u.ir.c. Libfy
Ssflals Dept.
Chapel Hill, M. C,
8-31-49
WEATHER
Light ralnt over th tt&te tsday.
A 0 L A I
His HBomb prepasil it jiid.
Se editOMil, page 1.
VOL. LVIII, NO. 13
Complete (JP) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1956
Offices in GraJiam Memorial
FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE
o dl uSifli Tin' HH nfP
13 6 Women Students
Receive Sorority Bjds
A total of 136 wimen students
has pledged sororities on campus,
according to an announcement
yesterday from the dean of wo
men's office.
Bids were -issued between 7
and 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Alpha Delta Pi sorority gained
20 pledges; Alpha Gamma Delta,
17; Chi Omega, 25; Delta Delta
Delta, 28; Kappa Delta, 20 and Pi
Beta Phi, 28.
The complete list of pledges is
as follows:
Alpha Delta Pi: Molly Adams,
Wimington; Barbara Hope Brown,
Carthage; Emory Burkhardt, Bal
timore, Md.; Mary Jane Fisher,
Bristol. Va.; Karen B. Hansen,
Washington, D. C; Mary Ann Hof
ler. Gatesville; ATi Elizabeth
Holt, Sanford; Mary Waldo House,
Hamilton; Betty Carolyn Huffman,
Catawba;
Pat Messer, Canton; Claudia
Milham, Hamlet; Patricia M. Mil
lar, Kinston; Martha Isborne,
Smithfiejd; Elizabeth Nicholson,
High Point; Jill O'Donnell, Camp
Hill, Pa.; Mary Lewis Rountree,
Sunbury: Nancy Roystert Lexing
ton; Margaret Bradford Sherrod,
Enfi?ld; Anne Stallings, Shelby;
and Mary Susan Whitely, Towson,
Md.
Alpha Gamma Delta: Susanne j
Caroline Blackwelder, Lenoir;
Patricia R. Carter, Wallace; Ingrid j
Clay, Cobleskill, N. Y.; Ann In
man. Greensboro; Phillis Krafft, j
River Forest, 111.; Ella Frances ,
McXnight, Asheville; Jennie Mar- j
garet Meador, Charlotte; Ruth
Neisler.. Concord;
Pearla Ann Rev'elle, Conway;
Deborah Hunt Sink, Mooresville;
Katherine Smith, Chapel Hill;
Emily Somers, Wilkesboro; And
rea Stalvey, Charlotte; Mary Eli
zabeth Straughn,' Fayetteville;
Fredriee Louise Trull, Canton, and
Kathe '"Webster,' ' Prlndeton,K. "J.
Chi Omega: Jane Bradford, Ma
rion; Mary Louise Bizzell, Golds-1
boro; Catherine Brown, Charlotte;
Margaret Branson, Albemarle; Ca
rol Campbell, Raleigh; Roberta
Chapin, Asheville; Katherine Coe,
Washington, D. C; Mary Lewis
Craig, Gastonia; Martha Derr, Ra
leigh; Daryl Farrington, Short
Hills, N. J.; Katherine Anne Han
nan, Lumberton; Elizabeth High
tower, Winston-Salem;
Sarah Hudson, Atlanta, Ga.;
Alice Jane Johnson, pindale;
Hannah Boone Kirby, LouisvUle,
Ky.; Marianna Miller, Pineville;
Mary M. Martocia, Daytona Beach,
Fla.; Priscilla Norman, South Dart
mouth, Mass.; Nells Purrington,
Raleigh; Eleanor Ann Ruffin,
Greenville; Margaret Sanders,
UNC To Celebrate 163rd
Birthday Next Week
The University of North Carolina
will celebrate its 163rI birthday
next Friday with traditional camp
us exercises recalling the founding
of Carolina, the nation's older,
state university.
The annual observance is called
University Day and will feature
pageantry and pantomine re-enacting
the laying of the corner-stone
of Old East, oldest campus build
ing. Special music will be supplied
by the,' University Band and. the
Men's Glee Club. ' ,
Classes and offices on campus
will be closed from 10:50 a.m. to
12 noon to permit students, facul
ty and "administrative personnel to
take part in the celebration, ac
cording to an announcement by
Chancellor Robert B. House.
The observance will be held on
the south steps of South Building
and will conclude at Davie Poplar
with the singing of "Hark the
Sound.",
IN THE INFIRMARY
Mrs. Ruby Batten, Misses Har
riet Schafer, Linda Hall, Sue
Gilliam, Julia Black, Mary Ann
Keeter, Patricia Barlow, Mary
Ben Williams, Nancy Davis, Mar
vin Harless, John Perkerson,
Thomas Kearns, Charlie Aycock,
John Wilber, Charles Cox, Hugh
Price, John Beale, Wayne Ven
ters, Robert Ketler, James Ca
dieu, Craig White, Bobby Braw
ler, Charles Harrington, Alvin
Smith, Misses Eleanor German,
Mary Douglas, Stephanie Sparger,
Carol Covington, and Norman
Smith. . .
Charlotte; Martha Ruth Starling,
Raleigh; Elizabeth Thompson,
Rocky Mount; Ruth Watkins, Hen
derson and Jane Ward Westbrook,
Dunn.
Delta Delta Delta: Elizabeth
Barnes, Wilson; Martha Ann But
ler, Dunn; Deborah Conner, Char-,
otte; Belle Corey, Atlanta, Ga.;
Julia Ann Crater, Raleigh; Mar
tha Virginia Dawson, Snow Hill;
Marian Dickens, Thomasville; Pa
tricia Ann Dillon, Statesville; Bar
bara Doar, Raleigh; Genny Lou
Garrou, Snow Hill;
Florence Fearrington, Winston
Salem; Martha Fowler, Greens
boro; Ruth Starr Lukens, Birm
ingham, Ala.; Eve Leah McClat-
chey, Atlanta, Ga.; Elizabeth Mac-1
Kay.. Ocala, Fla.; Elaine Louise;
Meldahl, Mexico City, Mex.; Susan
Lee Mayhue, Ft. Lauderdale, Fist.;
Nancy Macys Milan, Baltimore,
Md.; Ina Gee Ridley, Courtland,
Va.;
Louise Barnwell Robertson,
Matthews; Nancy Jo Rush, Long-
view, Mass.; Mary Ellen Sample,
Asheville; Roberta Heam Simp-
son, Wilmington, Del.; ' Peggy
Byrd Swarington, Salisbury; Vir
ginia Walser, High Point; Eleanor
Williamson, Winnsboro, La.; Mar-
1 tha Williford. Favetteville and
CaroIyn H. wis(V Asheville.
Rappa Delu. N A1jen-t
LouisburS; Eiizabeth Gore Barnes,
.Washington, D. C; Norma Joan
Culp EIkins w. Va.; Elizabeth
LIoyd Dougherty Cincinnati,' O.;
A Elle winston-Salem: Bar-
bara Kay Honey, Charlotte; Bar
bara Ann Jackson, Elm City; Mary
Elizabeth Killian, Gilkey; Char
lotte Luella Ledford, Durham.
Barbara Jean Moore, Crown
Point, Ind.; Jane Patten, Char
lotte; 1 Josephine Payne, Washing
ton. D. C: June Potter. Wallace:
Betty. Richards, -JVlontclair, N.:, J44
Sally Simpson, Richmond, Va.;
Eleanor Stephens, Asheville; Bet
y Rene Webster, Madison and
Connie Whittaker, Whittier, Calif.
Pi Beta Phi: Mary Beth Acker
son, Louisville, Ky.; Billie Rise
Britt, Lumbertin; Nancy Jean Car
penter, Hillsboro; Betty Sue Clark,
Wllliamston; Kitty Corr, Bronx
ville, N. Y.; Nancy Davis, Moores
ville; Carol Dennis, Essen Falls,
N. J.; Susan Mary Donald, Nas
sau, Bahamas; Susie Fagen, Mi
ami, Fla.;
Elizabeth Fenwick, Winston-Salem;
Mary Arnold Garvin, Aiken;
S. C; Pat Gregory, Benson, Jac
queline Haithcock, Kannapolis;
Roberta Ashby Hastings, Orange,
Va.; Margaret Head, Wilmington;
Bettie Melton Kell, Bristol, Va.;
Anne (Nancy) Llewellyn, Bronx
ville, N. Y.; ' Barbara Madison,
Washington, D. C; Doris Peter,
Orlando, Fla.;
Susan Saurfders, Chapel Hill;
lane Sawyer, Wallace; Cynthia
Jane Segraves, Jacksonville, Fla.;
Sarah Jane Shaw, St. Petersburg,
Fla.; Mollie Williams Spruill,
Rocky Mount; Sarah Ann Van
Weyk, Winnetka, 111.; Susan Greg
ory Warburton, Williamsburg, Va.
and Patricia Davis Wilston, Char
lottesville, Va.
PROFESSOR SAYS:
A
ccounfing leaching Methods Are
By BUCK PAYSOUR
" A bombshell has been explod
ed in business and scholastic cir-'
cles by a UNC professor and a
colleague from De Paul Univer
sity. The sensation was created by
a paper written by Dr. Harold
Q. Langenderfer of the UNC
School of Business Administra
tion and Dr. Ernest H. Wein
wurm of De Paul. Entitled
"Bringing Accounting Curricula
Up-to-date," the article appear
ed first in "Account Review",
and has been widely reprinted in
academic and professional' jour
nals, including The Cost Ac
countant, published in London,
The professor's charge that in
structors of accounting are us
ing outmoded methods of teach
ing. ;
They also say that accounting1
curricula is set up as if every
c.ii-.rnt ur.rii etndvincf in hf a
f Certified Public Accountant.
Dorm Thievery
Rash Reported
Dormitory residtnts have report
ed a rash of stolen articles, it was
learned yesterday.
Rey Jefferies, assistant to the
dean of student affairs, listed the
articles which had been reported
missing to him.
John F. Sharpe has reported that
two shirts and two pairs of pants
were taken from his room in Cobb
basement Sunday night.
The shirts were plaid, one with
a predominate yellow background
snd the other, a blue background.
One pair of pants was charcoal
brown and the other pair was light
brown.
Nightwatchmen have been ask
ed to be cn the lockout for anyone
carrying clothes across campus.
A $60 watch, an Elgin Shock-
master belonging to Lewis San-
ders, has been missing since Sun-
day night. The watch was left in
the rest room of third floor Lewis.
Three passbooks have been taken
from boys in Alexander Dorm.
Jefferies has suggested that stu
dents lock their doors when leav
ing rooms even if they will be
gone for a short period of time.
inis .precaution snouia De oDserv-
I mi. t
ed especially on weekends, he
said. ;
Students finding lost articles
have been asked to turn them in
immediately to the tiwner, the
L YMCA office, or Graham Memorial.
Two Profs To Attend
Pathologists Meeting
Dr. K. M. Brinkhous, professor
and chairman of the Pathology
Dept., and Dr. Walter R. Benson,
assistant professor of pathology,
both of the University School of
Medicine, will attend two meetings
in Chicago this Sunday through
Thursday.
These are meetings of the Col
lege of American Pathologists and
nr American Society : of Clinical
Pathologists. Dr. Brinkheus will be
attending the latter meeting as
councilor for North Carolina. Dr.
Benson will be participating in a
"workshop", on studies of bron
chial, endometrial and cervical
cytologic preparations.
Hodges Terms State Dept.
Ineffective7 And 7Care!ess7
In Japanese Textile Problem
CHARLOTTE, ifr Gov. Hodges
yesterday asserted a "bungling, in
effective" state department had
been "utterly careless" in its
handling of the problem of Jap
anese textile imports.
"Many textile companies have
gone out of business and many
more will go out of business if they
do not get the proper attention
on this problem." declared Hodges
in an address prepared for deliv
ery at a Democratic rally in the
highly textile-conscious 10th Con
gressional District.
In his speech Hodges sought to
win support for , Democrat Ben
Douglas in his bid to unseat Repub
lican Charles R. Jonas as the 10th
District's representative in Con-
They added that this close con
tact between college accounting
instruction and the profession of
public accounting has resulted
in:
1. Inadequate training of ac
ceuntiirg teachers toward meet-
" i
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. ' '
Mens
emovecl
ointe
m M
ZMember
Board Headed
By Matthews
Members of the student govern
ment Traffic Committee have been
announced by President Bob
Young.
The Committee, established last
year concurrent with the institution
of new regulations dealing with
car ownership, will have jurisdic
tion over violation of these regu
lations. The seven members are:
Chairman Lawrence Matthews,
Bob Jacobus, jerry Oppenheimer,
David Parker, Jim Rose, Misses
Marian Dickens and Barbara Moore.
According to Young, "the mem
bers of this committee have been
screened and considered very
carefully."
The new regulations which the
Committee will have jurisdiction
over concern:
(1) Registration of automobiles.
(2) Prohibition of freshmen from
retention of cars on campus and
sophomores without the necessary
"C" average.
"The University administration
will stand behind any decision of
rthisxornmitteer Young said
The Committee - may suspend
students from school, remove the
privilege of keeping a car on cam
pus for upper-classmen, or enforce
any fines that may be levied by
Chapel Hill officials, according to
Young.
gress. He described Douglas as an
'intelligent, hard-working man of
great experience."
Hodges said Democrats of the
10th and particularly in Mecklen
burg County should "get back in
the Democratic Party and stay
there" and "straighten it out where
it needs to be straightened out and,
above all, put good men in office
at all levels."
The governor's speech climaxed
a full day's program for 10th Dis
trict Democrats. Earlier today,
luncheon meetings were held by
citizens for Douglas and women
for Douglas. Gov. Hodges spoke to
the citizens group and his remarks
were piped by wire to the women
for Douglas.
ing the needs of business.
2. Failure of most writers and
l publishers of accounting text
books to provide the needs of
business, and
3. Lack of training of students
in the solution of actual business
problems and the proper analysis
of more complex business situa
tions. As a result of these conditions,
the writers said, the accounting
curricula in mosjt colleges and
universities "tend to reflect the
requirements of the CPA. exam
inations to the disadvantage of
other accounting applications."
"This seems to be so despite
the fact that, . . . only 27 out
of each 100 business adminstra
tion majors are accounting ma
jors, and of these 27, only five
or six will go into public' ac
counting, they: asserted.
Many accounting teachers are '
not prepared to teach accounting
properly because of this orienta
tion of courses toward the CPA
rrniror
Traffic
By
r
V -
(Pnoto Of J. B. Clay)
Herbert Greenblatt is shown making a local call
is a sign wrhich reads "For Local Calls Only."
ble with students placing long distance calls on
ed if this continues. - (Photo by Norman Kantor.)
Harvard
By WOODY SEARS
Yesterday Harvard University
Athletic Director Tom Bolles an
nounced that the Harvard faculty
committee on athletics has cancell
ed a Christmas vacation trip south
for its basketball team. This has
obviously been done in protest to
racial' discrimination.
Harvard's wording of its expla
nation is as follows:
"Acting in its belief that Har-
vard alone must decide on the eligi-
J bility of its students to compete,
the Harvard faculty committee on
nthlofipc hsH u'ithrlrawn it an- !
proval of the trip which had in
cluded two games in locations,
where, under present conditions,
this control of eligibility would not
be possible.'
The games on the tour included
Quantico Marines, North Carolina,
Georgia Tech, and Loyola of New
Orleans.
The state of Louisiana has ban
ned interracial athletic competition
by law. As a state-supported in
stitution, Georgia Tech comes un
der the heading of state schools
against which Negroes cannot play.
Harvard was scheduled to play
exam, Professors Langenderfer
and Weinwurm declared.
"Far too many are merely
technicians who know how to
perform particular assignments
but show little concern with
their background, significance
and usefulness to business man
agement .. .
"We submit that before ac
counting curricula will be chang
ed in terms of current business
requirements, the teachers . will
first have to be trained to think
and teach in terms of those needs
, ... . Too many doctoral candidates,-aspiring
to be accounting
teachers, take little or no ac
counting work after their typical
undergraduate curriculum in ac
counting. The professors also charged that
textbooks are Inadequate.
"The emphasis is upon tech
niques, on how .to do the job
rather than why the job should
be done, jn a particular way,"
they declare.
The authors state further that
Jud
P resident
- -
Si
Cancels four
f the Tar Heels here Jan. 2, the first
j game for the. home team after the-
Dixie Classic contest in Raleigh, j
Coach Frank McGuire said rthat i
he had seen a letter from Harvard
which Athletic Director Chuck
Erikson had received several days
ago. He said that he was unaware f
of their reasons for canceling the
game, and that he had no corn-
ment to make.
Pnt.nn rmiM nnt Kn rphH ac
he has already left for South Caro-
lina.
Athletic Director Dodd of Georgia
Coach Bobby Dodd - of Georgia
Tech had received a letter from
Harvard a day or two ago inform
ing him of their decision to can
cel the Jan. 3 date in Atlanta.
"I'm sorry that Harvard has seen
fit to cancel the game," he said.
"We would like to have played
them."
The Georgia board of regents,
the governing body of the univer
sity system, adopted the racial
policy in Dec. of 1955 following
Gov. Griffin's opposition to Tech
playing a mixed race football 'team
in last year's Orange Bowl. The
Gov.'s opposition sparked student
demonstrations at Tech.
Wrong
because accounting instructors
"drill" students on procedural
aspects of accounting, students
can not properly express them-,
selves either in writing or verbal
ly. .In order to bring accounting
curricula up to date, the profes
sors suggest, it will be necessary
to: . .
1. Free the accounting curricu
lum from the present orientation
toward the CPA examination.
2. Give more attention to the
needs of non-accounting majors
who want a broad understanding
of accounting methods and their
applications in business.
3. Adapt the curriculum to -meet
the needs of students, and
4. Supplement students' tech
nical accounting training with
subjects which will give them a
broader perspective of business
problems.
The paper was developed out
of a round table meeting at the
Annual Convention of the Ameri
can Accounting Association.
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May Be
m a
iciar
'.1
mmB'f
Young
I
from a phone in Winston Dorm, while on the wall
The phone company "reports ther has been troo
these phones in4 that the phone wilt be remov-
Chapel Hill
; ' ) sponsible for seeing that dorm men
''f" I dp''i lk Place long-distance calls only from
all IOOUw5jpay. Phones, usually located on
AA
Biogra
Phillips Russell, editor of the
semi-weekly Chapel Hill News
j Aeaaer ana retired proiessor oi
journalism in the University, is the
author . of a book, "Jefferst n.
Champion of ' the Free Mind,"
which will be published Oct. 15 by
Dodd Mead & Co., a New York pub
lishing firm.
. His biography is basd on a new
conception that "Jefferson was not
a. radical; or subverter or idol
smasher(J but that he was an up
holder of ancient British liberties;
and that- Jefferson had wished to
see these" ancient liberties extend
ed and .brought up to date in a
new setting in a fresh and vigorous
America."
"
The well-known Chapel Hill
writer ana teacner aaaeci mat in.
all Jefferson s writings, the early
president used the word "demo
cracy or "democratic'" only three
times and that all the evidence in
dicated that Jefferson was primari-
4?.::.
4
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-' . ; . :'-'V.: :':
r
; PHILLIPS RUSSELL
ly a republic-man that is, be wish
ed to see America cut itself off
from a decaying European feudal
ism and strike out on new but well
indicated, paths that would , lead
the civilized world upward to a
new stage of life.
While ihe book gives due atten
tion to Jefferson asr a statesman,
Mr. Russell said, it has more to
say about the intimate side of Jef
ferson's life than any previous
work-
phy
Long Distance
Tie-Ups Cited
By Officials
There is eminent danger that all
non-pay phones may be removed
t'rom men's dormitories, according
to student government officials.
The reason for this threatened
removal is that dorm men are plac
ing long distance calls from non
pay phones, tieing up lines and
causing general confusion at the
Durham switchboard, Bell Tele
phone Company officials say.
The men are not able to com
plete the calls, but are causing
much confusion and time consump
tion, telephone company officials
say.
Interdormitory Council officials,
President Bob Young and Director
of Operations J. S. Bennett have
expressed concern over the threat
ened removal.
The Bell Company started instal
lation of pnones on the second and
Tourth floors of men's dorms re
cently, but has stopped as a result
j of the above incidents.
Dorm men are supposed to place
long-distance calls from pay phones
only, and removal of all non-pay
phones is eminent if use of Hon
pay phones for such calls is con
. tinued. .
! IDC '.prjesT den t Sonny Hall ford
said: .
"Each dorm officer must be re-
Dormitory first Uoors.
Dorm men are evidently not
placing the calls in an attempt to
avoid payment, but merely because
they are not aware that only local
j and collect calls are to be placed
from non-pay phones, Hallford said.
President Bob Young made it
clear that University officials were
not filing the complaint, but tele
phone company officials.
U.N.C. ALUMNI
50 copies of today's Daily Tar
Heel will be distributed tonight
to the Columbia, S.C. Alumni of
UNC. They are meeting at' 8 p.m.
at the Columbia Country Club.
State Education Board
Gets Revamped Setup
RALEIGH, (AP) A revamped
! committee setup was approved to-
I day by the State Board of Educa-
I tion.
The changes and
assignments
were submitted to the. board by
A. S. Brower of Durham, new
board chairman.
Under the plan, finance claims
and insurance committees are com
bined into one group and curri
culum, professional service and
college standards approval commit
tees are merged into the profes
sional services and standards com
mittee. New committee chairmen in
clude Gerald Cowan of Asheville,
athletics; Dallas Herring of Rose
Hill, professional services and
standards; and Barton Hayes of
near Lenoir, school buildings.
John Pritchett of Windsor, vice
chairman of the board and chair
man of the public lands committee,
also heads finance, insurance and
claims. Oscar Richardson of Mon
roe is chairman of the remaining
committee, transportation.
In other action, the board ap
proved an insurance bid byTon
tingental Casualty Co. of Chicago
of approximately $28,600 over the
next three years for additional cov
erage on state school plants.
GM'S SLATE
The following activities are
scheduled for Graham Memorial
today:
Pan . Hellenic, 5-6 p.m., GraU;
YRC. 7-9:30, Roland Parker
Lunges 1 and 2; YDC 7:23-y
p.m.. Rendezvous Room.