Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 21, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Serials Djp. Cbspel HU1, N. C Kiff WEATHER Cloudy, windy and mild with chance of showers ;onight. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 103 " Comvlet - s Pfc J Tir. 1 : J '" " : f h- rnoio and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1954 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY i Program On Prayer Is Today Karao Chujo of Tokyo, Japan,; will be the chief speaker at the Universal Day of Prayer for Stu dents service this afternoon at 4:30 in the Episcopal Church. Chujo, a Methodist Crusade scholar who is now doing" gradu ate work in English at Duke Uni versity, has been active in the .student Christian movement in his country. A day of prayer for students is a long-established American ob servance, sponsored first by the churches and later taken over by Luther Wishard, first student sec retary of the YMCA. This observ ance paved the way in part for the WSCF Universal Day of Pray er for Students all over the world. John R. Mott, general secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation, said: "The observance cf the Universal Day of Prayer for Students has been successfully promoted in over forty countries." The service this afternoon, to which the public is invited, is an annual observance of the "World Student Christian Federation, and ha been planned by a committee of local representatives from the various church and Y organiza tions which comprise the WSCF. In addition to Mr. Kazuo, also on the program will be Ed Ram saur, ESU, from LincoLnton; Frank Warren. Canterbury Club, from Snc.v Hill: Bill Lofquist, Westmin ster Fellowship, from Asheville; Miss Jackie McCarthy, Wesley Foundation, from Norfolk, Va.; and Jerry Campbell, Lutheran Student Association, from Taylors -ville. Gray To Work With Institute On Education :-n Gray, President of the i-tcd University, was re elected to membership on - of Tru-tees of the Insti-I-'err.ational Education in ork City, the Institute an I yesterday. v serve a three year ; a rjstee of the exchange P - said yesterday that the A1 involve meeting with irl " two or three times a cen'I; tute Xe-.v Ir.-t.tute of - International n. a central private agency ' ' .S. in the exchange of stu hers, snd specialists, ad r programs for public and agencies here and abroad. ear approximately 4,000 m eighty countries r train in a country other "s-ir own through Institute pn;:s CPU To lak On War, Peace i ire necessities of modern war-' iare and peace compared with; jr:3r: and peace prior to the! "ir.fiict will be discussed ' the Carolina Political it 3 n'rlnr-V in th Hrnil tonir Urdon Porn of Graham Memorial. r Jam.?s E. King of the His jy Department and Jmimy Wral ;y airett )r of Grahanr Memorial, 'Abe .?U03ts at the meeting. The l invited and is asked to m the discussion. '-nr.ers will discuss to what th -i":ertcans snouia entrust i:-rties and rights to govcrn ;nt d;Jring the cold war, and per Ps a hotter war against a totali- "ia.i regime. Newman Club Ta" .fGV- Fat-her Frances Madi 'fn TAl spe"k on "Religion' and cio.ogy at the Newman Club meet i r -j ? i - , . . . , oclocs this evening f e IIorace Williams Lounge of ffham Memorial. Refreshments be served. CflnPp Hesfricfi(ms Obi "'Freshmeni Suggested yU frsS fr n n fr$K n n n J? Coed buys hot Coke, cold grape juice, mixes the tico and then drinks them; Happens daily in the Y. Coed, after icriting home to .mother that she needed more lingerie, getting box of Lux flakes. Woman's College prof hanging back at end of State of Univer sity Conference banquet to eat an extra piece of apple pie. mi . rADE G. McCAUGO Will Address Merchants Merchants Open Meet OnCamous The third annual Merchants Association Officials Conference will be held here today and Mon day. The conference will be spon sored jointly by the University and the North Carolina Merchants Association. Registration will begin at 4 o' clock this afternoon in the Caro lina Inn. There will be a social hour at 6:30, followed by dinner and special entertainment at 7:30. The Presidents' breakfast will be held Monday morning at 8 o'clock in the Inn with Dr. R. S. Winslow, director of the Bureau of Business Sendees and Research, UNC, as speaker. Dean Thomas H. Carroll of the School of Business Administration will welcome the Merchants Asso ciation officials at the first gen eral session in Carroll Hall at 10 o'clock. Miss Amanda Thomas, public re lations secretary, Ohio Council of Retail Merchants, Columbus, O., will address this session on "The Public Life of Retail Associations." A panel discussion on "Develop ing the Year's Work Program" will follow with W. A. Kirkland, executive secretary, Durham Mer chants Association, serving as mod erator. Wade G. McCargo, Richmond, Va., president, National Retail Dry Goods Association, will address the luncheon session on "The Challenge To Retailing in 1954." The afternoon session will, fea ture a panel discussion on "Finan HnT Ynnr Merchants Association," with G. Wesley Williams, executive secretary, Raleigh Merchants Bu (See MERCHANTS, page 4) Works Of Art Students On Display In Museum The work of three graduate students from the Art Depart ment is represented in the 12th American Drawing An nual Exhibition which- opened re cently at the Folk Museum, Vir ginia. The three are Edward Bry ant, Mary Evelyn Stringer, and Leonard White. The purpose of this exhibition, the second open national compe tition to be held in Norfolk, is to provide a cross section of the kind of draughtsmanship found in widely varied parts of the coun try; and this year it draws from a wide range of artists, even as far away as Colorado and Nebraska. ural Set For Tcmorrow At N.C. State RALEIGH, Feb. 20 ) Dr. Carey H. Bostian will be formally installed as Chancellor of North Carolina State College in exercis es in Reynolds Coliseum Monday. I Dr. Bostian assumed the chan cellorship Sept 1, succeeding Col. j J. W. Harrelson, who retired after heading the college for 20 years. The installation program start ing at 3:00 p.m., will be opened to the public. Gov. William B. Umstead, who is chairman of the board of trus tees of the Consolidated Univer sity of North Carolina, will formal ly install Dr. Bostian. The oath of office will be administered by Chief Justice M. V. Barnhill of the State Supreme Court. President Gordon Gray of the Consolidated University will pre side and will deliver the charge. Following the charge, Dr. Bostian will make his inaugural address. Greetings will be extended by Major L. P. McLendon of Greens boro, representing the Trustees; Dr. Walter J. Peterson, represent ing the State College faculty; Bil ly Barnes Oliver of Selma, repre senting the students; and Frank B. Turner of Raleigh, represent ing the alumni. Poly Scientist To Talk Here "Communication and the Social Sciences," a lecture by Dr. Harold D. Lasswell, a recognized world authority on political science, pro paganda and communications, will be given tomorrow night at 8:30 in Carroll Hall. Dr. Lasswell, professor of law and political science at Yale Uni versity, has served on many na tional boards, including the Re Search Advisory Board, Committee for Economic Development, and Committee on Freedom of the Press. The professor will also speak to the Faculty Club Tuesday, confer with faculty members in the fields of communications and the social sciences, and will talk with com mittees and individual faculty members about communication re search and instruction. Carolina Fellowship Jeanne Axelson, Southeastern staff member of the Nurses' Christian Fellowship, will be guest speaker at the meeting of the Carolina Christian Fellowship to morrow night at 7:30. The meeting will be held in the Horace. Williams-Thomas Wolfe Lounge in Graham Memorial, and group singing will precede the speech. Budget Meeting The Budget Committee of the Student Government will meet to- morrow afternoon at 4 in the Grail Room. J.ickie Brooks Edits Inauqural Set l "1 'Bird '" Fli . UP Publishes Paper The University Party is pub lishing a weekly newspaper now. The first issue of "Looking UP," edited by Miss Jackie Brooks, is scheduled to come off the Mimeographing machine ear ly this week. Copies will be sent to dormitories, fraternities, sor orities and party members. The first edition, three pages long, carries on the front page n introduction by Editor Brooks. She writes that she hop es ."that it helps you become a little better acquainted with what is going on in Student Government and what the role of the UP is in Student Govern ment, m ' : . ' . " ... " r i - I ft "vs ( " I ifH i mini nun nniiini ..... t .1 imm nai'm DR. A. E. ENGSTROM UNC French Professor Penny-A-Vote Will Determine Game's Queen A new queen will be named on the Carolina campus this week. Miss Blue and White of 1954, who will reign as queen of the Blue-White football game, will be elected this week in the Y lobby. Sponsored by the Monogram Club, the contest to pick Miss Blue and White will run Tuesday through Friday of this week and will be on a permy-a-vote basis. The following --girls have been chosen as candidates: Sandy Donaldson, sponsored by Tri-Delta; Pat Gibson, sponsored by Carr Dormitory; Marcia Crane, sponsored by Pi Beta Phi; Judy Landauer, sponsored by Chi Ome ga; Gerry Snider, sponsored by the Nurses' Residence; Ann May, spon sored by Chi Omega; Peg Hall, sponsored by Kappa Delta; Jeanne Bunch, sponsored by Spencer Dormitory; Marilyn Habel, spon sored by Alpha Delta Pi, and Lol ie Van Kirk, sponsored by Tri Delta. Proceeds from the contest will go into the Monogram Club schol arship fund and the orphans' par ties fund. A bulletin board will be located in the Y lobby with each girl's picture on it. Ballot boxes for each girl will be beside the board. The polls will be open each day from 8:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. Miss Blue and White will pre t. canr rrnn ntoc ta Tn n :i m n hi 1 the year and the assistant coach ! of the year as picked by the Mono-1 gram Club and to the game's win ning team. The Eighth Annual Blue-White game will be held March 6 in Kenan Stadium as a climax of the j spring football practice now in progress. Wake Forest's Monogram Club sponsored a similar contest last year which was successful.' Press Club A business meeting of the Press Club will be held tomorrow night 'at 7:30 in 306 Bynum. "We feel that the members of the party and the students who are not members should be giv en an opportunity to know a lit tle more about just what the party does and what membership in the UP stands for." iThe editor says the paper will, come out every Thursday after noon. Articles in this week's edition include regular UP news, such as revisions of the party's by laws, spring elections nomina tions, and a note from Jack Stevens, UP chairman; and, the paper's views on recent Legisla ture actions. Engstrom By Jennie Lynn "Over all the years you can see evidence of how birds have so influenced man, in folk be liefs, in ancient rituals, in form al practices and in poetry," Dr. Alfred Engstrom said in re ferring to his Humanities Lec ture to be given Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in Gerrard Hall. The title of the lecture will be "The Symbol of the. Bird in Flight."' "I am interested in showing how bird flight has" cap tured man's imagination," the UNC French professor said. Dr. Engstrom said that if you ask someone what poems he can recite he most probably will have all kinds of wings in his mind. "If you have ever been at sea, it is an overwhelming feeling to see a bird appear overhead. You will understand quickly how poetic imagination can associ ate it with: loneliness and other moods of man." He became interested in birds World Understanding Forum Is Planned On Tuesday By Y A World Understanding Supper Forum will be held Tuesday evening at 5:30 in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall. The meeting is sponsored by the YMCA-YWCA World Relatedness - Commission. - No Reduction On UNC Price For Milk Now If the current milk war in Dur ham is going to have any effect on University prices, it hasn't been felt yet, according to campus food buyers yesterday. . Officials at the Carolina Inn said they "had no information at the present time," and those at Lenoir Hall could not be reached for comment yesterday. Informed sources said the University buys its milk on a contract basis, and that holders of the contract may or may not hold the University to '.he specific price. Durham Dairy Products, whose Chapel Hill branch is located at the Dairy Bar, said yesterday it e'was cutting prices ot wnoiesaie miJk three cents per quart, and re tail milk one cent. Lons Meadow Farms also an nounced that as of Saturday their price of milk would drop two cents per quartT and one cent per quart home delivered. Bot dairies serve Chapel Hill, and their prjce cuts wm g0 nto effect here. The cut in milk prices began some two weeks ago in North Carolina when George Coble, Lex ington dairy king, cut the price of j Coble Dairies milk, on the whole- bue ievw uure tenia yci 4uu Women's Athletic Group Closes Two-Day Session Tho NTnrth fam na Athlete Federation of College Women clos-if ed its annual two-day conference here yesterday. Guest speakers at the opening meeting were Controller W. D. Carmichael, Jr., Dr. O. K. Corn well, director of the Department of Physical Education, and Mrs. Ruth W. Fink, director of PEysical Education for Women. The week-end schedule included a banquet Friday night, an organ ized playday and a general busi ness meeting yesterday with the Rev. Charles Hubbard, pastor of the Chapel Hill Methodist church, as speaker. Catholic Mass Mass will be held at 8 and 10 o'clock this morning in Gerrard HalL Confessions "will be heard for one half hour before each mass. To Lecture when a boy in Illinois. He and his friends used to go out to watch them and keep records of when they were in flight His fascination continued, and he still notes the seasonal change in their flights. "I immediately sense an unearthly quality in a bird, especially a flying bird," he said. "The ways various poets use them in their work are al most limitless." The public is invited to this lecture, to be held under the sponsorship of the Humanities Division of the College of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Engstrom is author of numerous articles and in 1950 was co-editor with Dr. U. T. Holmes and Dr. S. E. Leavitt of "Romance Studies Presented To William Morton Dey." He is one of the editorial collabo rators in the "University of North Carolina Studies in Com parative Literature," a series of books attracting national atten tion. "Germany The New Gener ation's View" will be the title of the panel discussion. Four ex change students from Germany now studying at UNC and at Duke will comprise the panel. Forum moderator will be Alice Hicks. Wolfgang Holstein. from Konigs berg, East Prussia, will briefly de scribe the general picture in post war Germany, dealing primarily with the geographical and popu lation situations. Holstein is study ing sociology and political science. He was drafted into the German Air Force in 1944, and served as a glider pilot and then in the in fantry in the fight against Russian troops in the fall of Berlin. His father was taken prisoner, and is still missing, presumably being held as a prisoner in Soviet Rus sia. Since the war, Holstein has be come a member of the Internation al War Resisters League. He has studied at Hamburg and Wilhelm shaven, combining the study of Economics, Sociology, Political Science and History into one ma jor, wtih a minor in Psychology. He plans to teach. Nikolaus Bruck, from Vienna, Austria, will speak about Austria since the war. Bruck has studied in Vienna and Marburg, and is pre sently attending Duke Uiversity. His field of study is International trade and Economics. He plans to enter business, specializing in f or- eign trade. Mt7r frn- rrWc .-m speak about some of the political aspects of post-war Germany. He has studied in Frankfurt and Mar burg, and is now attending Duke um,U3UJ'- iuujrXng m LIle Ileiu. political science and in ternational law. His aim is to enter the foreign service of his govern ment. Hans Karl Kandlbinder, from Passau-on-the-Danube, Bavaria, will speak on his experiences behind the iron curtain and as a student in the Free University of Eerlin. Mr.. Kindlbinder is currently studying at both the University of North Carolina and at Duke Uni versity, in the field of Classical T3 V t 7 rvl r rfrr TTtc-f riT TTa raioira A his degree from Munich in 1951, in Ancient Cultures, studied at the Free University of Berlin until 1953, and in Copenhagen for the rummer course in 1953, just prior to coming to the United States. Ha is here on a Rotary Exchange Scholarship, and is planning to teach upon his return to Germany. Pfaffs Report Urges Liberal Course Set Up By Dick Creed The State of the University Con ference suggested this , week that the Consolidated University con sider segregating freshmen into separate dormitories and restrict ing them from joining fraternities. It called for "liberalizing" edu cation and a move away from the "tendency of the whole education- On Friday The Daily Tar Heel will print the complete text of' the report given by Dr. Pfaff on the freshman and sophomore years. al system to reduce learning to accumulation of facts." It called for resistance to the "teaching of basic courses from the standpoint of any particular vocational ap plicability." It recommended that liberal ed ucation during the freshman and the sophomore year be "strength ened." An attempt should be made , to view courses offered as "inte gral" parts of a student's orienta tion to the world rather than an air-tight, compartmentalized, first course in x-subject," the confer ence decided. Report Given By Pfaff These points were part of the report presented by Dr. Eugene Pfaff of Woman's College at the final dinner meeting of the con ference in Lenoir Hall Friday eve ning. It deals with one area of discussion students in the fresh man and sophomore years. A host of suggestions were of fered by the conference in an at tempt to answer the question, "How can the Consolidated Uni versity of North' Carolina more nearly meet its full responsibility in the areas of instruction and re search?" Whether these and the other recommendations are acti vated here and at the other bran ches of the Consolidated Univer sity depends upon action by the administration. In making the recommendation restricting the freshmen, the Pfaff report stated that "admin istrative procedure" in regulating student behavior "appears to be too lax, too inconsistent, too ir responsible, and too ineffective." It said that a "much clearer" line should be drawn between the area of "student autonomy and the faculty-administrative respon sibility." It pointed to "peculiar problems' which transition from high school to college present and said that they are now "inade quately recognized and met." It called for more dormitory counsellors here and at N. C. State College: "There should be at least a minimum of reasonably developed dormitory controls, stu dent initiated, to instill the basic ideals of community living and to insure adequate study conditions." Liberal Approach Urged In urging a "liberal" approach to education, the report stated that under present conditions the students are not required to think. It attacked the "tendency to re duce learning to accumulation of facts, memorization, and passive response to "poorly designed test ing procedures." "The University is not doing what it can to implement the communication skills taught in grammar, logic, etc., by requiring the student to do creative written work in all appropriate courses," the report stated. Hall, Mayo Give Reports Two other reports, dealing with students above the sophomore year and those in graduate and exten sion study, were presented by Dr. Everett Hall of Chapel Hill and Dr. Selz Mayo of N. C. State Col lege. The reports were summaries of the discussion among the more than 200 faculty members of the Consolidated University who came to Chapel Hill Thursday for the conference. The Pfaff report said that the (See RESTRICTIONS, page 4)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 21, 1954, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75