Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 17, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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I 4. B!-;".1 ' " 1 ' ,.. ..ii II. jiii jiiii-i.. ..,., i . i.im.i - X ii i-ii - viiitiimiii.ii hi - - - ii .in ' - ) . y. v" " UM3E R!! Complete A' Photo and WirTT CHAPEL HIL 1 . MTTT-" f. I " ""UMT' FEBRUARY 17, 54 office, m GrflW Memorial FOUR PACES TODAY 0 ok Exchange May Be tier Deal Gorham Rollie Tillman Gets Nomination For Orientation Charmanship idii ' t' students may change, and students Charlie llv. ,bu) UMa texts from me att and Syd Shuford, will meet! President Bob Gorham yesterday ! approved bv th. ... . Pneesext Tuesday to look further Into announced the appointment 0Vtd b tt 8ldent i .... .. elnHanl Ik. - n. . - . . a i ra i s, uinvier. ue numaty junior from Lake. idfnt n..b Gorham and. The Stores Committee, said Gor- wles. Fla to the office of Orien iham, yesterday asked Ritrhu tation Chairman ... .. HI , - uMcniay a su- suDmit a list of used book prices (t ,!u, lanus oiv.j me prices tne Exchange oavs. i it, . . " ' Legisla- The appointment of a junior came as a surprise to some, be- rail fnr Ika na.t - Said Gorham yesterday: , confident that the program for office a steppinfratone to the pres. laency ot me student body or have -,y hj Muuw.is "" u iae prices ine students nav. luie coming year will be thj best - . 1 . a " I I X. J ua, ujc BLUUr .it me txenange. , "we are working in h;. we have evpr hut nnui. i. - ' , .. . ... jSiUr;! -- I , a uca, I - ---" is vw , run IOr mat OUlCe, sSvmmiuec. saiu uornim. ;oi me most capable men I know; 'pe i H McGregor of j Informed Sources, however, said!he has shown his interest in the ybv'. H K. Ritchie, gen- yesterday that state law prohibit 'prorara by hi diligent work on .fr ot the hook, tx- minsr Trips Students a book store's underselling an- iWf imenn Orientation, other, under the provision of the! " nave thought long and care State Fair Trades Act fully about appointing a chairman Gorham said, though, that the and now 1 am sure the best man state law does not concern used nas the Job." Religion Expert Dr. Ralph Sockman Speak In Hill Hall Tonight books, with which the committee is dealing. The Campus Stores Committee was established by an unanimous vote of the Board of Trustees of the Consolidated University in May of 1952. It is composed of three faculty members appointed Meet Your- by the Chancellor, three students n wasning- appointed Dv.Lhe president of the ooay. an oppor outstanding! (I Nations student and Dean Gorham's appointment must be ;r Government , h 1-23. stu- watch new i jHilincs bo - the flrnir of In visits to . - they will !Tiins are Vi Executive ; 'he Supreme u !I runl out ;ont at work. Weaver. Third Political Unknown Enters Senatorial Race Adler To Talk Today At Tea Elmer Adler of New York, noted authority in the fjelds of prints, printing and publishing, will speak on dook collecting at me Bulls Head Tea in the Assembly-Exhibition Room of the University Li brary at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The public is invited. Adler's visit to Chapel Hill is part of a five-month tour of uni versities in the Southeast for the th r -'"! in seeing ' meeting with fr- -v h-T countries, !' '-h-p in ' ' - on mcctirgs. S . s v, to the UN. jdi .-. ,f the UN I : - -t ,tives from Sf 5EVf,tR. rage 4) RALEIGH, Feb. 16 A third political unknown today of ficially threw his hat into the race J purpose of holding seminars and for the U. S. Senate. j public talks on graphic arts. The He was Amazon E. Turner of , tour is sponsored by the American Palmyra, a Democrat, who paid Federation of Arts. $125 to the State Board of dec- t S2 a night ! tions to run for the seat held by Statistics Colloquium who re- Sen- Alton A. Lennon. rjr. Wilfred Alan Gibson, asso- In addition to Lennon and form-' ciate professor of Psychology here, er Gov. W. Kerr Scott, two other , will give a talk on Latent Profile Democrats besides Turner are ' Analysis, A Possible Alternative to seckin the seat held by Lennon. Factor Analysis, at tne nexi meei- They are W. M. Bostic of Cary, ' mg or tne ". meals $9-Wjhing'on Statistics Colloquium a machinist, and Henry L. Sprinkle, The meeting will be held Monday of Greensboro, an independent at 4 p m in Room 206, Phillips tne oil distributor. I Hall. p .-h J': A'C Symphony ns Concert a Piftsboro m;hony O Earl Siocum Spring Semester's Enrollment Shows Bigger Coed Population Total University enrollment for the spring semester is 5.486 a decrease of 190 students from last fall's enrollment-according to fig- Although the new enrollment is below last falls, it shows an In- . . . I e AiJ .til ' crease oi over uie dents enrolled for the spring quar ter last year. Coed enrollment jumped to a high of 962, as compared to last spring's female population of 835. An overwhelming percentage of th enrollment. 7S, are North Tillman was appointed in Pc tober as Interim Orientation Chair- man by Gorham. In the summer' loilowing his freshman year here, he traveled through Florida, show ing "In The Name Of Freedom," a movie about the University. In his sophomore and junior years he served as a Counselor. 'There's fun la Orientation be cause you have a chance to give back to the University," he said yesterday. "It's a real privilege." Tillman outlined the plan he formulated while serving as in terim Orientation chairman. "When the new student is admit, ted to the University he receives a letter of welcome from the Ad missions' office," Tillman said. Then he wiU get a letter of con gratulations on his acceptance and a welcome from the Orientation Committee, he added. Along with the welcome, the stu dent will receive an activities card, which he will fill out and return to the committee. Then it will be filed, campus organizations will note which activities he prefers, and will send their material to him through the committee. The procedure will cost the or ganization two cents. Tillman ran unsuccessfully for editor of the Yack last . .Mr, and is now managing editor of Tarna tion, humor magazine. Previous Orientation chairman was Tom Creasy. IP SEEN 1 FratK Play Anyone interested in the pro duction of a French play is asked to attend a meeting in 202 Mur phy Hall tomorrow afternoon fit 3:30. A working knowledge f the French language is desirable, but not essential. Dr. Ralph W. Sockman, the Methodist minister who has two and a half millipn radio listeners through his "National Radio Pul pit," will speak tonight at 8:30 in Hill Hall. Life magaine recently featured Dr. Sockman and eleven other preachers for their effectiveness in the pulpit as determined by a polling of ministers, priests and theological schools of all faiths. The article, entitled "Great Preach ers," gives such men much credit for the recent increases in church memberships in the United States. Dr. Sockman's visit to the cam pus will include a meeting with the Chancellor and deans at 3:30 this afternoon, a press conference at the Carolina Inn at 5:30, the ad dress at Hill Hall at 8:30, and a re ception sponsored by Wesley Foun dation in the Methodist Church at 9:30. He is Iso expected to visit Phi Delta Theta fraternity, to which he belongs. The 64 year-old minister, who has written several books including "The Higher Happiness" and "How To Believe," receives 5,000 letters a week from his radio audience seeking help in their personal problems. Dr. Sockman received his BA from Ohio Wesleyan in 1911 and his MA from Columbia in 1913. In 1916 he was graduated from Union Theological Seminary and received his Ph.D. in 1917 from Columbia. For 37 years Dr. Sockman has been minister of Christ Church on New York's Park Avenue, and for Celebrated Methodist Minister Was Lauded In Life Magazine 'Great Preachers' Article 25 years he has preached on Sun. 'American Society For Russian Re days on the "National Radio Pul- lief, chairman of the Interfaith P'-" J Commission. He is a member of Since 1928 he has been the chair- Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho, man of the World Peace Commit- Phi Delta Theta, and Sigma Chi. tee of the Methodist Church. Hel This week Dr. Sockman has been is a director of Union Theological one of the featured speakers of Seminary, New York University, Religious Emphasis Week at Duke and New York Medical College; i University, where he held per a trustee of Ohio Wesleyan and sonal conferences with students in Drew University; and director of addition to making special ad The American Russian Institute, j dresses. His visit to the Carolina He has also served as president campus is being sponsored by the of the Federation of Churches, YWCA, YMCA, and Wesley Foun delegate to Russia in 1947 of the dation. GREENVILLE, Feb. 16 Stu dent rating of instructors begins this week at East Carolina College, it was announced here today by Louis Clark, chairman of the Stu dent Rating Committee. The faculty rating program is scheduled to last until Saturday of next week. Rating sheets will be given to students Monday, and Clark urges them when rating the instructors to "at all times be frank, but without prejudice." The rating sheets are divided into five categories: subject mat ter, classroom procedure, grading and testing, student relations, and personality. In addition there are several miscellaneous items listed on the sheets. Students will not sign their names to the rating sheets. The instructor will compile the aver age taken from an me rating 'sheets submitted in his class an.1 record it on one tabulation sheet. 16 iT) Most The strike began last Thursday , which he will present to the eval- students con- night following a student demon- uat ion committee. Charles Kuralt Appears With Charlotte Symphony Charles Kuralt, Daily Tar Heel reporter, appeared Monday and Tuesday nights with the Charlotte Symphony in Charlotte. Kuralt did a reading of Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait." His deep, resonant radio voi"e has been heard locally over WCHL and WUNC-FM. For several summers he has worked with WOT in Char lotte. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace H. Kuralt of Charlotte. Shaw Students Still On Strike; Result Of Meeting Is Unknown Four Fraternities Are Tried For Dance Rules Infractions In their regular meeting last night the University Dance Committee tried four Carolina fraternities for dancing to combo music without members of the dance committee present. The new chairman of the committee, Charlie Waters, disclosed to- day that all four of the fraterni ties had been ordered not to hold any dances until Spring semester 1955. Waters replaced Wallace Prid gen, the past chairman, last night, and John Medlin took over the job of secretary that Waters had filled. "We are going to try severaj individuals next week for drink ing at the concerts during the past weekend," Waters added after the meeting. East Carolina Begins Rating Of Instructors concert in! Carolina residents, representing j r.iht at 8 .- -houl gymna- ;c and om of Pittsboro, the concert in No admission 4,299 native Tar Heels. Of the 1.123 out-of-state students, Virginia has the largest delega tion, 155 students, and New York and South Carolina both Lave 127. Florida and Georgia follow with 106 and 94. respectively. There are 64 international students en rolled, representing 27 foreign mnA A U. S. DOSSCSSionS. "i0! The number of veterans enrolled , , the post-war peaa: year , hances from, JW . hllt above last year's' by Shetant, ltal q 1043 xhis lotai includes Student sitting cross-legged near Davie Poplar, feeding pea nuts tar seven hungry squirrels. Kite hanging on coatrack in Graham Memorial. i tival Over-1 I Geiger Chosen To Coordinate SP Campaign The Student Party Monday night RALEIGH, Feb. Fhaw University tinued to remain on strike today stration at Dr. Strassner's home. in protest over "grievances" and I the recent suspension of six stu dents, but officials were hopeful of a setttlement tonight or tomorrow. A group of students, faculty members and trustees met today in a long conference, but there suits were not immediately known. Dr. William Strassner, president of the Baptist Negro college, was not available for comment. Blinded Girl Must Depend On Operation GREENSBORO, Feb. 17 Judy Atkins, whose stepmother is Dean F. P. Payne said officials ( charged by police with dehberate- horwd to see an end to the strike :ly blinding her right eye, must de- " " tonight or tomorrow. pend on an operation to save any part of her sight rather than ac- 1 a i ii,. r.onorat College n.n iuuu, - - ' , . . r r.aor camDa nn CO- ,ira m.de'ghowed lbe largest enroiunenw mnrlna elections, ministration ultimatum yesterday. s ...lu vm ....-i-onf. enrolled tnere. nrum ' " ---- .LT.r J,e College of Arts SP sources said yesterday Along with the election oi Student leaders said today that ccpt offers of an eye from two only a handful ot students attend- men ed classes after receiving an ad I'ty, had its il -twenties.' c.nnA the College 'f Profpssor' j r--! . ,uh The School ana . .. j t "luc ' " of the,of BufiineSs Administration was Geiger. tne ar cn"VZ M7. to class or risk placlrtg their aca 'r,Mnat.onaifourlh with 452, and the sno. .Mature - . . . . nersona, records m The students were informed in I I UHa Ia vadirft a mimeograpncu I .. .. t.l ! I UChl of Medicine' .how. lie Hyatt and Joe Roberson were Jcopardy. The student committee'. iltsliiirn Iho n a dinner' an enrollment of 223 future doc- nominated the spon- tors, In f tl from Division one 10 memoera were told that if aca ... a i ..1.. rKK TrtTOM- ' . a J Lm Increase of 60 over last (whicn memoes ... v. - demJc routine was not restored u, rvar num- torvi. ana manning ....... chosen from Law School enrollment of 173, ,. m increase . Mannintf Muntzing and uc'" - " ; , ii he served year's total. Future lawyers ....- . from today they woum auiun.t.., ' ri i. fuih expel themselves from the schooL D.. Horace D. Strickland, re gional director cf the North Caro lina Eye Bank for Restoring Sight, Inc., said here tonight that the only part of the eye that may be transplanted to a person is a small piece of the cornea. "It's impossible to transplant the retinal from one eye to another," he said. Reports from Duke Hospital, Durham, where the 12-year-old Clark pointed out that "the real purpose and value of the rating sheets still lies in the instructor's analysis of his own weakness. The rating sheets are also to help us improve instruction in this col lege." Free Lance Forum Should capital punishment be abolished in the U. S. will be the topic for discussion at tonight's meeting of the Free Lance Forum. The meeting is to be held at 7:30 in Lounge 1 of Graham Memorial. Frats Report More Damage Additional damage from van dalism during the Germans Week end was reported yesterday. Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity lost a sofa to the furniture bonfire in the SAE front yard. It was report ed the Phi Gams put their sofa in their backyard after a cigaret had ignited it and they had succeeded in extinguishing the blaze. Later, the sofa was stolen from the yard. Two metal "Stop. Schnol" signs were taken from Glpn Lenox and Chapel Hill schools. The Glen Lenox sign was domaged beyond repair, police said. Its cost was estimated at $35. Dr. Castle Of Harvard Will Lecture On Blood Dr. William B. Castle will give a lecture on "Immunological As pects of Disorders fo the Blood" Tuesday, February 23 at 8 o'clock. Dr. Castle is Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. The lecture, to be given in the Hospital Auditorium, will be mainly for Medical School stu dents and staff, but is open to all others intereseted in the field of medicine. On Cimpus Tomorrow 119 Wiih Open Arms' Wy Club Goes 'Coed': Men's World? E,.,, ' ... i ... for women but remarked I the University. . Of P.LL k. D.lorlo I A ' Club is no ""Ity Club. f nally been ' the group f an amend Alexander 'fire profes- "flight" 1 a new name result being ""th Carolina The group will now fulfill the purposes for which it was set up in 1925, commented sociology professor Gordon Blackwell, in tofar as it U supposed to pro vide an opportunity for faculty to get acquainted and discuss matters concerning the Univer sity and academic questions. To accomplish Hhls, 12 cf women faculty member. U nec essary be said ness for women but remarked that he thought it was "refresh ing arid relaxing" for men to be able to get off by themselves every to often. Thus he opposed the passage of the amendment. But Wiley finally jsseertcd that once passed, he would "welcome the women with open arms." Blackwell also noted that this change abolished an evidence of Cultural lag" wnicn naa m m. . a ara t- T- t InA W. L. Wiley or me rT ":,lted or iUCh a long time In partment made known his fond- existed wr sucn Women nave ucen wcicm ingly widening their rights, he declared, and the University has tended to lag behind the change with regard to the Faculty Club. The new "coed" Faculty Club will have its first meeting next Wednesday and one professor commented that "the women may bo a little slow to come in, but before long they will Join." Turkish Prexy To Visit RALEIGH, Feb. 16 (JP) The how he would describe the reactor official tour of Turkey's presi-, to the President and Mrs. Bayar. dent. Celal Bayar, through North since neither speaks English. Man Carolina this Thursday and Fri- yas said, "There just arent any day was outlined today by George words" for such translating. P. Geoghegan, Jr., general chair- At 2 p.m. the group will visit man of committees handling the the Morehead Planetarium on the arrangements. ; University of North Carolina cam- The 70-year old Turkish ruler pus at Chapel Hill An hoor Inter iaa in ha IT ! Jan IJl for a the oartv Will visit th T l j .i-j I ,ti.n"""i,J " " . ' child is scneau.t-u u ... 27-day cross country view ot the and Myers cigarette factory at Dur. sometime this week indicate thatjUs o us Gqv ham nJght a formal the retina of her ieayt Is arnment He is the first Turkish will be given at Duke University, tached from the eyeball. The other Qf iQ u g The pjrty ntun to ,he s,r eye is sightless. j Bayar ,eft Daiias, Tex., by train Walter Hotel that night. James Gulledge, High Point, to- today. His three cars are due to On Friday the party will visit day became the second man to arrve here Thursday morning at Rocky Mount, driving through Wil notify newspapers that he would 3 a m, and his party will leave son on the way. At Rocky Mount donate one of his eyes to Judy if from the Seaboard station at 9 a.m. they will visit the Shelton Looms, the offer would mean that anyfor a welcoming parade along the Rocky Mount Mills, and visit part of her eye sight would be re- Fayetteville Street, Raleigh's main with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert If. Itnrprf A Lancaster, Pa. man ha 1 downtown artery. Schell. Schell is chairman of the 0 f If nni-ll made the same oner night tinnl.'l transDlant a hi; Highlights of his stay include: board of the Sidney Blumenthal Tour of the Textile School at North Co., one of the nation's textile cornea Carolina State, which Bayar per- giants. . : . .v. -fc;M-. mn.llv reouested. and a tour of j The party will return to Raleigh if it were that pan 01 v. . at w. 'and then depart by train for New eve that was injured, ur. "-,"",,. Ji-in. York Friday nisht endimr th. - i., 1 rjT!n nainfl3. pjaioin - - "but tne reuna i -- . n 1 j.iu.i. lining of tne eye ano is i j ki. i w. ? Htllia.v - . i I Kim Vnrk admitted W repurv- nmnucr u u mv7 in w too complex and delicate to :,. - ltllinId 0DiWiii be unofficial and private. J M j CI 3 MB " iranspuBcu.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 17, 1954, edition 1
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