Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 5, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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J ' 1 I f k for the group to perform more of . .- n,.,,.,,,.,,,,,,,.,.,,,., - y nivcrsity will l.avc a regularly-scheduled, credit lixcd chorus, it was aiinounced vesterdav . action, approved and set into operation at the end: idii semester, has made the j change possible, according , to ' Dr. ; Glen Kaydon, head of the Music! , vepi. ana cnatrman of the Division ot Humanities. The first nucleous of member ship, according to Drj ir3uHr,n ;ni be drawn from the Woman's Glee' Club. That group will temporarily lose its identity to become a Dart of the larger organization. CLASSICS In releasing the announcement. Dr. Haydon said the mixed chorus is designed not only to provide op portunities for more undergradu- , ates to take part in a musical ac tivity, but also to make it possible for the group to perform more of . the standard rlascic nf An..! is erature. , The new University Chorus will be separate and distinct from the Varsity Men's Glee Club, and stu dents may belong to both, said Dr. Haydon. The only restriction on the size of the University Chorus, said Dr. i Haydon, will be that of "balance." Choruses of some collegiate insti tutions run as high as 250 or 300 voices, he said. CREDIT Membership in the chorus will? be open to any man or woman reg ularly enrolled in the University. The activity will carry one unit of .- computed on the basis of attend ance at rehearsals. Auditions for the new choral group are being held daily, Mon day through Friday, in Hill Hall. GLEN HAYDON ounces 'new chorus owship ers Are lg Made f interested in public af public service and who e their B.A. in June have ed an opportunity to ap ellowships to study at srent universities. Each will grant $1,950 in total ns this June, fellows will ? a public agency such as department in a city or srnment. In the 1956-57 sion they will take grad es at the Universities of Kentucky and Tennessee. lion of the 12 months criod entitles fellows to ate in public administra I can be awarded a mas ce at either of the three es upon completing a 1 passing examinations. j Sibility requirements and ormation students would f Educational Director, 'Regional- Training Pro Public Administration, 1 of Alabama, University, deadline for submitting 'ns is March 9. Here's A-Scale-Model View Of The University's New, $2 Million. Dormitory Addition Plan Here are two scale-model views of the new $2 million dormitory plan for the University at Chapel Hill. Three new men's dormitories and an extension which will dsublethe size of Spencer Hall for wo men are on the bill. Construction is expected to start by late spring. Picture at the left shows the position of the three men's residences in relation to Kenan Stadium. Each dormitory is expected to house ap proximately 180 students, and the Spencer addition (not shown) will take in 60 coeds. Picture at right gives another view of the model, constructed by University engineers. That rectangle below Woollen Gymnasium is the outdoor pool, which will probably get lots of use from dormitory men in the summer time. Each men's building is expected to have, open porch corridors on each floor connecting to four-room units, instead of central hallways. The U-shaped buildings will contain built-in furniture only the beds and chairs will be mov able, University officials say. You'll pay for the buildings through a $30 increase in dormitory rents. (Press Photo Service) priference illifef hurs G 'lodges, To R A un Aaain ForTopPost CONCERTS PLANNED: Some . 250 representatives of 19 North, Carolina civic, women's re ligious and educational organiza tions are expected to gather here Thursday for the sixth annual Conference pn World Affairs A special invitation has; also been extended to the approximate ly , 500 foreign students from 70 countries and territories, who are attending North Carolina colleges and universities. . '' The day-long conference, based on - a theme of "Our Role in This Revolutionary World," will be highlighted by two keynote ad- LEAKSVILLE, Gov. Luther H. dresses. Dr. Martha Branscombe of Hodges told a hometown audience New York City, chief of the So- yesterday that he will campaign cial Services Section of the Bu- for a full four-year term as gov- eau of Social Affairs for the ernor and at the same time, re- United Nations, will address the emphasized his stand on school morning session, speaking on segregation. "Achieving World Peace Through Social Services." "I shall be a candidate for gov- The closing address of the after- erno'r on the Democratic ticket noon will be given by Paul Green, subject to the May26th primary," chapel Hill, playwright and lec- he told a rally sponsored by the turer in Asia on a recent world tour.v of " fhe Rockefeller Founda f tion. His address will be centered on the conference theme. . Young Democrats Conference Director Russell Grumman of Chapel Hill noted that the rest of the day will be devoted to .group discussion of such areas as the impact of mod ern inventions, the realignmant of world power, the awakening of the peoples of. the world, the struggle I Hall Announces ring Music Series Pt.of Music has announc-j Feb. 14, a program of Mozart for. world, resources,; and the role Nance Ifused to partJ a Of "Dmlv ' a7 are mov Fowler And Dave Reid Discuss New. Council The issue of whether or not the editors of the Daily Tar Heel shoulcl he removed from office will be debated at a joint meeting of the Dialectic Senate and the Philanthropic Society Tuesday night, according to a joint statement issued yesterday iy the heads of the two organizations. Dave Reid, atty. gen. and president of the Di, and' John Curtiss, speaker -of the Phi, said ; yesterday the meeting will be held 1 times. Hauser made the statement to make the real issues of the at a meeting of the council for recall election clear. j Better Student Government. The recall election will be heid j Reid, when asked what he Feb. 14. It came about by a peti-; thought of the Council for Bet- Fo r M vfp3 n 1 '"" Luxon Is aainsf ion A E i .LI leer m By DON 'SEAyER' tion circulated by E. L. (Junior) Nance to recall the editors. Dick Fowler, chairman of the ter Government, said: "From my conversation with Chairman Fowl er, I can only conclude that their mt Council t for Better Student Gov- purpose is solely to retain the pres ernment, had earlier tried to get ent editors of The Daily Tar Nance and Reid to debate the issue Heel and have no long range am- DEAN N. N. LUXON . . . dangerous precedent with Editors Louis Kraar and, Ed Yoder. Reid got tied into the mat ter when he was accused by Chuck bitions for improving student government." Chairman Fowler himself stat- TT 1 . ' xidur, locai newspaperman and ed it was only & temporary com special student in.arts and sciences, mittee established to propagandize to nave miiuencea iNance to start for the present editors. Better stu- uie peiiuon. Reid and President Don Fowler have both been attacked by editor ials of The Daily Tar Heel in the past.' Reid has said he had noth ing at all to do with influencing Nance to start the petition. Kraar and Yoder agreed to par ticipate in debate -with Reid and Togram schedule for the tmester Tuesday Evening chamber music presented by'Doro-l rthe individual. k AMon Tp.n HpardEdsar Al-' Registration will be held from!be . . . . 'special interest to pa-! den, Williarn Klenz and Earl f to 10:30 a.m nurs?,af m ine participate because Nance asTted iw ii ' . f lobby of Carroll Hall. Films pre-,him nnt t. , . , i two all-Mozart concerts, orating the bicentennial "nposer'g birth, certs which afe schedul remainder of the sea as follows: GM'S SLATE ife scheduled for Gra orial today Include: is 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Room; Presbyterian i 9;30-ll a.m., Roland Lunge 1, 2, 3 and APO Student Party, 8:30 p.m. Woodhouse Confer 00f"; Episcopal Church, ;'1Con' Cam Room. scheduled for Gra en,orial Monday include: ,!nt Parr 7:30.11 p.m., ; frker Lounge 1 and 2; i Question Of Alcohol Will ie Discussed Roo P-m., Woodhouse Con- m Elections Board, l Woodhou$e Confre Da nee nee CammlfU. T.a 00Jhoufe Conference WC, 2-4 p.m., Council Feb. 21, the UNC choral groups Pared by the UN will be shown will present Mozart's Requiem and during that time in the auditori M t t K 165- I um incIudinS Assignment Child- rZi! ;Q HelmieraJ ren," starring Danny Kaye. JS-- mcf , I The 19 organizations participat- on wiiiiom R Newman! (See WORLD, page 4.) lviaicn and Edgar Alden, UNC profes sors in the Music Dept., in a re cital of sonatas for piano and vio lin; March 27, Alexander Schreiner, organist at the Mormon Taber nacle in Salt Lake City, in a re cital commemorating the 25th an niversary of the dedication of Hill Hall and the Renter four-manual organ. The last three concerts of tfte series will be given by UNC Mu- l sic Dept. organizations: April 10, the University concert Band, conducted by, Herbert Fred; April 24, The University Chorus and Men's Glee Club; M.ay 8, the University Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Earl Slocum. 5 All Tuesday Evening Concers are held in Hill "Hall, and begin a$ 8 p.m. Admission is free.- him not to . " "The gravity of the issue de serves debate in a joint meeting since the Di and Phi are traditional mediums for free student self ex pression," Curtiss and Reid said. The site of the debate will be announced Tuesday. It will prob ably be held in Gerrard Hall, they said. Phi Speaker Curtiss said, "The purpose of the debate is to bring to tight dent government is something we are all striving for, but it is a misnomer to confuse this commis sion with such a lofty ambition," he said. President 'Fowler said, "I'm in favor of any organization that can offer concrete suggestions for im provements in student govern ment." v . 'In answer to these statements, Chairman Fowler said: "If Mr. Reid thinks that the only purpose of our council is to sudport the editors of The Daily Tar Heel, he is totally mistaken. "We believe a long and respected tradition of a-free campus press is being threatened. A campus newspaper untainted by politicians is much preferable to one being used by people with higher politi cal aspirations. '"Further, we will not be 'a fly by night organization as Reid sug- ght the true issues involved Traditionally the Phi and Di have gests, but we intend to unearth and I 'am sure will contiuue the ineDtness and corruntion that The Rev. Reid Montgomery,1 dblead,,e "pus in illustrative exists in the present student ad- Presbyterian minister from , . . , muuuii. , H""-iun iu ue ae- we noDe Dv tnis means to re- fireensboro. will lead a discussion ' ..' 7 " . on the Christian's responsibility ""r editor, TJrCT Vlv students from their apathy to- toward alcohol at the Young Adult 'LfJS student government and that tri!nu7Shir,' mePtiri!? on Wednes-1 J!l. remved from office. this will lead to more participation Fellowships meeting on EditQrs Rraar Yoder Dkk in ug t nf tho 'univ.r1 tv Metho I F0Wler' NanCe and other Merest- fied students to hold. office than Lounge of the. University Metho- ed students have been invited to now is the case distXhurch. . attend. Reid and Cuitiss said they "And last, it is our desire that The Young Adult reiiowsnip is were sure that Kraar, Yoder, Dick before the spring elections we can an "over-21 group consisting Fowler and Nance would attend, make concrete suggestions con largely of graduate students and. Chuck Hauser said President cerning some such-needed consti young townspeople. The group Fowler and Reid were both into tutional revisions" meets on alternate Wednesdays ' the matter of the recall petition "Both Reid and Nance refused to and has invited all "over-21" to "up to their necks." Reid and send representatives to take their participate. - c Fowler have denied this several place in the proposed debate." Putnam Prize Competition Is Now Open The opening of competition for the 1956 Putnam Prize, a $2,000 award offered by Putnam's Sons, Publishers, through the University, has been announced by Miss Jessie Rehder of the English Dept., who is handling inquiries and entries in the competition. ; Judges this year will be Frances Gray Pattort of Durham, author of "Good Morning, Miss Dove," and James Ramsey . Ullman, whose "Tiger of the Snows," the autobiog raphy 'of Tenzing of Everest, was published recently by Putnam. An extension of eligibility for the prize has been made, Miss Rehder said, to include "any writer who has at one time been a student at the University or. who is at pres ent enrolled in any branch of the University. Students in the Exten sion Division are also eligible." Either fiction or non - fiction books of "general interest" may be submitted, she explained, ' but works of a "strongly scholarly or highly specialized 'nature" will not be considered. -v Submitted manuscripts must consist of at least 40,000 words with a detailed synopsis of the un written parts of the book. They must be submitted by July 1, 1956, accompanied by return postage, to Mis Rehder, Box 350, Chapel Hill. Miss Rehder stated that the publishers are to have an option on their usual terms on any book submitted in the contest, as well as the winning manuscript. Sec ondary prizes will be awarded when and if the quality of the material warrants it. Dr. Norval NeilLuxon, dean of UNC's School . of- Journalism, has declared himself in complete ac cord with The Daily Tar Heel ed itors' right to criticize. He cited the coming recall election as a dangerous precedent. Amidst all the recent hub-bub over the election, Dean Luxon, a newspaperman and journalism in structor of many ., years' experi ence, said he was ". . . 100 percent on Kraar and Yoder's side." He added it is absolutely "un tenable" for a student body, large or small, to attempt to set edi torial policy. "It is absolutely im possible," he said, "to represent the views of the owners and stock holders of a newspaper. This, is true no matter what the size of the student body." He pointed out that on commer cial newspapers few editors are also publishers. In ,most cases, however, the editors are granted Avide freedom in editorial opinion, he said. RESPONSIBILITY The dean spoke out on the edi tors' responsibility to the student body. "Any campus editor who is chosen has to be guided by his conscience," he said. "I do not think he has the responsibility to represent the majority of student opinion." He said it would be a crime if me bLuueiu uou; vuicu iu uuji The Daily Tar Heel editors a rime that would result in pub licity all across- the country. He declared chaos would result if every time the editors disagreed with someone, a recall petition were instituted. DANGEROUS "It is an extremely dangerous and bad precedent that 10 percent of the student body can bring about an election to recall an ed itor of a student paper," Dean Luxon said. He added "it is my hope and my belief that the Carolina student body will understand the issues involved well enough to vote against recall by an overwhelm ing majority." He said he didn't believe that students realized all of the im plications of the recall petition. Integration The Community Church stu dent group will meet tonight to discuss "integration's Prob lems." The group will meet at 6 p.m. in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall. It will be a supper meeting, and discussion will fel low, the meal. ACLU Director Malin So i"" o rs r w Q Here Tonight Patrick Murphy Malin, execu tive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, 'will speak today at 8 p.m. at the Parish House of the , Chapel Hill Episcopal Church. The subject of his talk will be "The Present State of Civil Liber ties." The meeting, sponsored by the Chapel Hill Ministerial Assn., will be presided over by Rev. Maurice Kidder, president of the associa tion. Following the meeting, persons interested in the formation of a North Carolina unit of the ACLU will be invited to remain to dis cuss the question with Malin. Malin, a Missourian by birth, is a 1924 graduate from the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, having re ceived his B.S. degree in Econom ics. After doing graduate work at Columbia University in the eco nomics field, Malin became a member of the Economics Dept. at Swarthmore College. He served in that capacity for 20 years. In 1950 he took over his present position with the ACLU, having headquarters in New York City, i He has done active work with various America Friends' organi zations and is. currently serving as treasurer of the American Friends of Toynbee Hall. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss Ann R. Daniel, Miss Sa rah E. Guffey, Fredrick E. Van Horn, Herbert I. Greenbkff, Douglas D. Cantrell, Talms- L. Jones, Jr., Robert L. West, Wil liam D. Asker, III, Andrew J. Pollard, Robert H. Guinn, Den aid L. Patterson, KappagantuU Lakshmi.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 5, 1956, edition 1
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