Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 12, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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y W C LIBRARY .SE3IASS DEPT. : CHAPEL HILL, N. C. - WHY? - He has a question," the editor hasIfs on p. 2. ; . v a ... -. .. -1 . .WEATHER ; "Cooler and some showers -today with anexpected high VOLUME LXII NUMBER 119 Complete Jf Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1954 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY Ji :v.IEil 3t-IW vjI IFC Of K Votes To Retain Policy eenina Violators Secret Limit Placed On 2nd-Time Punishments The Interfraternity Council has : given a vote of confidence to its present policy of keeping secret the names of fraternities convict ed of violating IFC regulations, Council Chairman Henry Isaacson announced yesterday. '- . . At the same meeting, the Coun- cil passed a motion to limit strict er punishment for the second and third offenses to a fffur-year per iod. Policies of the IFC regarding these matters were challenged by The Daily Tar Heel recently, and the actions taken were apparently in response to the editorial criti cism. The DTH called for the defeat of the secrecy policy of the IFC. But the Council, by a strong ma jority, defeated a motion to leave to the discretion of the IFC Court the decision on whether to release names of convicted houses. The Council followed the DTH recommendation in the matter of second and third offenses. A third recommendation made by The Daily Tar Heel was discussed in the Council but no action was taken on it. It was a suggestion to put fines for violations on a per capita basis, rather than imposing the same fine on both large and small fraternities. - V 1 1 5 .V Candidates Agree Daily Tar Heel editorial candi dates Tom Peacock and Charles Kuralt yesterday reached an agree ment on evening hours for cam paigning. Peacock, "acting on a suggestion published by Columnist Chuck Hauser, proposed to Kuralt that they would campagin against one another in dormitories only be tween the hours of 7 and 9 o'clock in the evening. Kuralt agreed, so now the two candidates will disagree at the same time every night 'ii i ii Mrnm r nrirfl"- nrminiiimi n iifniiiiiiwi1- CorneU Wright Photo THE PANHELLENIC Council is sponsoring a Fashion Show to bo given next Friday, March 19. Modeling th latest in spring attirt? are left to right Laura Woodward, Chi O from Charlotte; Paige Moore, Tri Delt from Charleston; Sarah Rose, Pi Phi from Chapel Hill; Judy Landauer, Chi O from Red Hook, New York and Betty Parsons, Pi Phi from Jasper, Ga. Student Nurse List Disclosed Twenty-two student nurses were placed on the Dean's List for the BRAT Nof Defunct Yet; Lives On Caldwell Roof By Warren Love BRAT has not gone underground, but overhead. A Daily Tar Heel reporter final ly tracked down the ring-leaders of the BRAT movement yesterday and found them on the roof of Caldwell Hall putting the finishing touches on their newest sculpture. It consisted of a beat-up old brown shoe, on which, rested two rotten scraps of lumber with a rear-view mirror from an automo bile sticking out one end. Questioned about the meaning of the sculpture, they replied that "BRAT is above and beyond mean- first semester, according to an ing." It was described, however, as announcement yesterday by Dean Elizabeth L. Kemble of the School of Nursing. Students making a B average or better include: Junior class: Mary Anderson, Durham; Bette Davis, Morganton; Virginia .Edwards,- Durham; Ger aldine . Snider, " Fay etteville; .Win nie Lee T Wiiliams ,-Fayetteville; Sally Winn, Henderson;, and Mar tha Yount, Hickory. s;? . . , , Sophomore class:-: Billie Dobbs, Charlotte; Geneva File, Salisbury; Dorothy McNeely, Morganton; Syl via Minteer, Asheville; Natalie the only sculpture "we know m which the observer may see his own image ." . ' Tom Brame, graduate art stu dent and one of the leaders of the BRAT movement, reported that al Dean Carmichael Talks To Women's Association Katherine Carmichael, . dean of women!: spoke last night to the Raleigh branch of the American Association of University Women. Dean Carmichael and Frances Sweat, assistant personnel adviser Salter, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Jane Sny- to women here, will attend a meet- der, Winston Salem, and Jane Sox, 1 jng 0f the N. C. Association of Hickory. j Deans of Women tomorrow at the Freshman class: Sara Burt,' Bis-1 Woman's College of Duke Univer- rno- Shirlev Coeeins. Walstonburg; . Slty- Carolyn Greene, Durham; Shirley The day's program was planned Guenthner." Washington, D. C; by Dean Carmichael and includes -.... iinnoirnn- Puth discussions on matters such as jjianne uuj , ucuuujwi - Holmes, Wilson; Ann Page, Buck- j "Controls Through Student Gov hannon, W. Va.; and -Anna Wind-! ernment" and "Social Relation ley, Washington, N. C. ship." Before CJass Time DTH Candidate Kuralt Pledges Good Delivery Charles Kuralt, candidate for, The University Party endorsed Daily Tar Heel editor, yesterday promised to have the paper "com pletely delivered before class time each morning" next year. The candidate also said a later deadline, assuring "expanded" cov erage, would be installed. "This means they (the papers) will be delivered' to every men's dormitory door and to women's dorms, fraternity and sorority houses, houses of students in town and to DTH delivery boxes and that they will be there no later than 6:30," declared Kuralt. . Kuralt, reporter and columnist on the paper, said he doesn't in tend to make "the customary flood of political promises in my cam paign." He continued, "A conscien tious candidate for editor cannot. But this is one thing I can pro mise: completely satisfactory Dai ly Tar Heel delivery." candidate is running againsx Sports Editor Tom Peacock, who went independent. "Next year, something new is to be added a new press, which will be installed this summer by our printers," Kuralt pointed out. "With this advantage, and with efficient circulation methods, I in tend to overcome the circulation problem," he said. - - "It will also be possible for me, if I am elected, to extend the jpnHlinA for news releases from camnus organizations from the,vear of age, present 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Coverage of 'late' stories, those which hap pen from 8 to midnight or 1 a.m., will be greatly expanded thus af future exhibits of BRAT will be conducted in private or outside of Chapel Hill. "It is my plan," he said, "to have BRAT carried out altogther on a mental plane. In this way more people may be associated with the movement, than if all its works were physical." Chapel Hill Mayor Lanier's crackdown on thQ public, exhibi tion of BRAT art has put at least a temporary end to the display of BRAT paintings and sculpture. The literary aspect will still carry on, according to Brame, who reports that "A BRAT Anthology of Gold en Moments" is to be published in the very near future. A play which will be called "Much Ado About BRAT" is now in the embryonic stage. It is in tended to be a social satire, Brame says. Operating on his own idea that all works of art . were jtnade to; be kept in closed rooms and never shown, Brame has placed his latest work the rear-view mirror sculp ture in an obscure corner on the roof of Caldwell Hall. . . ... "We have proudly disowned BRAT as a movement because we feel we have been persecuted," an other of the BRAT leaders, who prefer to remain anonymous, said yesterday. "If Mayor Lanier represents the town as an elected official," hei continued," and as much reflects a community or ratner puritan, staid morals in objecting to BRAT's exhibit, he was fulfilling his du ties. However, the element of per sonal vindictiveness, the aspect of a vendetta shows us that perhaps more potent forces than the ob servance of town ordinances are in operation." Brame pointed out that BRAT did not originate in Chapel Hill, but had its beginning in Pans Improvements For Additional Dorms Asked ; Geiger Presents Bill Calling For $1,796 For TV, Ping-Pong . By Tom Lambeth The list of dormitories without at ' least promise :of "social im provements" was cut shorter last night as - the. Student Legislature received its latest bill for approp riating surplus student govern ment funds to brighten up dorm life. Ten dormitories . will be affected by the improvements bill which was introduced by Don Geiger, Student Party floorleader and chairman of the Social Improve ments Committee of the Legisla ture. Total, amount of tne ap propriation is $1,796. The dorms and the improve ments are: Smith 21" TV set (UHF&VHF), rotary TV antenna and installments; Manley UHF Converter and rotary antenna; and Winston Rotary antenna, ping-pong table, 2 card tables, ad 2 straight-type chairs. Aycock UHF converter and ro tary antenna, book case, 3 stand up smoke stands, pencil sharpen er, 3-speed automatic record playere; Joyner TV table, card table and 4 chairs, ping-pong set: Stncv TTTTR1 converter nnrl rntarv ' distrophy, cancer and cerebral Campus Chest Objective Set At $10,000 The Campus Chest Drive will begin Friday, March 19, and will be carried through ' the week to March 26. Lew Sherman, chairman of the drive, is asking everyone to "dig down deep and come up with a heap of help for this worthwhile cause." solidarity despite the historical economical, racial, psychological and cultural differences between the two peoples. Plaza, who headed the Ecuador ian government from 1948-52, said there are "deeper analogies which stem from the fact that we are all children of the new world, with less than five centuries of West ern civilization and two of inde pendent government in our his torical make-up, so that our prob lems do not have to bridge great abysses is seeking solutions." The former president's theme last night was "North and South Americans: Differences and Ana logies." Dr. Alexander Heard chairman of the Committee of The purpose of the drive as , Established Lectures and member stated by the chairman is to con-j of the Political Science faculty, solidate the numerous charitable ( presided, and Chancellor Robert laza of Ecuador ites Differences Predicts North, South American Solidarity En Spite Of Economical, Racial Inequalities - - . It's not idle talk to say that democracy can be achieved in all Latin American nations, a former President of Ecuador and an ardent expon ent of governmental democracy said last night. The speaker, Galo Plaza, giving the first in a series of three Weil Lec tures in Carroll Hall, predicted & goal of North and South American! El ur. woodhouse Will Be Guest At CPU Meet B. House introduced the speaker. Plaza will give the second Iec- antenna, card table, 15 folding chairs, book case, pencil sharp ener, drapes; and Cobb 30 fold ing chairs, 4 floor lamps, 2 ping pong tables, 4 card tables. Mangum TV table, card table, trophy case; Conner 3 perma nent tables, Venetian blinds, dozen decks of playing cards, $150 in records; and Kenan coffee-maker. In the only major action ofrthe evening, the Legisature chose two members, Bob Young and George McKinnery, to represent it on the reorganized Publications Board Reuben Leonard was the only other candidate for the post. A bill calling for the body to express its support of reforms in several academic fields, the cut system and veterans physical edu cation in particular, was recom mitted with the recommendation that it be broken down into sev eeral specific bills. Dr.Trueblo6d ToaVsf Here Next Friday Dr. D. Elton Trueblood, newly- appointed chief of religious policy of the U. S. Information Agency, will pay a two-day visit to the cam pus next Friday and Saturday, sponsored by the YWCA and YMCA. Dr. Trueblood, author and pro fessor of philosophy at Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., will speak at a public service, a stu-dent-facuty" luncheon, and to var ious University classes.: His appearance has been iar ranged by the University Sermons Committee, formed by both YWCA drives into one. " The goal of the drive is $10,000, which will be equally divided ture tonight and the third tomor among the state units of the or- r0w. Both will be given in Carroll ganizations combating muscular Hall at 8:30 p.m. Analyzing the problems facing paisy the Americas, Plaza declared that Campus Chest Week will be an understanding of "both our cul terminated with a musical entitled tural and psychological character "Good News,", to be presented on istics are indispensable for better Friday night, March 26, at 8:30 in relations. Memorial Hall. . ' -. "There are extreme misunder- The show is to consist of nine standings that should be erased) scenes from nine Broadway musi- but there are diferences that cal productions and is under the should be reckoned with he said direction of Jackie Brooks, assisted , we arp morp iHMi;qt,v vmi . Professor E. J. Woodhouse of the Political ScienceDepartment, and John Sanders, former presi dent of the Student Body who . is now a law student here, will be the faculty guests at this Sunday's meeting of the Carolina Political Union in the Grail Room of Gra ham Memorial at 8:00 p.m., it was announced yesterday. Dr. Woodhouse founded the Car olina Political Union some twenty years ago and has since been ac tive in many student-faculty under takings. Sunday night's discussion will be on recent charges made by the national Republican leadership that the Democratic Party and past Democratic administrations were 'twenty years of treason, tainted by the deceit of an Acheson, the idiocy of a Truman, and the red slime of a White." byBd Bernardin; -ir " " Tickets for the show are $1 and a door prize of $25 will be given. The drive committee is com posed of Lew Sherman, chairman; Arthur Barbanell, publicity; Bill Calvert, and Thelma Souder, solic tations; Jackie Brooks, entertain ment, and Joan.Metz, secretary Gorham Lists Fall Advisiers President Bob Gorham yester day announced the names of next fall's Orientation Committee. , ' The committee appointments, subject to 'approval by the student Legislature, are Martin Jordan, Bob Young, Bill Temple, Dusty Lamson, Bev Webb, Bob Barlowe, Gil Ragland, Jim Exum, Ed Mc Curry, Ed Yoder, Annette Leyen- son Luanne Tnornton, Ann can- are realistic; we are individualists, while you are more capable of col lective enterprise." Realities of today are contribut ing more than anything else to the gradual lessing of all differ ences, Plaza said. Rising Juniors Scheduled For English Exam All General College jstudents who have qualified for junior standing or who have attended a ! college two or more years, will be "North Americans who already required to take a general test in enjoy a higher standard of ma-.English, Dean C. P. Spruill of the lCndi wcu-uemg are moving 10-. General College announced ward recognition of the values of terday. tne spirit wmcn will eventually i j x i ! ieau to a greater ana aeeper en- yes- joyment of life, while Latin America has realized that it is im possible to live in a dream land The test will be given on March 15, 16, 17 18, and 22 at 7 p.m. in 206 Phillips Hall. Any student who is : qualified for transfer to the ' non, liaDDie uuono, ana jratsy Tonight he will speak on "Ecua- Daniels. dor: An Experiment in Democra- Rollie Tillman had previously cy," and his final lecture will be been named to head the Orienta- "Democracy in Latin America; tion Committee. Past and Future. in" the-20th century and. that she colIe.ge of hls mot and s to must learn to convert her resourc- receive a notice of the test, should . es and potentialities into a higher contact hu' GeneraI College ad standard of living for her masses'.' viser ""mediately. ' Ilfri; ." . . . '. ' i Students who fail the test will "This ..is how we look at each v . ... , . .. , ... r; u M required to do extra study until middle of the 20th century," Plaza concluded. The general theme of Plaza's three Weil Lectures is "Problems of Democracy in Latin America." rieht after the end of World War.and YMCA members, which spon- n. However, he reports that there ! sored the visit of Dr. Ralph W. are at least 150 active participants in the movement on campus today. The entire group was responsible for the exhibit in the University Restaurant's windows which brought down the wrath of Mayor Lanier, although . responsibility ,is largely attributed falsely to Brame, another of the leaders reported. Victory Village Offers Saturday Baby Sitting The ..Victory Village Day Care and Community Center is offering its facilities for baby sitting on Saturday nights from 7 to 12 o'clock for all children over one These services are scheduled to begin on March 17 and the charge will be 35 cents per hour. Sockman last month. . A . member of. the Society of Friends, Dr. Trueblood joined the Earlham faculty: in 1946, after at Stanford University, and Haverf ord. (Pa. ) teaching Harvard, College. ' In his new position as chief of religious policy, he will advise the agency on overseas broadcasts and other information 'programs. Dr. Trueblood, in accepting the post, described his task as "helping overcome a Communist initiative in the East-West war of ideas.'? Among the 13 books which he has written are "The Predicament of Modern Man," "The Life We Prize," and "The Recovery of Family Life," fwhich he co-authored vith his wife, Pauline. For 11 years he was editor of on the Political Fronf with Louis Kraar The nursery requires notifica- l.a m ' J I . . jl IIS a t 1 J- . t. fording Daily (Tar Heel reports of,tion Dy noon ot tne aay Deiore ane -jjnena," ana noius memuei organization meetings and camnus child is to be left. ship in the American Philosophi-j events which are not now possible, The nursery phone number is cal Association and Theta Chi so he concluded. 1 8-0611. 'cial fraternity. 1 I Spring Is Here So Is Politics With spring coming on, they're sitting on the South Building steps more, and the talk is changing. Politics is what many of them are discussing now. And that's what we plan to do through the approaching campaign, election and run-off (if there is one). So the race is on. And as the" politicos go, we'll try to keep you filled in on them. Gorham's Going To Talk President Bob Gorham, reticient till now on the question of big-time athletics and their place in the University, will loosen up and say something about them soon. The students' chief executive has, some other things coming up also that indicate-he's j. switching from the "no comment" man he was earlier. A student-faculty committee or the Book Exchange has been meeting recently. Gorham, a member of the group, will have a report about the Book Etf next week. In other words, Gorham's off the fence. Th Startma Post Is Readv The University Party will pick its nominee for president next week. The UP seems fairly set on Tom Creasy for the top post. The other executive posts are less certain. ' And the Student Party is expected to tap its top men, too, next week. With Gordon Forester out of politics, Don Geiger will no doubt be SP's choice. With the addition of separate posts of secretary and treasurer instead of one man doing the job, parties will have another nomina tion to make. The switch was sponsored by the Student Party. a "reasonable competence is at tained." Any student who does not take the test when scheduled will be charged a fee of $2 when he does take it The test must be com pleted before pre-registering for the next term. Play Auditions Are Scheduled "The Outsider," a drama of Greek sponge fishermen on the Florida coast, has been chosen as the second in the Carolina Play makers' series of premiere attrac tions to be given here, the drama tists announced yesterday. The play, written by Emily Crow Selden of Chapel Hill and directed by Kai Jurgensen, will be pre sented April 8 through 11 in the Playmakers' Theatre. Auditions will be held in the theatre Tues day at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Preliminary readings for all interested will be held Monday evening at 7:30 in the theater. Coed Driver Hits Car Parked Near Woollen An accident occurred near Woollen Gym on Tuesday night when a car driven by a coed, com ing from the direction of the Bell Tower, hit a parked automobile standing on "Raleigh Road. Driving the oncoming car was Janet Harris, a Tri Delt from Ra leigh, who was traveling about 20 m.p.h. She was reportedly com ing from the Library parking lot.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 12, 1954, edition 1
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