dover Beach" by Samuel Barber, for bari tone and string quartet; and the "String Quartet No. 1" by Randall Thompson. Performers Include the Univer sity Brass Ensemble, made up of Fred Hierson, trumpet, David Gad dy, trumpet, Guyte Cotton, horn, John Adams, horn, Joseph Fields, trombone; Lloyd Farrar, trombone and Joseph Wood, tuba; the Uni versity String Quartet, made up of Edgar Alden and Jean Heard, violins, Dorothy Alden, viola, and Mary Gray Clarge, violoncello; and baritone soloist Joel Carter. The Bach number will include Caroline Sites, pianist, and Earl Slocum, flutist. Faculty Group Topic Is Iran Charles F. Milner, associate di rector of the University's Exten sion Division, will talk on the situ ation in Iran before the Men's Fac- ular director, Joseph Wood, and alulty Club luncheon Tuesday at 1 prayer and benediction by the Rev erend William Howard. The organ recital will include three short Fugues by Pachelbel, Bach's Chorale Settings "Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring," and "Thou Comest, Jesu, Down From Heav en," the D-minor Toccata and Fugue of Bach, Liszt's "Andante Religioso," and the Toccata from the Fifth Symphony of Widor. The public is invited to attend. OQCliQ ten" editorials, Louis Kraar for news writing, Ken Sanford for fea ture stories, and Biff Roberts for sports coverage. Two of the recipients of awards are repeaters this quarter. Biff Roberts earned commendations for sports writing during the 1952 spring quarter and also during the winter quarter of 1953. Neill re ceived his first award for news coverage last fall. The awards, first issued in 1952, were originally based on the single best stories in the four categories for which they are now issued on the basis of overall contributions during the quarter. Pete Hulth, Rebecca Near, and Jess Nettles were awards committee judges this quarter. Prof. Walter Spearman served as faculty advisor. Also to be feted at the outing are Leo J. (Buddy) Northart, char ter member and president of the Press Club from its beginning un til the recent installation of Jerry F. Epps who was elected this quar ter, and graduating seniors of the club's membership. Monday's program will mark the last meeting of the club for this quarter. President Epps has said the activities will be resumed dur ing the summer sessions and that the Press Club looks forward to a big revival of interest during the coming year. 1 Mm . I c j m w n n m EI ifW s y w-.-iA;S-jaKw''w - , I,, , s:-v v. .. - i ,- - , f. - , 1 . - $ k if - 1 i os A If X-ii -km i wwy Tfft 1 at mar-.v., : jfrwftMrf)i jeiMtewaa f-T i imam ir MrHn:iini riYiiifti nnrrrvin'nltfc Aft triir - ""i 'it"iiiiflTW'ir-"-v'-- on Prog irooTj Organ Recital Features Bach Chorale Pieces A service of special music cen tering around the new Standaart organ will be presented at the Methodist Church tonight at 7:30. The service will include a recital of organ music by Monte Howell of the Music Department, a per formance by the choir of Haydn's The Heavens Are Telling," under the leadership of the church's reg SHOWN HERE ARE SIX OF THE .MAJOR figures in tomorrow's dedication of the new School of Business Administration. Top row, from left are: James E. Webb, president of Republic Supply Com pany, Oklahoma City, Okla., former budget director, under secre tary of state and under secretary of the treasury; Donald K. David, dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration; Thomas B. McCabe, president of Scott Paper Company, Chester, Pa.; bottom row, from left: Thomas H. Carroll, present dean of the Busi ness School here; Dudley D. Carroll, professor of economics and for mer dean of UNC's old School of Commerce; and George M. Harri son, president of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks and vice-president of the American Federation of Labor. Fleishman Gets Chairmanship As CPU Elects New Officers Joel Fleishman was elected t Episcopal Student Congregation. p.m. at the Carolna Inn ballroom. Mr. Milner, who spent six months in Iran recently giving audio-visual instruction under a grant from the State Department, will show pictures taken during his stay, particularly those taken of the partisan street mobs which formed in the showdown between Premier Mossadegh and the young Shah. WUNC Schedule 7 p.m. Sunday Showtime. 7:30 Learning in Later Years. 7:45 Songs of France. 3 Little Orchestra Society Con ceils. 10 News and Coming Events. 10:05 Evening Masterwork. Tomorrow 7 p.m. Stories 'n' Stuff. 7:30 Adventures in Research. 7:45 Bonjour Mesdames. 8 University of Chicago Round table. 8:30 Drama of Poetry. 9 British Concert Hall. 10 News and Coming Events. 10:05 Evening Masterwork. chairman of the Carolina Political Union at its last meeting to suc ceed Bob Pace. A rising junior, Fleishman is ac tive in student government and student politics. He is parliamen tarian of the Student Legislature, active in the Di Senate, secretary of the Carolina Forum, past vice chairman of the Student Party, member of the Young Democrats Club, chairman of the Blood Com mittee last year, and outstanding freshman in the NROTC last year. Officers elected to serve with Fleishman are: Don Sherry, vice- chairman; Norwood Bryan, secre tary; and Gene Cook, forum rep resentative. Sherry is a rising sen ior from Connecticut and active in the Phi Assembly. Bryan is a ris ing sophomore and is active in the Student Party and the IDC. Cook, a rising senior, is active in student government, the Di Senate, and the The CPU was organized in the early thirties under the leadership of Professor E. J. Woodhouse for the purpose of discussion and bringing speakers to the campus. It has brought sucn persons as Franklin D. Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Sen. Paul Douglas, and Maurice Tobin to the Carolina campus. This year it undertook a new venture in the presentation of television discussions over WFMY TV in Greensboro. Tonight the CPU is holding the last discussion of the year which is a continuation of the question of religion and the preservation of the American way of life. Recruiting Officer A Naval Recruiting Officer will be on campus Tuesday to talk to seniors interested in the Navy De partment's Officer Candidate Program. The Boys Will Go Too By Joyce Adams Hop, skip and jump around the Power.' All 10 a.m. classes Common Examination (All French, German, and Spanish courses numbered 1, 2, 3 & 4) All 11 a.m. classes All 1 p.m. classes All 12 noon classes, All 2 p.m. classes and zoology 104 All 8 a.m. classes : - All 9 a.m. classes CPU Discusses Freedom Vs. Catholicism Tonight The Carolina Political Union will conclude this year's program with a meeting tonight at 8 o'clock in the Grail Room of Graham Me morial. The discussion will be on the question, "Is American treeaom worl(L threatened by Roman Catholi- That's how it will be for Dr. cism?" and Mrs. Arnold S. Nash, teaching This question was brought up as an(j counseling team here, when a result of Paul Blanshard's book, they begin their global tour next "American Freedom and Catholic month. The main purpose of their trip will be their work for six months in India. Dr. Nash will be work ing with the Commission on High er Education of the National Coun cil of Churches in India, and Mrs. Nash with the Commission on Mar riage and the Home. Their trip is being sponsored by the Harvard-Yenching Founda tion which is concerned with the colleges and universities of Asia. Dr. Nash will report the team's experiences in India and the other countries of Southeast Asia in a report to the International Mis sionary Council. The data will be used in working out a new policy for Christian higher education in the light of the new political re gimes of India and the other coun tries. Mrs. Nash will be reporting on Globe-Trotting Nashes Prepare For Busy Schedule In Summer Final Exam Schedule No student may be excused from a scheduled "' by the University Infirmary, in case of Alness, or by hu General Col lege Faculty adviser or by his dean, in case of any other emergency compelling his absence. All 3 p.m. classes and Bus. Adm. 71 Sc 72 and all classes not other- d , wise provided for in this schedule . Saturday, May 30, 8:30 a.m. Saturday, May 30, 2 p.m. Monday, June. 1, 8:30 a.m. Monday, June 1, 2 p.m. . Tuesday, June 2, 8:30 a.m. ' Tuesday, une 2, 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 3 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, June 3, 2 p.m. Thursday, June 4, 8:30 a.m. Health Society, the Planned Pa renthood Federation of America, and the American Association of Marriage Counselors. She will alsg write for the journal, "Marriage and Family Living." The first hop of the airborne journey will be to Ireland, where the Nashes will visit with friends prior to skipping on to England. There they will spend a month va cationing and working with the International Missionary Council planning their work in India and the Near East. Dr. Naih has been invited to preach at the Oxford University Chapel while there. During their stay in England Mrs. Nash will jump over to Gen eva for the second ecumenical conference on "The Church and Marriage." This will be attended by psychiatrists, psychologists, so ciologists, and clergymen from America, Europe and the Near East. They will go from England to France where Dr. Nash will preach at the American Cathedral in Paris. From there they go to Switzerland for a short visit with Dr. H. G her work to the Carolina Mental I Baity, on leave from UNC to work with the World Health Organiza tion, and his writer wife, Eliza beth Chesley. Next they will spend a month meeting with professors and ad ministrators at the universities of Yugoslavia, Greece, Palestine and Egypt. On their way to India they plan a few days in Pakistan with the Richard Duncans. Duncan, an alumnus of Carolina, is in Karachi with the Point Four Program. The Nashes are taking their two sons along on part of the trip. Sixteen-year-old Keir will be dropped off to spend the latter half of the summer with friends in Germany. David, 10, will do more traveling than any other member of the family. In Egypt he will take a plane to Uganda, East Af rica, to visit nis aunt tor six months. Later, he will rejoin his parents in India for the trip home via Burma, Siam, Japan and Hawaii. Like any other woman, Mrs Nash's chief concern at the mom ent, is how to get a year's supply of summer and winter clothing in to the 44-pound weight limit pre scribed by the airlines. Four distinguished leaders in the fields of business and industry will deliver the featured addresses at formal dedicatory exercises for the new home of the School of Business Administration tomorrow. The program will be held in the auditorium of Carroll Hall, be ginning at 2:30. Addressing the afternoon session will be James E. Webb, .president of Republic Supply Co., Oklahoma City, Okla., and George M. Harrison, Cincin nati, Ohio, president of the Broth erhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks and vice-president of the American Federation of Labor. Governor Umstead will be pres ent at the afternoon program to present the three buildings to President Gray. This will be among the first major activity by the gov ernor since he was stricken with a heart attack shortly after his inaug uration in January. The night program, which will begin at 8 o'clock, will be high lighted by addresses by Thomas B. McCabe, president, Scott Paper Co., Chester, Pa., and Dean Donald K. David of the Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University. Three new buildings comprise the new home of the school Carroll Hall, the central unit (nam ed for former Dean Dudley Dewitt Carroll), Gardner Hall (named for the late Governor O. Max Gard ner) and Hanes Hall (named for the Hanes family of Winston-Sa lem). Of traditional design in archi tecture, the three units are con structed so as to complement the Saunders-Manning-Murphey quad rangle across the mall. Raymond Weeks, Durham archi tect and engineer, designed the new buildings," and J. A: Jones Construction Co., of Charlotte had the general contract. A number of interesting exhibits have been arranged especially for the dedication, including the In ternatoinal Business Machines Cor poration Art Exhibit entitled "Painters of the United States 1720 through 1920." Webb, who will speak on the role of businessmen in relation to government service and the role of schools of business administra tion in training personnel who may go into government service, is a native of Granville County and an alumnus of the University. Be fore becoming associated with Re public Supply Co., he was under secretary of state, director of the Budget Bureau, under secretary of the Treasury and vice president of Sperry Gyroscope Co. Harrison started his career as a railway clerk, became president of a local chapter of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks and worked his way up to head of the national organization in 1928. He has served as the U. S. delegate to numerous world labor meetings. He will dis cuss the responsibilities of labor toward business and the place of labor in education for business. Dean David will open the even ing program with an address on the role of education for business. He received his master's degree m business administration from Har vard in 1919 and the following year became instructor and as sistant dean at Harvard Graduate School. He served as president of Maize Products Co. from 1932 to 1941 and has been dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Busi ness Administration since 1941. He is a trustee of Radcliff Col lege, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, General Electric Co., is a director of the Boys Club of Am erica and author of numerous books on problems in retailing. McCabe will take business re sponsibility from the point of view of business management for his subject. He has been with Scott Paper Co. since 1915 when he graudated from Swarthmore Col lege. Starting off as a salesman he became assistant sales man ager, vice president then presi dent. He has been a director of the' Federal Reserve Bank of Phil adelphia since 1938 and chairman of the board since 1939. Open house will be held in room 301 Carroll Hall, from 1 to 6 pjn ana tours of tne buildings are scheduled between 1 and 2 p.m and 5 and 6 p.m. New Exhibits Are Featured In B A School One of the highlights of the ded ication of the new school of Busi ness Administration are the many interesting exhibits that have been arranged by the faculty under the direction of Prof. Alton G. Sadler. One of the feature exhibits is the International Business Ma chines Corporation Art Exhibit en titled "Painters of the United States 1720 through 1920", which will be on public display on the fourth floor of Gardner Hall until June 7. This exhibit, which is valued at $200,000, includes some of the original works of such fa mous painters as Durand, Peale, Remington, Stuart, Harnett and Whistler. The School of Business Admini stration textbook exhibit, arranged by Delta Sigma Pi professional fra ternity, is a display of all texts used in required courses in the school. It is divided into three pri mary groups; the sophomore, jun ior, and senior year requirements. The senior-year group is sub divided into eight parts the eight majors: accounting, production, marketing, personnel, banking and finance,.'', statistics, insurance and business economics. The junior-year displays the seven core requirements, required of all business students, and the sophomore year group shows four courses required in this year: the basic accounting and economics courses. The graduating class in account ing systems, which is taught by Professor Sadler, is presenting to morrow in Hanes Hall a display of the many accounting systems now in use in North Carolina, along with an accounting practice set of 1854, a textbook of 1901 and the "Federal Income Tax Service of 1918." Also includd in the display are more than 200 volumes which have been presented to the "Pro fessional Accountant's Library," and the "Accounting Teacher's Li brary", and it is thought that they constitute one of the most valu able accounting libraries in the South. The. entire ground floor of Car roll Hall, the main building of the new school, has been set aside as center of adult education and training available to all business men and other citizens of the state and region. The exhibit, "Educa tional Programs for Businessmen," has been arranged by Prof. Rex Winslow and includes pictures and literature of some of the activities of the program of institutes for business and industry. The Production Management De partment of the Business School has arranged in its laboratory on the basement floor of Gardner Hall some of the equipment and ma terial that is used to acquaint the students with all types of produc tion. The exhibit is under the di rection of Prof. John Dykstra. Prof. Richard P. Calhoon. of the ersonnel Administration Depart ment has arranged an exhibit in Gardner Hall to illustrate the many aspects of personnel relations and the analysis of different materials now in use. The exhibit is also de signed to serve as source material for development of different types of personnel problems and projects. In the library Prof. Warren Pier- pont and Mrs. H. von Beckerath will have an exhibit of different types of constructive writings of students associated with the school and writings of current faculty members in the form of articles and books. French Play Le Petit Theatre Francais will present its annual play Wednes day and Thursday at 8:30 in the main lounge of Graham Memorial.