Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 21, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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eather ALCHEMIST Editors want chestnut cut of fir before becomes bomb. See P. 2 I ilh an txpo v. v y gmjrr:. 'fry -r.ijMen. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956 Office In Graham Memorial FOUR PACES THIS ISSUH !)rt lrwLir Dublin Players Coming f. 1 1 X-f ! (x H r$ .61 -n -nil 1 n . : : Evalyai'lii'i"ii of 5 M1KE vester J y President Don Lf to the University .'j. last night. speech was an evalua l..Vjt the administrative the government t .had i ;he campus under his Vile beSaa bv ?ivinS ., anecdote concerned jth'of speeches. jaid he regretted being tent president because handicap, that of not unified force behind :3ed the UP of one of P promises that he had h. and that was to ! 4 student date tickets ("-sines. Fowler said he !x:p of interested stu Jialked to Chuck Ericson, i athletics, last fall and led to get a reduced ae tickets. Fowler re- s pxrty that it was neces liKf this reduced ticket reserved on campus, to :t the Honor Code when discussed the class cut laid a survey had shown pads of the various de- ): unuuju a 11IU1 c JIUCldl ;::sld be established. said the revised edition citation, whenever it M would be presented pent body for approval, i administration. : ie iiggesL problem " he i to face during his ad- was the traffic prob ic committee has been i a work on this problem 1 1 have the personal as- then paid tribute to f ie UP members who r "J great help" to him ifay in office. They in fJKoneith, Jack Stevens, jJim Martin, Bill Sa jiDave Reid. pier about Reid, "This )A. Group Or gamze or row national meeting of t? Democratic Action tomorrow night at 8 (7e woodhouse Room of Penorial. C,for democratic Action C'4ate of Americans for Tc action. According to ! acting head of the qsD A. is "an organi Cals, dedicated to the i of freedom and4eco rf;tHor all people eve , education and 1;;0UP believes that "all f waiitariankm !i.wi:.. ; MY, W said Holmes. "In e for fln expandine dp- j and E and a2ainst Fascism. Com- ! faction S.D.A. wel- -noers only those 'a !on t0 the principles i .T'eeaom is unqualifi- iged ail students' who i Te freely" to these 1 Pi t e meeiing tiuuue ouuuj. SLATE .hedoled for Gr- oday lnclude: lWV,rnmtnt 2-4:30 7' Confereivre Ha , 11 P-m-. Roland If unduer7tllr fS ".8t dea" 1 events' en riot,, for an I ot undue criticism from hy stu- know. But, I think he should eet a chtednSasPirVHi ,1at. b '"e Praise for th'e he?p he8 na's charged with starting all kinds of been during this year." Music By Mozart Will Be Presented Tonight By Combined Groups Mozart's Requiem and the motet j Exultate Jubilate will be perform ed tonight by combined choral groups and Symphony Orchestra. The presentation will be held in Hill Hall at 8 o'clock. The Men's Glee Club, the University Mixed Chorus and the Chapel Hill Choral Club will combine for the per formance and will be conducted by Dr., Joel Carter, head of the Voice Division of the Music Dept. Mrs. Jean Carol Vernon, so prano, will be the soloist for the chorus' performance of the motet. State Charged With Giving Athletes Housing Priority RALEIGH, Feb. 20 State Col- conditions of the buildings at the lege's coordnator of student hous- NYA Center, the decision w a s ing was noncommital today on a J made to abandon the NYA pro charge by the college's Veterans ject. . .," added the dean, i . Association that State gave prefer-! Housing coordinator Watts said red treatment to athletics in cam- pus housing. J N. B. Watts, the coordinator, re NYA project, and that his, office f erred a reporter to the college's, knows nothing about the matter, news Jbureau, which -is releasing a j:-. Meantime; college;: authorities statement soon on the controversy, ' have declared that State College The controversy broke here, last is obligated to provide garters for week when the Veterans Associa-rsJ i x ' students since quarters to tion charged ' that athletics were which they have been assigned 'are Nthe administration that , nousinS development, ahead, of 272 of the traffic com-' oiner marnea stuaents on i n e "be backed by the ad- waiting list. ;' a, he said ' I Six married athletes are being moved out of the old National Youth Administration housing cen-. ministration to repair 12 units at ter. The NYA buildings are being their expense for their use and abandoned because construction of since there are only six of them intramural fields nearby will dis-' occupied, , there evidently have rupt water and sewer lines and re-1 been vacancies in the NYA units quire extensive grading, according this year. Why weren't other mar to Dean of Student Affair's J. J. ried students informed of the va Stewart Jr. cancies so they could take advan- "Af ter considering the .cost, the tage Ml them?" Ike And Second Term Vili Be Di Debate To pre The Dialectic Senate will meet tonight at 8 p.m. on the 3rd floor of New West. The bill for t h e evening is "Resolved: That Eisen hower Should Run For A-Second Term." Miss Nancy Rothschild will introduce the bill. President David Reid has issued an invitation to all interested per sons to attend and to participate in the debate Civil Liberties Group Meets To Start Drive A group of American Civil Lib erties Union members met here Sunday to discuss the formation of a North Carolina chapter of the A.C.L.U. .-' The members were from Ral- rrnrham. ChaDel liin and we incompatible with Greensboro. A membership driye , is being started to raise the worm Carolina membership to a number large enough to support a North Carolina affiliate chapter. Anyone in Chapel Hill interest ed in joining the A.C.L.U. may contact Dr. H. R. Chamberlin, Miss Elizabeth Coding, Dr. Walter Hol lander Jr., Allen M. Krebs, Dr Nelson K. Ordway, Lloyd Shaw or Child Guidance Movie To Be Shown To Wives The Rev. James Cansler will present a movie on child guidance tonight at a meeting of the Stu dent Wives' Club. invited Student wives have been invited to attend the meeting wh.AwUl be held at 8 p.m. in the Victory Village Nursery. Mrs. Vernon, a senior voice maj or, is a student of Dr. Carter, She gave a junior recital here last spring and is soprano soloist with the Presbyterian Church here. Soloists for the Requiem will be Dr. Robert Morris, tenor and assis tant professor of voice at Woman's College; Miss Elinor Dorsk, con tralto and junior voice major at Woman's College, Miss Donna Pat ton, soprano and junior voice ma jor at UNC, and Edgar Vom Lehn, bass and instructor of voice and graduate student at UNC. yesterday that the i Athletic Depart- ment assigned students to the The Technician, student news- paper, eaiioriauy siueu wmi, me Veterans Association, declaring: "Since the Athleic Department obtained permission ior me an-; Dr., Mrs. Purlcs Go To Beach For Week Dr. and Mrs. J. Harris Purks are spending a week of rest at Virginia Beach, Va. Dr. Purks, who w.a s recently named director of the North Car olina State Board of Higher Edu cation, will take up his new duties upon returning from the vacation. William Friday, now secretary of the Consolidated University, will take Dr. Purks' place as acting president. , , Preparing For . : :::;xX;;; ' A - i 4 I. t' Alpha Gams, Shlrly Collins a batch of cookies for the Alpha up - GM Adds New Truck To Aid In Services ' Graham Memorial has paquired a truck to aid it in its services to UNC. ' The truck, a 1956 three-fourths ton,, dark green Chevrolet pickup, was delivered to GM on February 6. The new pickup will haul rental equipment and will help perform the catering services needed for GM receptions. The truck can be' hired by or ganizations of the student body. The basic fee will be $5R plus 10 cents per mile after the first five miles traveled. If used for more than one hour, a fee of $2 will be charged for each additional hour. The truck must be driven by GM staff members at all times. The pickup will be used primar ily for the business of GM, accord ing to a GM staffer. Alpha Gammas Hold Bake Sal$ To Fight Palsy Alpha Gamma Delta social so rority will sponsor a bake sale today. . Proceeds from the sale will go to fight cerebral palsy, according to the sorority. The sale will be held at Electric Construction Co. on E. Franklin St. Cookies, cakes and all sorts of homemade baked foods will be on sale from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. The sorority holds a bake every year, according to one of its mem bers. All the food is cooked by coeds. - ' "We'll guarantee our products, because they're good," an Alpha Gam reported yesterday. ' Bake Sale mym ""in nn i i ii" i " ' ir r i i ii i iniij i iii pun 1 in ijnii i SB 1 :j:':'v -:-;; and Shirley' Carpenterr whipping Gamma Delta Bake Sale. Henley Photo T GRAHAM MEMORIAL'S NEW TRUCK ' . ( .Student Union Workhorse due for piano hauling and other chores. SAYS MEDICAL SCHOOL lien-Pecking Domineering Aid Ulcers In By PETE IVEY Hen-pecked fathers and dom ineering mothers contribute to stomach ulcers ia the later life of their children. , That is one conclusion coming out, of a group therapy project in the UNC Medical School's Department of Psychiatry. v Ten'? University 'students with peptic ulcers, dyspepsia or other gastric disturbances of a psycho somatic nature are now .beginn ing the' second half of a two year program seeking to improve, their health and to find out facts useful to medical science. In a preliminary report in New York this month to the American Group Psychotherapy' Associa tion, Dr. D. Ws Abse and Dr. John W. Fortin of the U.N.C. Psychiatric Center here related results of the new Group-Analytic Psychotherapy technique as developed by Dr. S. H. Foulkes of London. Dr. Abse is a former associate of Dr. Foulkes. The pilot study group in the University (composed of eight undergraduates and two post graduates) revealed other indica tions that an emotional crisis brings on. flare-ups in those prone to psychosomatic disturbances For instance, the approach of mid-term examinations caused ulcer symptoms to recur. Family misunderstand.ngs and tiffs with other students on the cam pus also caused setbacks. Meeting twice a week about an hour and a half at a time for over a year, the students have had over ; 100 sessions, with marked improvement noted. Dr. Abse described "Before and "After" symptoms: ' Before When the . sessions began late in 1954, the students exhibited characteristics of de pendency. They were belligerent, rebellious, resentful, 'and hostile toward certain others in the group, just as they were hostile toward their associates outside, and members of their families. Arguments wefe plentiful. Fly ing off the. handle was a regular occurrence. They resented tljeir mothers, didn't get on w'ell with their fathers and had trouble with their girl friends. After At present, the stu dents, though not yet entirely cured, have fewer ulcer attacks. They get along better in the group and outside the group. They have -fewer arguments. Trouble with girl friends is less pronounced. Some of them have married. They show less resent ment toward their mothers and get along better with their fa-, . thers. They are now less de pendent, .less rebellious, more mature in outlook. Another of the beforeand . after findings relates to the at titude toward the instructor. At first, members of the control GROUP: of er group got angry with him, made complaints that he didn't exer cise what they considered to be appropriate leadership. They had hoped the instructor would advise, them, lecture to them, tell them, what to . do. But the kind of leadership ac tually practiced by the instruc tor, Dr. Fortin, is essential to '.the group analytic, psychothera py design as taught by Dr. Foul-' . kes and Dr. Abse. Instead of acting authoritatively,. Dr;! For- s tin tf ies to generate discussion and "keep' it' going. The conver sation is "free floating." They swap experiences, telling of backgrounds and divulging experiences common to all in , the group. Some of them, in re counting personal histories, re Educational Foundation Holds Reception For New Coaches Approximately 200 of the Uni versity's alumni gathered here re cently for a reception of the Edu cational Foundation directors and invited guests, honoring the col lege's new football coaches. Head coach Jim Tatum was formally introduced by Caesar Cone of Greensboro, chairman of the Educational Foundation's board of directors. Tatum spoke informally torthe group, expressing pleasure at. be ing back at his alma mater. He emphasized that he insisted on the highest scholarship for his foot ball team and pointed . to the scholastic record of his players at Maryland. J "We believe in winners because it is goodi for football players to win, rather than to lose, but you can rest assured that we will nev er compromise on academics. A player who is not a good student is not a good player." Emmett Cheek and Ed Kensler were two assistant coaches present. Tatum said the other staff mem bers were "out in t h e field at work." He referred to Eddie Tea gue, Pat Patterson, and Fred Tul lai. Coach Frank McGuire of the basketball team attended, Tatum said spring practice would start on March 5 and added that he was looking forward to the challenge offered to him at North Carolina. "We have some fine players, but simply lo not have enough of them at present," he added. Tatum said that North Carolina's alumni were the most, loyal and enthusiastic group of alumni he knew of anywhere, mentioning on ly Michigan as a school with simi lar suport among its alumni. Chancellor R. B. House w.a s among the guests at the reception. The Educational Foundation is ' i 5 2 ' 4 Henley Photo t Life mind the others that their own difficulties have been similar or identical. This promotes more personal interpretation. Students recognize their own "outbursts," and those in others, as coming from deepseated resentments that they can interpret to them selves and to others. in .the group fDf: ' Abse 'began the experi ment, which is patterned on sim ilar projects 'he. has headed, in.. England, in India . and in . this country. ' , ..... At the outset, more than K months ago, a number of stu dents showing signs of peptic ulcers and other like distur bances in the Student Health Center at the Infirmary were (See ULCERS, page 4.) composed of alumni and other friends of the University who con-J tribute to grants-in-aid for wor thy athletics. Marshall Cooper of Henderson is president. Tatum, in his talk, said his staff would concentrate on North Car olina in seeking to bring players here who are qualified scholasti cally and in other ways. Phi To Debate Suffrage As Done In 1900 The Phi tonight will observe an unusual and historic event, the annual "century" bill. Debate on the bill will take place as it would have seventy five or a hundred years ago. The "century" bill this year ad vocates woman suffrage, a subject which was much in the limelight around the turn of the century. Rep. Lawrence Matthews, Chair man of the Ways and Means Com mittee, has announced that Miss Bitty Dent of the Phi will intro duce the bill. Debate, it was said yesterday, will be limited to what might have been said around the turn of the century in support or refutation of the bill, and no debate will be al lowed which does not observe this rule, according to Speaker John Curtis. The bill'should be of special in terest to Women, and all coeds were particularly invited to attend the debate, as are other students and the faculty, Curtis said. Debate on this bill, expected to be lively and provocative, will take place in Phi Hall, fourth floor New East Building, at eight o'clock this evening. - . The Dublin Players, who tele vision ecce Ed .Sullivan has call ed "one of the finest acting com panies that has ever come to this country," will be presented here March 7. The Irish play group will pre sent George Brenard Shaw's "Py gmalion" in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Their appearance will be spon sored by the Recreation Commit tee of Graham Memorial Activities Board. Tickets, at $1 and $2, may be purchased at Graham Memor ial's information desk and in sev eral downtown stores. Coeds Treafee! To A Surprise Serenading Residents of Alderman and Kenan were treated to a sur prise serenade late Saturday night. An unknown male appeared jn front of Alderman with a guitar and serenaded the coeds with Spanish songs. His music brought the girls io the win dows. When he ended his sere nade, they called to him to come back again. When questioned concerning the serenader's identity, some of the Alderman coeds said they didn't know who he was, but "he was good." Others said the serenader was one of a group from the Cosmo politan Club. The group also sang at Kenan. Legislature I o Pass On Traffic Rules Student government officials yesterday cleared up any doubts about the powers of the student government Traffic Committee. All rules made by the commit tee, it was learned yesterday, wili be subject to student Legislature approval. The distribution between trivial and excessive violations which the committee will make will have to be approved by the Legislature. Student legislators last week passed a bill expanding the powers of the Traffic Committee- .Fla grant violators of parking rules .and laws, they agreed, will be de nied the right to keep their auto mobiles on the campus. 79 Morehead Candidates To Be Interviewed Hero Seventy-nine candidates for John Motley Morehead Scholar ships have been invited here to b interviewed by the Central Com mittee of the Morehead Founda tion. Twenty-seven graduates of sen ior colleges and six graduates of junior colleges in North Carolina will be interviewed by the Central Committee on Feb. 24 a n d 23. Thirty-six high tschool 1 'studen; and ten out-of-state preparatory school students will be interview ed by the committee on March 3, 5, and 6. From these candidates the Cen tral Committee will recommend candidates it believes meet the qualifications of Morehead Scho lars to the Trustees of the John Motley Morehead Foundation fur interview and examination on March 7. The selections made by the Trustees shall be final. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday Included: Thomas R. Grimes, William L. Osteen, Jerome M. Gibson, Craij M. White, Christopher G. Crew son, Joseph McK. Bryan, William H. Redding Jr., June H. Stalling Jr., Robert R. Bailey, William D. Akin Jr. and Wad M. Brannia.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 21, 1956, edition 1
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