S EH I A!13 DEPT. CHAPEL HILL, H. C. vf WEATHER Fair and mild today. High, 74; low, 40. WROfslG The editor says a politi cal party is out of bound. See p. 2. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 22 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THURSDAY; OCTOBER 15, J953 FOUR PAGES TODAY t ' ' ' Orientation Banquet Is Set Tonight A banquet will be held in honor The Rev. Charlie Jones Says If Bigger Pay Check ny C?oa, The College Student Is A Failure .By Jennie Lynn 'The college student should of '175' orientation counselors this t learn to think sympathetically; !!he evening at 6:30 is "Carolina "Inn. must be able to see unfinished is ' Chairman Tom" Creasjr :said' yes- j sues in their sweep of civilization leraay, xms is ine largest group j ana acquire convictions wita toi- of students' that have ever -been connected with "orientation".' It was done iri an effort to' give' the new students asr' much individual ''"at tention "possible.""1 '"' "! ' ; Dean of Students Fred Weaver will" thank ttie"students"6n behalf of'the'i'dminWaUon. 5 Ron tevinan'd ' his combo will furnish 'jazz5 for ;&er entertainment' Creasy said, ,?The entire set up of smaller s groups worked out to perfection, andt sincerely -hope that" it" will be continued "in 1 the future. ' - c "Each counselor did an outstand ing job in contributing to the suc-j cess of the program,' and it is int appreciation to them that this ban- j quel is given.;. The banquet for men and women orientation counselors brings to an end the 1953 orientation program. eration," said the Rev. Charlie Jones Jast night." - . ' "If av number of students were approached with the questions:' - " what are the most worthwhile things' we' cangefroriY "college; UNC Workers Can Get Group Hospital Care Hospital Care Association of Durham has reopened its Universi ty of North Carolina Group for en rollment of new members. The enrollment opens today and will extend through October 23. Representatives of the Durham Blue Cross Plan will be on campus during this time, and anyone wish ing information should visit the Blue Cross information and enroll ment center on the second floor of the YMCA. All full-time employees on the University pay roll, including fac ulty, administrative and mainten ance workers, are eligible. Em ployees who join during this spe cial rework will get comprehen sive Blue Cross care at group rates which represent " a" saving of "ap proximately 25 per cent oyer indi vidual non "- group1 membership dues. The University Accounting Office will handle - collection - of monthly dues on a pay roll deduc tion basis. There is no enrollment fee. The Comprehensive Certificate being offered to the University group is a Service Plan wmcn guarantees the full cost of a ward bed in member hospitals and un limited payment of all standerd hospital "extras". Maternity care, a schedule of surgical payments, out-patient care in accident cases and other benefits are also includ ed in this coverage. Hospital Care Association has a special contract with the new Me morial Hospital, which guarantees the following flat-rate payments on the Comprehensive Certificate: for ward bed, $14 a day covering full charges of the hospital for room and board plus standard ex tras; for semi - private" accommo dation's, $14, $15, $17, or $19 a day allowance, depending on the cer tificate selected by the member; out - patient benefits paid in full according to the terms of the cer tificate; and surgical benefits paid separately" to the docior, as set forth in the surgical schedule. In order to secure pay roll de duction on the first billing, new application for the University group must be completed before October 23. Benefits- will become effective on and after November 15, 1953. ! f si .A . -." t--. - iiis.i Jif-;: 'f i V'-- ,;-' i t i 1 . i , ; i - r - 4 4 Z f:VW V, ' 4s;i A TRIO OF WORKMEN put the final touches on the six-foot birthday cake which President Eisenhower cut at his party in the Hershey, Pa. Arena. Thousands of Ikemen were on hand to wish the chief executive a happy birthday. NEA Telephoto. why did you come to college?' "There would be different an swers," he said.' : ; ' Mr. Jones spoke at SUAB-spon- sored forum held in' Graham Me morial last night. His topic was, "Is College Worthwhile?" '"Back on a farm that I visited some years ago, the farmer "had been to E college for four years, During the evening we goVto talk ing. His' "mother came in snuff in her mouth and approached me with 'You're down "here from the university,' ain't you? Tom, here, went to college. Didn't do him no good. 'I sent him to school so he wouldn't have to work. See, here he Is back farming.'- ' Perhaps during some periods it isn't worthwhile oing to college. When I went to school during the depression, teachers had Tom's mother's idea. They taught you not to want to work with your hands. Frankly Til say that my college education" wasn't worth it, as far as making a living is concerned. "Most of us beyond our- fresh man year should; be expected to have a better sense of values than this. We may not learn what to do or how to do it, yet we should get a sense of high values. I don't hate money. But if all college does for you is let you learn how to get a bigger pay check, it hasn't done enough. "Some boys would say that they come to college to learn how to enjoy life. "During a previous rush season in a fraternity house a boy asked (See JONES, page 3) BP Possibility Frat Rush Invitations Stilt Given Fraternity rush invitations will be available again today in front of Gerrard Hall from 9 a. m. until 2!p. m. " Tomorrow they will be distribut ed 'from 10 a. m. until noon. , Freshmen interested in being rushed by a fraternity should go by the bid table at Garrard Hall and ask if there are any bids for them.' Strict silence a period during wHch fraternity men and fresh men are not allowed to " speak ex cept for social hellos started the first day of classes. It ends Sunday night when rushing begins. Strict silence will begin again Thursday, Oct. 22 and last until noon Wednesday, Oct 28, except on the Sunday evening in between when shake-up will occur. Shake up is when the rushee agrees to pledge a certain fraternity and tells them so. The campus has 26 social fra ternities which will be rushing. The six sororities rushed last week. as possible after 1 o'clock. UF'Jffll Tonight Two Days Left To Get Sophs7 Yack Pictures What's the matter with you sophomores? Out of a class of 900, only 100 students have shown up to pose for their Yack pictures and the r e are just two more days left. -! Fourth year medical stu dents" pictures also will" be taken through Friday. " - " ' Photographers will take pic tures today and tomorrow from 1 to 8 o'clock in the basement of Graham Memorial. The Yack asks students to come as soon 1N BRIEF NEW YORK Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy said yesterday a "top scientist" for the Army Signal Corps had admitted taking 43 se cret documents from Ft Mon mouth, N. J.,' to his home ' for study."" McCarthy told newsmen the man described himself as ' a close friend" of Julius Rosenberg, who was executed at Sing Sing Prison as an atomic bomb spy for Russia. The senator quoted the witness as saying he " attended meetings of the. Young Communist League with Rosenberg and that Rosenberg solicited him "repeated ly" to join the Communist party. TRIESTE Rioting flared in Trieste yesterday at Slovenes and pro-Communist Yugoslavs demon strated in defiance of an Allied ban on public meetings. It was the first violence here since the Brit ish and Americans announced six days ago their decision to turn ov er administration of Zone A, in cluding the city of Trieste, to the Italians. CHICAGO A Chicago attorney said yesterday that "Cinderella bride" Barbara (Bobo) Rockefell er and her estranged husband, Winthrop Rockefeller, have agreed to a record - breaking divorce set tlement of more than $5,500,000. The attorney, who said he was an "adviser" to Mrs. Rockefeller, said reports that the couple had final ly reached a settlement of their drawn - out marital difficulties were suDstantiany correct." Three UNC Students Called In Recorder's Court Tuesday Three Carolina students were called to answer charges in Chapel Hill Recorder's Court Tuesday before' Judge W. S. Stewart. . J. A. Timple Vas fined court costs for speeding 45 miles per hour in a 25 mile zone. John Richard Sawyer of Bur lington was called but failed to appear. "A" writ calling for his arrest was issued and the case was continued until Oct. 20. The case of J. F. Vaughn was postponed until Oct. 20. A State student, John R. Schenck, was called to answer charges of public drunkenness and resisting arrest. He pleaded nolo contendre and was fined $20 and the court cost. Also called were the two gen tlemen football fans from Ra leigh who were involved in the knifing in the stadium parking lot during the State game here on Sept. 26. In the case of C. L. Byrd Jr., who was charged with assault with a deadly weapon, no prob able cause for the charge was found. However, ' such evidence was uncovered as to cause a bench warrant to be issued for illegal possession of liquor. Byrd pleaded guilty to this charge and was fined $20 and court cost. The other participant, Clifton Wright, was found guilty of public affray and fined $40 and court costs. Di Named Quarterly Sponsor After Pledging 100 Support In its executive session this week first campus newspaper in the ear- Last Interviews Today for Delegates To SSL The last day of interviews for the State Student Legislature will be held today' in the Woman's Council room, Graham Memorial. The legislature will meet No vember 19-21 in the State Capitol Building at Raleigh. Twenty-six students will be chos en as delegates from Carolina. Fifteen will represent the House, three the Senate, and there will be eight alternates. MT. CLEMENS, Michigan An Air Force Reserve officer whose Dersohal lovaltv is unauestioned faced ouster yesterday as a "doubt fur security risk." He is Lt. .Mflo Radulovich, 26-year-old father of two and a meteorology student at the University of Michigan. A 10th Air Force board of three colonels recommended that "he be discharged from the Air" Force Re serve and that all commissions held by him be terminated." in an nouncing the decision, however, 10th AF headquarters made a point of repeating that "his loyalty was not questioned." Activities of his father and a sister were ques tioned. The father, John Radulo vich, 65, a Hudson Motor employe, was accused of having been a sub scriber of a "radical" newspaper, and the sister, Mrs. Margaret Fish man of - Detroit, with having en gaged in "picket line activity." the Dialectic Senate pledged 100 support to the Carolina Quarterly for the coming year. By this act, each member of the society subscribes to the maga zine, and the Senate is named as one of the Quarterly's official sponsors. "This is how we keep the liter ary in the Dialectic Literary Soci ety," a spokesman for the organi zation said.' The' senate has tradi tionally been a patron'' of campus publications," having"" taken an ac tive part in the production of, the Dr. Howell Speaks To UNC Personnel Group Dr. Roger W. Howell, Profes sor of Mental Health, led a discus sion of the film, "Mental Health," before a group of campus person nel workers Tuesday. Dean of Women Katherine Car michael said ' the discussion was the first in" a series 'of in-service training programs -designed to as sist the staff of the Dean of Wo men. " Dr. Howell is a graduate of the medical school of the University of Michigan. Before coming here in January, he served as a staff mem ber at Michigan, specializing in the field of psychiatry. ly part of the 19th century. The Philanthropic Literary So ciety, this week defeated a motion calling for block subscription to the Quarterly by the Phi. An amendment was pro posed which would "urge all Phi members to support the Carolina Quarterly" but would not require block subscription. Third Grail Dance Will Feature Johnson, Cole Dance Music Saturday night will bring to Woollen Gymnasium the third in the series of Grail Dances this fall, featuring Jimmie Johnson and his orchestra. . . An added attraction will be the intermission entertainment of Bob Cole and his Country Boys, a lo cal hillbilly band. This year, as in the past 23 years, the Order of the Grail has sought to provide informal Satur day night dances which are open to the entire student body. The only admission requirements are coat and tie, plus $1 in cash for the ticket. These dances, while providing a source of evening en tertainment, also help the Grail to finance $150 tuition scholarships for needy students. Johnson and his orchestra al ready have appeared at the Grail Dance on the Washington and Lee weekend. They feature smooth, danceable music, with "concert type" Dixieland jazz numbers, re serving the latter for breaks in the course of the evening. An experiment is being tried this Saturday with the intermis sion music by a hillbilly band, since there has been quite a de mand for this type of dance. "The Grail is presenting Bob Cole and his Country Boys to see if Carolina students like hillbilly music enough to justify further dances of this sort," a spokesman said. The admission charge is payable either at the door, in advance to Grail members, or at the booth in Lenoir Hall at lunchtime. The dance will last from 9 until 12 and will be on the main floor of Woollen Gymnasium. Tennis Club Match The Tennis Club will have a match and social with High Point College tomorrow at 1:30. The girls will play four doubles on the varsity courts. Mary Lou Jones, Nancy Gerlach, Sandy Donaldson and Carolyn Johnson are ' expect ed to take part. " ' Fall Concerts Announced By Glee Clubs The Men's and Women's Glee Clubs have already made, several engagements for the new year and have others pending. They opened the new season on University Day this week when they had an important role in the 160-year celebration of the institu tion's founding, including the sing ing of "The - Creation""1 (William Billings), and "Integer 'Vitae" (Flemming). On November 29 the Men's Glee Club will unite with the University of Virginia Men's Glee Club for a performance in Charlottesville." The traditional fall concert will be given on December 1. On December 15 both Glee Clubs will combine with the Chapel Hill Choral Club in singing "The Messiah." Future engagements for the Men's Club will include a perform ance with the Woman's College Glee Club and a tour. The Student Legislature meets tonight at 7:15 on the fourth floor of New East " It will be the first legislature meeting since Monday, when Gene Cook, chairman of the Student Party, and Bob Gorham, President of the student body and University Party member, traded verbal blows on the subject of the U. P's selec tion of orientation counselors. Cook, who also serves as the S. P.'s floor leader in the legisla ture, criticized counselor selection as "irregular and unfair." The se lection system, he charged, was run by the University Party "for the benefit of fraternities." And he promised he wouldn't let the point drop. That promise may materialize to night into a S. P. sponsored bill to investigate the counselor se lection' system. A similar bill, in troduced last week in the legisla ture by Independent Bill C. Brown, was defeated in a close vote. The University Party, mean while, is adopting a wait and see attitude. President Gorham insist ed Monday that fraternity mem bership, "had nothing to do with the selection of orientation counse lors," yesterday pointed out that the orientation system has gained the admiration of "students and faculty alike." "Administration officials," Gor ham said, "including President Gray and Chancellor House, have remarked upon the success of the program." A University Party spokesman said the Party's legislature mem bers will go into tonight's meet ing with no pre-set plan to com bat a possible S. P. move. At least one UP member of the legislature, Lou Wolfsheimer, looks upon the S. P. criticism of orientation as a "purely political" affair. Wolfsheimer said yesterday he sees no need for a legislative look-see into the program, but re marked, "Certainly, there's noth ing about orientation for us to be ashamed of. If the S. P. wants to investigate the program, I'm in clined to say, let them go ahead." ' Two or three other bills of a minor nature are expected to be introduced ' and debated in the meeting tonight Village Babies: Game Sitters Are Available Registration of children in Vic tory Village for nursery care at the Village Day Care Center dur ing Saturday's football game must be completed before 6 p.m. tomor row. The cost, covering a minimum period of four hours with no extra oh At 7:JU Tonight TO ProtS wm be 25 cents an hour for one director of ' ch cents for two of the same iamiiy, ana ou cents lor tnree ot the same family. Payment must be TV Director To Speak University Television and associ ate professor of radio, will speak on "The University and Its Tele vision Service" in the faculty lounge of the Morehead building tonight at 7:30. Shenkkan will be speaking be fore" "a" 'meeting of the American Association of University Profes sors and the general faculty. Lawrason Named Assistant Med School Dean: Winter Assumes Position As Surgery Professor made at the time of registration. Registration will be at the re-, sidence of Mrs. Joe Gilchrist, 163 Daniels Road in the Village. Blankets and sheets are request ed for children who are to sleep during the afternoon. No child will be accepted who is under one year i old, or who has not been pre viously registered. The nursery will open at 1 o'clock Saturday. Important changes in the staff of the Medical School and Hospital include appointments of Dr. Fre derick Douglas Lawrason. - - - as "assistant dean of the school of ihedicine ' and assistant professor in" the "Department of Medicine, and Dr. Frank Counsel Winter as assistant professor of surgery in charge of 'the division of ophtha lmology ' The appointment of Dr. Winter means that the members of the ophthalmology faculty will" from now on be available on a full-time basis. Dr. S. Dace Mcpherson Jr., and associates who had served during the past year on a part- time basis, will continue 6n ' that schedule. Dr. Winter wilj also have as an additional associate Dr. 'Robert G". Murray, instructor in surgery with the Division of Ophthalmology. A graduate" of the University of To ronto School of Medicine, he comes here from' the "Wilmer Institute", the eye division of Johns Hopkins Medical School where he was an associate of Dr. Frank B. Walsh; a famous eye specialist: Dr. Lawrason comes to the Uni- except for 20 months in Navy ser vice.' He was resident instructor in the Yale Medical " School" from 1946-48 - and resident instructor during the next two years. - In addition to his regular duties Dr. Lawrason will have special responsibilities at the School of Medicine. He has just been named chairman hi the Committee on Medical"" Education which will study the entire problem of Medi- versity from the National Research j cal -education as it relates to the Council, where he served for three j Medical School here and which years as professional associate and J will re-evaluate its objectives, as "coordinator of ' research and' He will also head up a new development for the National student advisory program for coun Blood Program while on leave ! selling medical students In their from" the Yale University School j first two' years. Twenty members oi medicine wun wmcn lie iiau ui uit lacuuy nave ueen assigned been associated from 1944 to 1950, 'as advisers. ' ."VV" WUNC Today 7 p.m. Sketches In Meeleody. 7:30 Out of Court. 7:45 Interview. 8 The University Hour. 8:30 BBC Drama Series. l0:0D-Local news and coming events. 10:15 Evening Masterwork. 10:45 Program resume and sign off. Talent Still Needed ..i i : . .. .. Auditions have been extended through tomorrow for the SUAB talent show. Auditions will be held from 7 to 9 o'clock tonight and tomor row in Memorial Hall. Anyone unable to meet this schedule is asked to contact Nancy Murray at Smith Dormitory or Lew ' Sherman at the "2BT house.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view