Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 9, 1955, edition 1 / Page 1
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St ATHER S Y S T E M Here's a way to put mere studsnt honor in the system. See ps 2. 3!T1ewhat colder today, J high of 48. NO. 66 'A 1 if STOCKING FUND: olunteered to play San to needy Chapel Hill rough the Empty Stock- additions to the list are rmitory, the junior class :lays latibn (hdwn .lion of whether or , not rgl Earclay's $11,00 a ad will be renewed re answered yesterday, .embers of the Athletic re out of town. All Bar offer to a reporter was, as much about it as I cretary in the office of f Athletics Chuck Erick sSother meeting of the f not yet been scheduled. ie council closed its Dec. without reaching a de ns for a future meeting announced. J said after the meeting was "unfinished busi V. Hobbs, council chair i the council's delibera not been completed. ' decision will rest with ? Rfibert House. Any de- by the Athletic Coun i sent to him in the form imendation. The council h an advisory committee. three-year contract ex- ,1 orking On ar For Spring Calendar Committee 'fng on a spring semes Sar. jJan. 10 as deadline for I to be turned in to the - Any campus organiza ?"ing t( have events en H turn them in to the f b- that date. HE infirmary in U. i inrirmary yes- f eluded; ietta Laing, Miss Ro .wahlen, Miss Retta S. ,!s Sylvia G. Callaway, r,i A. Rothman, Miss wtson, Fredrick A. :rHu D- Jackson; Wil n. Alfred J. Lewal ,ph W. Johnson, Has JH. Ashby T. Carper, L,pski, Rkhard A 7'' H. Geddie, John ' Fra"cis R. Randolph, V Parker William T. I riHRb6rt C' Ha"e' John F. Gonel- Complete H. f 1 s Just Before The First Act what Memorial Hall's stage looked like last night as Sound and Fury got ready for the open- I n of "Heaven Help Us." The musical show . will play again tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets, 50 cents I ts, are on sale at Town and Campus, Kemp's Ledbetter-Pckard, Graham Memoral and at the I kham Photo.) Campus societies ying Santa Claus 't campus organizations of the School of Nursing, Tri Delta sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. This yearr for the 'second time, the fund is using the "adopt a fam- ily" plan. Groups arp . -assigned a whole family and told the ages of the' children. They then fill boxes with toys, clothing and food for each member of the family. Last year, 422 needy families were aided by the program. This year's list of those wanting help 4 has already reached 200, and more applications "are coming in every day, according to, the .Junior Ser- vice League, sponsor of the pro ject:. ; . ; : . . - : - A typical. application is that of Mrs. T., an arrested tuberculosis patient who is unable to do full time work. She and her three children, acs 1 mopths and 3 and 5 years, were recentlj evcted from their home, and are now Lving with relatives under very crowded conditions. Mr. T. has deserted them, and Mrs. T. cannot do even part time work because she has no one to keep the children. The family's only income, therefore, is a small grant from the county Welfare Dept. not large enough even for necessities. ' The baby, for example, has no shoes or warm clothing, and con tracted pnoumonia when the family moved. FOR 'KILLING' WILL FRYE: Soccer Star 'On Tnal' Tonight At Law School A soccer star who 'is alleged tp ing beer" in Spero's pub just be- have "killed" football star Will Frye with a beer bottle will go on "trial" tonight in Manning Hall. Joe Mavretic, star on the UNC soccer team, has been termed the inalous lover and killer" who pounced upqn Frye Monday night as the football player was leaving a downtown theater. Frye was accompanied by Miss Anne Wrenn, beautiful and mys terous Carolina coed, when he was "attacked" and "killed" by Mav retic, according to police. The "state" is planning to press for the death charge in the "trial" which starts tonight. Frye wasn't really killed, how ever. He was taking part iit Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity's an nual Mock Trial, which calls for a feigned crime and ends with a realistic trial. Superior Court Judge Richardson Pryer of Greensboro will preside at the trial, which will start at 7 p.m. in Manning -Hall's court room. The public has been invited. Chief witnessess for the prose cution will be Miss Wrcnn and cnorn Dnrton. manager of the I Goody Shop. Mavretic was '"drink- Wire Service Sound Fury Second Show Slated Tonight The second and last presentation of "Heaven Help Us" by the Sound and Fury company will be present ed tonight at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Tickets may be obtained at Kemp's, Town and Campus, Y- - UUil .d"u uii. - UL,U - "cls aic ou cwta air speople will be admitted for $1 The first performance of the presentation was presented, last night. This year the company's first presentation is featuring an origi nal musical score as well as an original script. " The story'tdficernsTrie" gliosis in a western town who disapprove of the ladies in a troupe of entertain ers which comes to sing and dance1 in the quiet old towrn. Square Dance A square dance will be spon sored in the Tin Can tomorrow night after the South - Carolina UNC basketball game by the Square Dance Club and the Re creation Committee of the Gra ham Memorial Activities Board. Music and a cal!r will be pro vided, and Cokes will be avail ablefor refreshments. 'Students with dates and stags are wel come. More square dances are planned in the future after home basketball games with groups of women from nearby women's colleges. fore he "attacked" Frye Frye, after crumpling to the sidewalk on Franklin St., was rush ed to Memorial Hospital, where he was "dead" on arrival. t 4 . t UNC soccer player Joe MaXret,c (far left) w.ll go on "trial" for his life tonight in the' courtroom of Manning Hall. He is "in for the "murder v cf football star Will Frye (second from left), over Frye's "love affair" wit lovely coed Anne Wrenn (third from left). Sperodorton (rght), manager of the Goody Shop, where Mavretic was "drinking beer" before the assault, will be' a star witness, a$ will Miss Wrenn. The whole crime is part of the annual Mock Trial, sponsored by Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity, and will start at 7 p.m. (Henley Rogues' Gallery Photos.) - . 'X SJ . 5 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955 nn r i li I 1 t! uuuuuu Christmas Around The WorJd' Theme Of Community Carol Sing This Evening "Christmas Around The World" will be the theme of the communi - ty carol sing, sponsored by the terracial Fellowship for the Schools and the Cosmopolitan Club, -to be held tonight at 8-p.m. in the Sun-( dav School room of the Lutheran l rhnroh nn Kast Rnspmarv Street, . Group singing will be led by Joseph Wood, music teacher of Chapel Hill High School and Mrs. R. P. BelL music teacher of Lincoln High School. Besides group sing ing of the familiar carols, the pro gram, planned- to be of interest to children as well as adults, will include carols sung by . several groups from other countries and one number by a chorus from Lin con High School. Carols of other lands will be sung by: Margareta Ortenblad, Bri ta Moberg Tate, Gunhild Gislerud, and Kirsten Milbrath of Scandina via; Mrs. Hildegarde Pierce, Mrs. Gertrude Huckaby, Erhard Kant- zenbach, Dorothy Kuge, Ann Arth UNCs Rhodes Candidates Go , mm mm I 0 lo eliminations Dick Baker and Ed Yoder, sen iors from Greensboro and Mebane, left ,fortl Atlanta, Ga., early this morning to represent the state of North Carolina in the final Rhodes Scholarshp eliminations" at Eriiory. Baker and Yoder were selected Wednesday from among a field of 17 North Carolina finalists, repre- scnting UNC, Duke, Davidson, N. C. State,, Atlantic Christian, North Carolina College and Lenior Rhyne. The final eliminations will be held at Emory University in At lanta. Two representatives from each state in the district will be present. States in this district are North Carolina, Virginia, " South Carolina, Florida, Tennessee and Georgia. From the 12 finalists, four Rhodes Scholars will go to Oxford University, England, next Septem ber. t Sherwood Smith, senior in his tory from Jacksonville, Fla., is the third student from Chapel Hill who will compete in the Rhodes Schol arship finals for this district in At lanta over the weekend. Smith was elected as one of the two finalists from Florida. Against Split The Consolidated University Student Council yesterday agreed to oppose deconsolidation of the three branches of the Un iversity. Delegates to the council from Woman's College, UNC and N. C. State College met here yester day. "V- 'Killer' Mavretic Goes On Trial Tonight -rT ',i,.M.-- n 1 ,. It t il M ur and Rosemarie Fussenegger of r Germany and Austria; fiva Suna, In-jMario Fajardo, Jorge Claripo, Dr. j Alberto Lacoius, Alcira Florez, Jorge Maldonado, Hortensia Colon, Jorge Sevilla and Milagros Guzman of Latin America; and Mrs. Char - fiotte liuse, France. - Fraternity Teams Play For Orphanage Today Two fraternity chapters will play football' in Kenan Stadium to day, complete with card section, combo and other half-time enter tainment. Chapters of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity from UNC and Duke will play in their annual Lambda Chi Alpha Bowl Game in Kenan StaSium at 2 p.m. Proceeds from tickets, on sale in Y-Court for 25 cents each, will go to the Methodist Orphanage in Raleigh, according to Peter Pol- -'lander of the fraternity. The, game will be played by football regulations, said Pollander. He predicted a large turnout, and said "surprise cheers" will be given.' , ' A combo is expected to-play, and a card section will perform stunts.'PolIander said. Last Petite Musicale Features David 1 Small The iast Petitekusieale of the fall semester will be presented in the main lounge of Graham Me- morial at 8 p.m. Sunday. . Bass-baritone David Small will be the soloist in a program of works by English composers for the most part. A highlight of the re cital, however, is a group of three songs by the Russian composer Modest Moussorgsky, including an aria from his opera, "Boris God ounov." Other well-known com posers will be Handel, Byrd and Vaughan Williams. Although only a sophomore Small won recognition for his in terpretation of Joe in "Showboat," a Playmaker production last year. He is soloist for the Men's Glee Club and for the University Meth odist Church choir. A native of Morehead City, Small is studying at present under Gene Service Frat Conclave Set Here This Weekend The UNC Rly) Chapter of the Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will be host to the Southeastern District Conclave here this weekend. Plans call for group discussions, an address by the national presi dent and a banquet in Lenior Hall Saturday night. After the banquet," the group will attend the UNC USC basketball game. 1 J, nw frri IftiWmrwHi.iM.-n nv mfi . ity mnff' -irltfm " ffl n1 'vr- Offices In Graham Memorial i "No Candle Was There and No Fire" will be sung by the following Lincoln High School students: Elaine Hairston, Elizabeth Jones, Malissa Farrington, Loretta Hack- jney, Dorothy Atwater, Peggie Vick , ers, Sallie Johnson and Evelyn 'Burnette '. Strassler. Hi accompanist will be Miss Mary Alice Dalrymple, also of the Music Dept. ; .V' The concert 'is free of charge, and the public Jias been invited to attend. . Vets7 Petition . Deadline Set On Saturday Tomorrow will be the deadline for veterans to sign the petition supporting a bill to increase edu cation and training allowances un der the Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1952, according to Benny Huffman, co-chairman of the Veterans' "Affairs Commit tee. , t . More than 500 veterans have signed the petition, and these con stitute about one half of the 1,250 veterans concerned with the bill, Huffman said. He urged all veterans concerned to sign the petition and to write their respective Senators and Re presentatives and request them to vote in favbr of the bill." According to Huffman, the peti tion may be signed in 315 South Building. It wilPbe sent to the Committee on Public Welfare of the U. S. Senate. i -A S tt-Hf . r fk Jf3 Schools, Universities A member of the State Board ol Higher Education said last night that one wonders whether North Carolina will need Federal aid if its educational institutions are to (any on at their present standards. Maj. J. P. McLendon, speaking at an open meeting of the American Assn. of University Professors, here, told his audience the money required for the public school and university systems will amount to staggering and unprece dented sums'. "The figures become so large one wonders whether it will be possible to provide the money without substantial aid from the Federal Government." Maj. McLendon, a former mayor of Chapel Hill, spoke last night at 7:30 in the Faculty Lounge of the Morehead Building. He did not mention the Univer sity by name, but appeared to be speaking . about the Consolidated University. "Our State Department of Edu cation has .estimated that the cost of furnishing buildings, land and equipment to meet the contempor aneous increased enrollment in the public schools for the period end ing in 1960 will be 395 million dol lars. We can get some idea of the cost of expanding the faciities for! higher education by recalling that from 1947 to 1952, North Carolina appropriated 96 and one-quarter million dollars for permanent im provements at the twelve institu tions of higher learning, and that for the operation of the twelve in stitutions is 19 million dollars annually.". . - Maj. McLendon gave some sta tistics pertaining to the operating expenses of universities, and some "foolish" regulations as to the use of buildings. HONOR SYSTEM VEEK - Code Violation 'Considered Serious Following is the second report the -'following statement on Caro of the semester from the Men's , lina's Honor System: Honor Council. , "Since the last report turned in by the Men's Council several weeks ago, four cases have been tried involving nine students. Of these, five were found guilty, four for Honor Code offenses and one for a Campus Code violation. Four were found not guilty of Honor Code violations. - "All four found guilty of Honor Code offenses were suspended. The student found guilty s(i a Campus Code violation was given an official reprimand. It would be misleading to assume by that that Campus Code violations are not considered serious." "It is entirely possible for the council to suspend a student for a flagrant violation of the Campus Code. It is equally important to note that in some cases, where the student has shown some initiative in cooperating with the Honor Sys tem after he has committed an Honor Code violation, he may be put on probation, instead of being suspended. This happened in a re cent case this fall." Ogburn Yates, chairman of the Men's Honor Council, gave this report on the dorm and fraternity talks that were held: 'Dorm talks were held in 13 dorms on Wednesday night. Oa the whole, attendance was good and much was accomplished in the question and answer period as to enlightening students. Many ques tions were asked, and a great deal of problems were solved. "From all indications, the fra ternity talks were a great success, too. In almost all cases, the boys would enter into the discussions. As in the dorm talks, much was gained through the questions and answers." UNC grid star Ed Suttop gave FOUR PAGES THIS ISCUC Li J 1 ' 1 l4 w Wl uj "Whether it is desirable or not, the statistics which I have briefly reviewed would indicate that we are going to be compelled some how to teach larger classes and to find some way to make a greater time-use of buildings, laboratories and other facilities. The taxpayers are. entitled to know whether the existing facilities are being used to their maximum capacity before they are asked to pay more taxes for enlargements and extensions." McLendon said that the problem of providing teachers for the insti tutions of higher education as well as for the public school system is one that calls for the combined ef fort of all of us. "We must find ways to make the teaching profes sion not only attractive but so appealing that many more young men and women will be willing to choose that profession for their ca reer. The question has been raised whether North Carolina should re turn to the practice of giving free tuition to teacher-students." McLendon outlined several o f the more important functions ol the Board. .After McLendon's speech, a dis cussion period was held. Members," of. the.audiencejvere invitcd-to a.-k questions of McLendon and acting President, Harris Purks, who also spoke at the beginning of the meeting on the background of tho Consolidated University. 4: I f m "Our Honor System here at this great university gives us, the stu dents in it, an opportunity to train ourselves now for the greater re sponsibilities which will befall us ; after we have finished our tenure J here at UNC. It gives us a chance t o exemplify truth, honor and character here in our youth when it is more likely to make lasting impressions upon us. It gives us a certain degree of self initiative and self respect which are essential in our everyday living. "I think that an honor system such as ours can be compared to a successful athletic team: it takes teamwork to attain the proper re sults." QUESTION AND ANSWER What procedure does the Men's Council follow in investigating a case? After a case has been turned into South Building, the secretary in the Dean of Student Affairs Office notifies the chairman of the ! Men's council. From her he picks up the pink slip, on which is in formation concerning the case. If the case involves the Honor Code, the next step is to visit the instructor who teaches the course in which the violation occured. j Here the papers of the students involved are studied by the council member and the instructor, and the (See HONOR, page 4) GM'S SLATE Activities scheduled for Gra ham Memorial today include: Carolina Symposium, Grail Room, 4-5 p.m.; Quarterly, Woodhouse Conference Roem, 4:30-6 p.m.; ROTC Squadron, APO Room, o:3Q-7:30 p.m. A
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 9, 1955, edition 1
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