Uther merwifhch.nc. ETHICS The editors review the Senate and lobbying ethics. See pas 2. ' expected high Complete (ff) mre Serrtce CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1956 Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE n ODS Braicfoo rs n V tern hi p3l itr if rf v ' L'e - S'il"s Ma f J.ectoop. Date; (1 . - i f. - :-. v"i-: ;. .w .-v. .v. - m x - , -V - ' J J I If.: P : . ( SI PRESIDENT ALEXANDER HEARD OF THE FACULTY CLUB ivith (center) Secretary A. H. Horn and (left) past President E. A. Brecht er ecirooois m Dar Q 11 li y u u Li li ; V" fey CLARKE JONES ; The Student Legislature last night unanimously adopted a "bill setting Tuesday, March 27, as the date; for the spring elections. The run-off elections will be held Tuesday, April 10. Harry Braxton was appointed chairman of the Elections Board for next year. Succeeding former Elections Board Chairman Bill Mc Lean, who has been named as Orientation chairman, Braxton will assume office immediately. , The spring elections are normal ly held on the first Tuesday in April.- This year, however, that date falls on the first day of clas-J (2) A bill calling for faculty scs after the spring holidays, thus members to suspend quizzes dur necessitating a change. j ing the week of March 11-16 at As a result of the passage of the which time several outstanding bill, nominations of candidates for speakers will be here for the Caro the elections will have to be made lina Symposium on Public Affairs, earlier than usual. Both the Stu-1 (3) A bill calling for a reading dent Party and the University Par- day between the last day of classes ty have already made plans to be- and the first day of exams, gin- nominations next week., Also up for debate next week The bill was the only bill passed will be a revised copy of the Gen during the meeting. ' , j eral Election Law. Submittd by the Several measures were introduc-' Elections Board, the revision was ship office. He was given a stand ing ovation at the close of the meeting after saying to Legislature members, "... I wouldn't give a million dollars for the experience I've had here." ONOR COUNCILOR KATZENSTEIN: wents 5 Part- Think I ime O O f Honor cc u potion. Kudents seem to feel honor at UNCmcans merely not cheating in class or "being i id disorderly away from Chapel Hill while wearing a Carolina hat. ' ! what Clerk Charles Katzenstein of the Men's Honor Council said yesterday in i accompanying lists of Honor Council cases. ' y;x he said, appear to believe the honor system "specifically prohibits cheating a in the classroom, 'and being drunk and disorderly away from Chapel .Hill' while wearing a Carolina nat, tor ex ample, and that's all. "Consequently, they jhave few ? Of 53 Students liilty Since Nov. Heard Elected President Of Faculty Club Dr. Alexander Heard, professor of political science, has been elec ted president of the UNC Faculty Club. He succeeds Dean E. A. Brecht of the Pharmacy School, who has served as president, since Febru ary, 1955. Other officers elected to serve until 1957 are Dr. A. H. Horn, Librarian of the University Li brary, who will serve as secretary, and Prof. Herbert R. Baer, of the qualms, about signing class" rolls Law School, treasurer. ? for-absent Iriendsrsigning books Members of the board of gover- "ou'rofih'XiVra'undcr'assumed nors include Dr. George Al Car j names to avoid paying finds. terr of the Music Dept., Dean N. N. cheating the telephone company. ' .Luxon of the School " of Journal j or lying about class excuses, j ism, - Arthur Roe, head of ' the' which are all honor system viola- Chemistry Dept ;sa cases involving 53 j; fere tried by the Men's psacil for the period co- jUO to Feb. 9. Twenty ie students were found according to Council the two-month period al met a total of 21 J spent almost 100 hours t code violations were in- 13 of the 18 cases, - lived 25 people. Of the found guilty, eight jnded: three for chea Piaes in social science, - cheating on a physics p ?or cheating on chem Ss. and two for de Phone violation by toe telephone co. in a Quarter on a string to f 1 lonz dLstan rp rail Students fnnnrl if honor code violations on probation. Two . sadents were connected dormitory phone -viola-leopied answers from gnomics statistics lab. parid on an English one plagiarized on fence term paper, but. i iofest enough not to lor code violator re- official reprimand for Ce co"ncil whUe acting m another case. (. 18 cases tried dealt CRS of the campus j;,(iaey involved 28 stu ien of the 28 students te students were Jus-' lfor having a.wo ldormitory room, and intlemanly conduct i nere copc , - ---u nwc yi. f sent. Five of the students found guilty of campus code violations were placed on probation: four for ungentlemanly conduct at a party with coeds present, and one for obnoxious behavior in a dormitory at Woman's College. BLACKJACK Four were given official repri mands: two for ungentlemanly conduct at a party with coeds present, one for being drunk and carrying a blackjack, and one stu dent for advising an honor rode violator that he had the choices of admitting his guilt to the council or lying about it. In addition to the 18 cases, three i students were placed on bad check probation. Nine stu dents were reinstated to the University, and two were refus ed reinstatement because less than one full semester had elap sed. Three students were remov ed from probation. fesiATE "hedu!.d for Cra- MlklwUCi l! "ion -wnmitte, 3-5 Room; Carolina P-m.. Grail r . 7 frat.rnity, 10 ".1 Room; SEC, p.m., renc Room. V "nt. 4-6 University Band Combo To Play At Duke Game The University Band Combo, which appeared at the last two home basketball games, will play at the Duke-UNC basketball game tonight, according to-Scotty Hes ter, president of the band and head of the combo. The combo is composed of band members who donate their services and receive no pay, he said, li will play between the freshmarf and varsity games and during the halt time of the varsity game, he said. v The six pieces' in the combo are clarinet, trumpet, tenor saxaphone, bass horn and drums, he said. The combo is made up of some of the members of the combo that played at the UNC-Georgia f oot ballgame last fall, Hester said.. BIBLE STUDY Dr Preston H. Epps will con duct 'the final study in a series of studies in the.book of The Act on Monday at 8 p. m. in the YM CA Library. The public is invited and coffee will be served Pre the study in the office of the Com munity Church, tions," Katzenstein said. He said students seem to seg regate their thoughts about the honor system from many of their daily actions and seek to place the principles of the system "on a special s'helf for occasional reference only." Many ; Carolina students do understand the honor system and care whether or not it works, -he added. "The Honor Council urges every student to evaluate his or her understanding of, and cooperation with, the "honor system, and to do his or her part to make it work," he said. -SERIOUS Katzenstein said the council re gards cheating as equally serious, whether it occurs in quizzes, final exams or popquizzes, and it us ually results in suspensions from school. "The council considers the theft, purchase or selling of quizzes and final exams to be a violation of ihn most serious kind, and a vio lator is subject to the strongest penalty," he said. Probation for honor code vio lators occurs when the unusual circumstances seems to warrant it or when the student has dis ( See HONOR, page 4.) and Earl Slocum of the Music Dept. ' .'Adventure Wins Radio Recognition Two high national radio awards given by the Freedoms Foundation and-the National Council of Chris tians and Jews have been present ed to the "American Adventure" Series produced by the UNC Com munication Center . It is the second year that the series has won a Freedom Award given by the Freedom Founda tion of Valley Forge, Pa. Recipient of a George Washington honor me dal last year, the series was nam ed winner this week of the second place national radio award, "for an outstanding achievement , in bringing about a better under standing of the American way, of life during 1955." .v "American Adventure" was rec ognized by the National Council of Christians and Jews for a program, (See RADIO, page 4.) UP Will Nominate Monday The University Party will be gin nominations for spring elect ions next Monday night, accord ing to Chairman Bill Sabiston. The nominations will continue through Tuesday, March 6. All meetings for nominating will be, held at 730 p.m. in' the Rendez vous Room of Graham Memorial, he said. ';''''' ' ' Nominations will , be ; held Mon day for sophomore class officers, town jwomens' legislature seats and president and j vice-president of the Carolina Ajthletic Assn, , '.-.' Nominations will be held Tue sday for town mens' and dormi tory womens' legislature seats and for the National Student Assn. co-ordinator. On the following Monday, March 5, nominations will be held for Senior class officers and men's dormitory legislature seats. On Tuesday, March 6, the UP t candidates for student body offi cers will be nominated. A party endorsement for editor of The Daily Tar Heel will take place either March 5 or 6, Sabis ton said. This will depend on the date the new Bi-partisan Select ion Board makes its selections, he said. ed during the meeting and will come for debate in next week's meeting. They include: (1) A bill calling for benches to be placed in front of each dormi tory for the purpose of providing a haven from the tensions and dis turbances of modern life. drawn up for the purpose of elim inating abnormalities in the voting process. Braxton, due to being named Elections Board chairman, was forced to , resign as a member of the Legislature because of the bi partisan position of the chairman- was Pi Taylor Elected, Head Of Pi Kappa Phi Frat Jack Taylor, of Aberdeen, recently elected president of Kappa Phi social fraternity. Other officers named were: Rick von Biberstein, of Bursa w, treasurer; Dean Bray, of Mt. Airy, secretary; Pete Ash, of Reeves ville, W. Va., historian; George Anderson, of Aberdeen, chaplain, and Bill Sessoms, of Pine Bluff, warden. Hundred Girls Will Attend Square Dance UNC students, along with 100 pretty girls from Averett College in Virginia, ' will square dance to night after the UNC-Duke basket ball game. The dance will be held in the Tin Can, and will start immediate ly following the basketball game. It will be sponsored by the YM CA and Graham Memorial, accord ing to Stuart Marder. Marder and Fred Baber, both callers for the Carolina Square Dance Club, will do the calling. s 4 V xd'1 V ' t:' if it A v - i I li It L HILLBILLIES JIM GAY, GEORGE HAMILTON AND HENRY HEITMAN . . . from the Grand Old Opery to station WCHL Chapel Hill Now Has Own Hillbilly Band Carolina, now can boast of its own hillbilly band George Ham ilton and "The Country Gentlemen." Hamilton and the "gentlemen." Jim Gay and Henry Heitman, originally started playing to- " Mozart Festival I onigrn gether at Reynolds High School in Winston-Salem. This year Hamilton reorganized the group here at Carolina. The group, which has a radio show over WCHL two afternoons a week, recently signed a re cording contract" with Colonial Records, a Chapel Hill Recording firm. For three years the trio has been appearing n television and radio throughout North Carolina. They also have appeared on the famous "Grand Old Opery" from Nashville, Tenn. . Gay, a sophomore, plays the electric guitar; Heitman, a fresh man, strums the bass, and Hamil ton, alsov a freshman, sings and play the rhythm guitar. ONCE RAN FOR N. C. GOVERNOR: Judo p arKer .llo apeak On aw The Honorable John J. Parker, chief judge of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, will speak in the Law School Courtroom Monday at 8 p. m. Judge Parker's topic will be "The Practice of Law as a Pro fession." He will be introduced by Pete- H. Gems, chairman of the. Law School Speaker Committee. Judge Parker, a member of the University's Board of -Trustees, spent 16 years of his career on the outer side of the bench as a prac ticing lawyer. After his graduation from the UNC Law School in 1909, he prac ticed in Greensboro, Monroe and Charlotte until 1925. He was then appointed to the bench of the Fourth Circuit, making for him self a distinguished name in the i .. Ill administration of justice. In 1923, Judge Parker was nam ed special assistant to the Attorn ey General of the United States. In 1945, he was selected an alter nate judge of the International Tribunal of War Crimes, Which tried the Nazi war criminals in Germany. Due to the high honors and po sitions which Judge Parker has achieved throughout the world, he was selected an honorary master of the bench in the Inner Temple, one of the most coveted honors of the British bar. Ience. Judge Parker ran for governor in 1920 and is presently a member ' of the National Committee of the Republican Party. During his undergraduate days at UNC, he was president of the Student Council, a member of the Golden Fleece and of Phi Beta Kappa. According to Gerns, Judge Par ker has twice been considered for an appointment to the United States Supreme Court. "Judge Parker has been named by many to be the nation's most outstand- JUDGE JOHN J. PARKER . , . here Monday night In the field of revision of laws, ' ing man in the field of jurispru Judge Parker has worked with the dence," said Gerns. American Law Institute and as a 'He extended an invitation from member of the "American Society the Law School to faculty and of International Law, and the Am- students to hear Judge Parker erican Academy of Political Sci- Monday night. Vayda Asks Good Conduct At Ball Game A plea for good sportsmanship was made last night by Jerry Vay da as a result of the free-for-all after the Carolina-Wake Forest basketball game. Vayda made the request as cap tain of the. basketball team and president of the Monogram Club. TRADITION He wrote, "Let's be extra care ful at our closing game with Duke here tonight to conduct ourselves in the best traditions of good sportsmanship. This is the Caro lina tradition, but in enthusiasm for the team and in retaliation for unkind treatment from the oppo sition, we sometimes forget our selves." He urged team supporters not to boo visiting players when they are being introduced at the be ginning of the game. "I do not believe our students have been guilty of that. Let's not fall into the habit," he con tinued. "Students stamp them selves as poor sports when they do it. Let's treat our visitors as we like for our own team to be treated when it is playing away. CREDIT "The team, itself, is resolved to acquit itself in a manner that will reflect credit on the school. We would like to have your co operation in building up Caro lina's reputation for good sportsmanship." A. Mozart Festival will be held here tonight. The festival, featuring Boris Goldovsky, Luboshutz and Nemen off, along with a 23-piece orches tra, will be sponsored by the Cha pel Hill Concert Series. The oc casion is the 200th anniversary of the birth of composer Mozart. The festival will be held in Me morial Hall at 8 p.m. Tickets may be obtained from Graham Memorial, Kemp's and Lcdbcttcr Pickard for $2.50, $3 and $3.50. The "piano festival "recreates the authentic musical conditions existing in Mozart's time," accor ding to concert series spokesmen. The orchestra will have the same numerical relationship between winds and strings, and the con ductor will play the solo part. Pierre Luboshutz and his wife, Genia Nemenoff, are both con cert pianists. They have performed together in Europe and the Ameri cas for nearly 20 years, and have appeared with the Philadelphia, Boston and other orchestras. Ac cording to the concert scries, they are the only duo-pianists who have appeared as soloists with Arturo Toscannini. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss aura H. Van Order, Miss Roberta L. Von Wilier, Miss Mil dred A. Disekar, James P. Crews, Don Schneider, Jack M. Wiesel, Dawson V. Carr, Wiliiam F. Park er, June H. Stalling Jr., Eugene L. Presley, Gerald A. Long, Mar. ion E. Byrd, Vade A. Bowles Jr., Robert William Caudie, Cob by D. Richard, Robert R. Bailey, Talbot R. Selby and William C. Akin Jr,