Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 6, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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V ft C Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill, . c. ! WEATHER Continued mild with chance of showers. I I 1 PHONES How to keep them roun4. S oag 2. r VOL. LVIII, NO. 14 Complete JP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1956 Offices in Graham, Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUO Win ess Tar Heels Meet Gamecocks In "Columbia Today COLUMBIA'.' S. C. Oct. f The victory hungry Caro lina Tar Heels will be making their third attempt to bring home the brron for Coach im Tatnm this afternoon when they go against the University of South Carolina Gamecocks in a game slated to get underway at 2:30 p.m. in Carolina Stadium. For Coach Tatum. the famine has been a long one. The v KING IXON ..flashy Gamecock halfback Coed taking radio to class to hear World Series game. Student walking in heaviest rain with paper bag over head; that's all ... no raincoat, jiist the beg. . w CAMPUS SEEN - Cars N of; Reg isfe r e d ; , Are Now Being Traced PWFS LWRcNCE MATTHEWS . . .heads .traffic committee . : More Time Given For Yack Photos The period for freshmen, fourth year medical students and nurs ing students to have their pic tures made for the 1957 Yackety Yack has been extended for three more days. Editor Tommy John son announced yesterday. These people, who have not had their pictures made, may 'do so Monday through -.Wednesday of next week at a cost of $1 per stu dent. ; The $1 charge is to cover the extended contract of- the photog rapher. Pictures,,' will be made in the basement i;'?f Graham Memorial from 1 to 6:30 p.m. Yack officials have requested that girls . wear dark sweaters and pearls for the photos. Men have been asked to wear dark coats, ties and white shirts. The remainder cf the - photo schedule is as follows: Oct. 8-12 sophomores, pharm acy, dental and dental hygiene stu dents. Oct. 15-19 juniors, law stu dents, medical students and grad uate students. Approximately 900 senior pic . .. mmmt, r r. tures were made, reported Editor , and Miss Marian Dickens and" Bar Johnson. ' 1 bara Moore. ' '' ' a man who built powerhouses at Ok- lahoma and Maryland in years past is now tasting the most bitter po tion of his career that of a vic tory drought. But the season is young and the Tar Heels are becoming more ex perienced with each passing Satur day. Certainly last week's game with Oklahoma was a devastating one a type of devestation that brings inspiration. When the Tar Heels take the field this afternoon they will as sume a role quite unfamiliar to Sunny Jim. That of an everything to gain, nothing to lose team. The Gamecocks, under Tatum's ex-assistant at Maryland, Warren Giese, have proven themselves an opponent to be reckoned with in early season games. They received national recognition two weeks ago when they pulled a major upset in defeating the Duke Blue Devils, 7-0; a game that many considered a 'fluke' and one that must have been won more on courage than anything else. The Gamecocks turn ed back tiny Wofford in their opener, but dropped a one touch down decision to Miami last Friday night. Carolina, on the other hand, is due for a big day. Their two one sided losses to State and Oklahoma cannot be attributed to bad breaks, but the Tar Heels certainly haven't (See GAMECOCKS, Page 4) t t The student government Traf fic Committee, having control of car ownership at the University, has learned that a number of stu dents have no registration stickers diplayed on their automobiles. The com mi tee chairman, Law rence Matthews, said yesterday that the committee would like to im press upon every student the ser iousness of this violation of the traffic regulations. Under the traffic regulations, an automobile registration sticker must be displayed within 48 hours after receipt by the student, the committee reported. The Office of Student Affairs has received long lists from campus policemen of license numbers of cars parked on campus bearing no sticker. These numbers are being pro cessed in Raleigh, and the ex posed violators will be asked to appear before the traffic commit tee. ' Students receiving as many as three parking tickets during one semester will receive a warning from the committee; those receiv ing as many as five parking tickets will be summoned before the com mitte for a hearing, Matthews said. Copies of traffic regulations have been distributed to dormi tories, fraternities and sororities. Copies may also be obtained at the Office of Student Affairs or at the Student Body President's Office. All' students have been urged by the committee to read carefully these traffic regulations: Any student who so desires may bring- a car to the University for the -Germans weekend. However, a car must not be brought to school before Oct. 26, nor kept at the University after October 28v If students co-operate with the committee in this Germans' weekend permission, an endeavor will be made to allow further priv ileges of this nature, Matthews said. The traffic committee, under the direction of chairman Matt hews, will begin its regulatory functions in a meeting scheduled for next Wednesday. Other mem bers of the committee are as fol lows: Bob Jacobus, Jerry Oppen heimer, David Parker, Jim Rose, y oun Has TWO MEN OUT OF JAIL ON BOND: Cheating Ring By FRED POWLEOGE Student government officials partially broke up a widespread cheating ring , during the past summer. This was announced yesterday by Student Body Atry. Gen. Sam Weils. He said investigations are still underway. Two people one summer school student and one graduate from Durham are out on bond and awaiting court action. The summer Honor Council, Student Body President Bob Young and the State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) participated r 1 . o 5 I - UNC QUARTERBACK DAVE REED . fntiy start today's game against Gamecocks First Senior Meet Set 9 By Placement Service The Placement Service will hjld its first- fneeting for all seniors Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. This meeting will present Mau rice W. Lee, the new, Dean of the School of Business Administra tion, who will be the guest speak er. Dean Lee is a native of Chicago and comes to us from Washington State College. He received his B.S. in 1933 from the Illinois Institute 1 of Technology and his Ph.D. in 1939 from Chicago. He has taught at, the University of Chicago, the Illinois Institute of Technology, and Utah State Agricultural Col legs. The topic for Dean Lee's speech will be "Careers After Graduation." J. M. Galloway, Director of the Placement . Service, will .describe the operation of the Placement Service 'and conduct a question and answer period. All , seniors and graduate students who will seek employment in business, in dustry, or government have been invited to attend this meeting. . Each year approximately 300 local and nation-wide companies send their representatives . to the campus to interview students for prospective employment. Only through registering with the Placement Service is it possi ble for students to be notified and have interviews with these com pany representatives. Whether or not military service lies between graduation and the beginning of students' careers, these interviews and contacts'' should" prove invalua- Vetoes rojn in the investigations, Wells said. TWO NAMES The , cheating ring allegedly made a business of stealing and selling examinations and quizzes from University professors. Wnile several students' names have been involved in the ring, Wells declined to disclose any but the two men charged during the summer. They are Max Icenhouer, pres ently a senior living here, and Herbert Andrews, Durham. It was learned that Andrews was suspended from the Uni- 5 V - ble in the future. Once registered with the Placement Service, stu dents are on permanent file and may use the Placement Service's facilities at any time to secure in formation and contacts for employ ment. MAURICE W. LEE ... new BA . School Dean Jcb hunting is not an easy task for those who have no special in terest and have given no serious thought and study to their own abilities, a spokesman for , the Placement ' Service said. Thous ands of different types of jobs are available today both in and out of the United States. There are numerous ways and peo'ple ready to help in making decisions, the Placement Service reported, including their testing service, professors, the Library? .business men, and countless others ' . . I v -;r Columbia Partially versity in the spring of 1955. Atty. Gen. Wells gave details of the cheating ring at a-joint luncheon meeting of the student government Executive Committee and the administration's Coun cil on Student Affairs. One stu dent ' member described the meeting's climate as that of an "era of good, feeling" between students and administration. In addition to Wells' report on the cheating ring, students talked with administrators about: 1. Other facets of Carolina's Honor System. 2. The parking problem as it affects owners of automobiles in Big Fraternity Court. 3. The need for coordination cf campus events to prevent sev--eral events' happening on the same night and at the same time. 4; Compulsory physical educa tion for veterans. OBSERVATION It was the second such joint meeting within recent months. Last spring, shortly after campus-wide elections, the same two groups got together over Lenoir Hall food and traded observa- . tions on major campus prob- t lems. Atty. Gen. Wells told the , groups the investigation of the : cheating ring came, after a stu ' dent made an unreasonably high rade oil an. examination last - spring. The investigation pro &xicd no evidence, -'though; tie said. ' Honor Council personnel start ed looking for a lead, he said, and were rewarded last summer: A student (Icenhouer) wh" made a high grade on a quiz was observed doing practically nothing while the quiz was given, Wells reported. A check showed the student was closely associa ted with a Durham man (An drews) who had been suspended from school in 1955. At this point the SBI entered the investigation. Subsequently the two men were charged with breaking and entering and steal ing examinations. Wells said after the meeting yesterday that the investigation produced considerable excite ment. "There were guns flying Di, Not Phi, Admitted Presley The Daily Tar Heel wishes to call attention to a misleading re port in its Oct. 4 edition. It was erroneously reported Oct. 15 Is Deadline For Student Insurance Oct. 15 is the deadline for UNC students to onroll in the Student Insurance Plan, provided this year for the second time by the Pilot Life" Insurance Company. Application blanks for the policy may be obtained from the Student Government Office, at the Y and in the Graham Memorial Informa tion Office. Fee for one year's coverage is $9 50, payable by check or money order to Pilot Life in Raleigh. A student government official yesterday asked students who have paid the fee to come by the Stu dent Government Offices in Gra ham Memorial and pick up their insurance indentification cards. IN THE INFIRMARY Mrs. Ruby Batten, Misses Mary Ben Williams, Elizabeth McCord, Janet Elizabeth Thompson, and Marvin" Harless, Thomas Koarns, Richard Satterwhite, Charles F. Cox, Bennett Whisanant, Hugh Prica, Robert Ketlar, Craig White, Chartas Harrington, Alvin Smith, Misses Eleanor German, Mary Jo Douglas, Stephanie Sparger, Elizabeth McCraw, John "William Johnson, Walter Ray, John Owens, Kenneth Willis. Street i Broken around in cars, and things were happening all over," he said. OTHER PROBLEMS Here -are the other campus problems presented by members oi tho student government Exec utive Committee, along with re plies from administrators: 1. On parking, Interfraternity Council Presdent Ed Hudgins said most fraternity men in the vicnity of Big Fraternity Court telt they were being "discrimi nated against" when the town Board of Aldermen voted to limit parking to two hours on S. Col umbia St. between Franklin and Cameron. The town has been unable to give a satisfactory explanation for the. ordinrnce, he said. ; University Housing Officer James Wadsworth said he felt the fraternities, as tewn tax-payers, should be given parking rights along wth all other taxpayers. Director Edwin Lanier of the University's Office of Central . Records asked that students not condemn the' Board of Aldermen "too much." The board, "like all such, boards, is completely baffled as to what to do about the car problem,'.' he said, You cannot put a gallon of water into a quart jar," he re minded the students. HONOR SYSTEM 2. On the Honor System, stu dent government Secretary Jack-. Aldridge' reported the Honor V CommTasmnP a'iJ-siuffent ."body- recently - established, - had done a good job in its attempts to "in doctrinate the freshmen and transfers in the Honor System." Chairman Luther Hodges Jr. of the Student Council explained recenty changes in the student Constitution. Arnold Perry, dean of the School of Education and tem porary chairman of the Division of Student Affairs, congratulated students on the "mature way . you've approached these prob lems." ' ' 3. Stan Shaw, National Student Assn. coordinator on the cam pus, gave th'e case against com pelling armed services veterans to take physical education. The administrators appeared to side with Shaw. that the Philanthropic Literary Society had passed a resolution admitting Elvis (the Pelvis) Pres ley to its membership. It was the Dialectic Literary Society that jestingly introduced the resolution that was passed by a large majority. Sen. Stan Germ ah s Will Have Rock 'AT Roll Man This Month For First Time The first rock 'n' roll man in the history of the Germans will be here next month when Fats Domino comes to Carolina for a concert and a dance. With Fats and his band will be the Billy May Band conducted by Sam Donahue. The concert, from 3 to 5:30 p.m. and the dance, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., will be held on Friday, October 26. Fats is believed to be the first and only rythm and blues performer to play' on the Caro lina camous.. according to George Ragsdale, Ger man Club head. . - ' Fats started his show business career In his home town cf New Orleans. He. played piano and sang with many local bands while stUl jn his teens. Soon becoming a local favorite, he played one nisht enaagements throughout Loutsianja, Texas and Arkansas. " . FATS RECORDS Imperial Records heard of Fats through their distributer in New Orleans, and flew from the West Coast to cut a session on the young perform er. The tune, "Goin Home," became a success, and before long the rock 'n' roll fans of the en tire South knew of the "Little Fat Matt From New Orleans.' . Bilk Traffic Commission Will Handle ProbSe Student Body President Bob Young yesterday vetoed a bill to establish a student government commission to act on the Columbia St. parking situation. At the same time he announced a student government Traffic Advisory Commission oi five students to study the overall traffic problem. Young said he vetoed the measure, passed by special or- Apt of business at the Sept. 27T meeting of the Student Legisla ture, because the Columbia St. area was an "isolated case" and "could lead to the establishment cf innumerable groups wtih very lit tie responsibility or influence ac corded to any one of them." The advisory commission study ing the whole problem will meet with the board of Aldermen next Monday night. Young said "We will have a strong case to present to thc'm' at that , time." . He said "For the benefit of the student concerned with the Co lumbia St. situation, this particul ar problem will be number one en the (commission's) agenda for discussion and for action. Members of the committee are Clark Hinkley, Darwin Bell, Bill Pruitt, Ed Hudgins and Wilburn Davis, chairman. The Board of Aldermen last summer passed: a" resolution re stricting, two-hour parking on Columbia St. between Franklin St. and Cameron Ave. The Board I also banned .parking on all ' of Rosemary St. ' . . .University :-r any .cnairman Mike Weinman last week, intro- ' diiced a bill "calling for the estab- lishiment of a student, government commission to act on the Colum bia' St. parking situation because: : 1. "Columbia St. is not a com mercial street between Franklin I St. and Cameron Ave. f - 2. "There is no need to limit parking 'on a street which is not i commercial as this limit serves no obvious purpose. , j 3. "It is the aim of student gov i ernment to look out for the inter ests of all students. .4. 'Then: parking limit recently effected on Columbia St. works great hardship on those students! who live on Columbia St. and the j Student Legislature feels that this j hardship has been invoked un- j necessarily." , j Weinman said the committee, ; if appointed by the student body j president, should "be empowered, to act in accord" with a similar i commission from the Interfratern ity Council. The , commission's aim, he said w;as tj,"obtain tne removal of the ...two' hour parking limit on Columbia St. between Uranklin St. and Cameron Ave." Young's . complete statement is as .follows: , . - FmeFi "I have vetoed A Bill To Estab lish A Student Government Com mission To Act On The Columbia Street Parking Situation. I would like to state my reasons for taking this action. I have not vetoed it for partisan reasons. The bill passed the Student Legislature unanimously. Therefore, this is not a political action. My reasons are as follows: "1. This bill stipulated that a committee be set up to study one isolated case, namely the Colum bia St. situation. This bill, if pas ed, would give any other group of students the right to ask that a committee be set up to study any one area. This could lead to "the establishment of innumerable groups with very little responsibil ity or influence accorded to any one of them. "2. The establishment of this particular committee would cause much duplication of work and dis cussion on the part of students and members of the Board of Al dermen. If this committee ap proached the Board of Aldermen and had only as its responsibility that of clearing up the Columbia St oroblem. then other committees would have to approach the Boird of Aldermen on other probJtins. Therefore,' I am consolidating the responsibility of all the problems under one commission. This I feel, will expedite work on the Colum-' bia St. situation, and also the over all problem. "3. I am announcing a Student Government Traffic Advisory Corn- mission composed of five stu dents representing all areas and viewpoints of the campus. This commission will function through out the y:ar. It will be responsible i for studying the overall traffic situation. For the benefit of the students concerned with the Co lumbia St. situation, this particul ar problem will be number on on their agenda for discussion and for action. The Board of Aldor men meet Monday night, Otc. 8 We will have a strong case to pre sent to them at that time, "Other problems that this com mission will consider are as fol "1. Making plans for use of the i registration fee for parking facili ' ties. J "2. Studying the possibility of utilizing present space on campus, j "3. Studying the parking situa i tion in down-town Chapel Hill. As the rock 'n roll craze grew, so did Fats' popularity as he began the first of his highly successful national tours. Many Carolina student. have seen Fals in his concerts throughout the state. Fats has just recently returned Irom Holly wood where he was in a movie. . Some of Domino's latest recordings are "When My Dreamhoat Comes Home," "Blueberry Hill" and "Honey Chile." DONAHUE STARTEP YOUNG Sam Donahue also started his career in his teens. After much experience as a tenor sax man with such bands as Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa and narry James, he formed his own band. Later he was assistant director with Tommy Dorsey. As a result of this experience he was asked to lead Billy May's already lamous band. May had elected to stay with Capitol Records in Los Angeles. An added attraction will be Debbie Brown, a pretty little vocalist featured with the Billy May band. Donahue's last appearance in North Carolina wa at the Raleigh Terpsichorcan Club's 1958 Deb utante Ball, held last month.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 6, 1956, edition 1
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