tj, N C LI 33 AH Y SERIALS DEPT. . a d?f. wrt.t. f 8-31-49 WEATHER Partly Cloudy with chance showers. High of 68 expected. El Ti Memo The editor gives one to President Eisenhower on page two. of VOL. LVII, NO. 179 Complete (JP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957 Office in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TH" ,ciU3 news N. C. Solohs ilk wJ I? 13 No uition ncrease : : - 1 - . r "T :.!U', I'. - -- : t:- -J ' f I j - .r Lend For ' - Observer's Dowd The Charlotte Observer's General Manager, J. E. Dowd, is shown abeve greeting the busload of students from the School of Journal- ,i eu i , ., , ism who went to Charlotte as guests of the Observer Thursday. Ac- ' Journalism Students Visit Charlotte Paper Thirty students and six faculty. Dean Luxon has indicated that members from the School pf Journ- j trips to newspapers throughout alism were guests of the Charlotte i the. state may become 'a perman .Observer Thursday,, jn a day-long; wit feature. in, the, journalism pro 6 program designed to orient' the school and students to various phases of newspaper operation. Dean Norval Neil Luxon and his group were taken to Charlotte by bus to participate in a program of afternoon talks by the heads of the news, advertising, circulation, pro motion and business departments of the largest paper in the Caro linas. General Manager J. E. Dowd, Ed itor C. A- McKnight, Advertising Manager R. J. Alander, Circula tion Manager J. G. Ward, Promo tion Director Dave Henes and Con troller Frank H. Trull led discuss ion periods on the several phases of newspaper work. The purpose of the trip as indi cated by spokesmen for the news paper was. two-fold: (1) to orient the School of Journalism to theiKilgo and Winifred Martin, Char- operation and capacities of the - newspaper and (2) to interest journalism graduates in consider ing positions with the Observer. Editor McKnight, Dowd, Aland . cr and Ward pointed out, during the course of their talks with the group, the extreme interest news papers today are taking in locat ing college graduates, particular ly journalism students in their de partments and over-all operations. Crazy? At a luncheon yesterday honor ing novelist Robert Ruark at the Carolina Inn, the following menu was posted: Southport Shrimp cocktail with ; Ruark sauce; Salad, head lettuce, with choice of Luxon, Spearman or " Pollander dressing. j Entre: Spanish bull meat not ! roasted Barcelona style; Wallace I Caldwell baked potato; J. Penrose Harland green peas; Mau Mau olives; pickles and celery; Scripps Howard iced tea or coffee. Dessert: Something of Value par fait a la Phillips Rujsell. Bull was killed yesterday morn ing in ring, butchered and flown to Chapel Hill by an international airline. GM'S SLATE The following activities are sc heduled for Graham Memorial today: Class Group; 11 a.m., Roland Parker 3 and Woodhouse Con ference Room, gram in the future. He expressed his belief in the success an Ij think of as tx ing me two most i valuc of the program to both the 'logical to relate? Would it be re- 2cnooi oi journalism ana me : newspaper organization itself. The visiting group was enter tained at dinner at the Elks Club following the afternoon discuss iions of the operation and there after completed the last phases of the program following the me chanical operations of the news paper. Visiting faculty members are William S., Caldwell, Joseph L. Morrison, L. M. Pollander, Stuart W. Sechriest, Walter Spearman, and Dean Norval Neil Luxon. Visiting undergraduates . were Charles G. Ashby Jr., Elkin; Woods G. Atkins, Gastonia; Char les M. Johnson, Lenoir; John W. lotte; Alice Joan McLean, Weaver ville; Rosa Mae Moore, Battleboro; Eleanor Rush, Asheboro; Donald M. Seaver, Charlotte; John Ken neth Clark, Chapel Hill. Thomas M. Byrd, Mount Olive; John D. Ash ford, Scotland Neck; Stanley Brennan, Chapel Hill; William P. Cheshire, Hillsboro; Jacquelire Haithcock, Kannapolis; Walter D. Merritt Jr., Hickory; (See JOURNALISM, Page 3) McCarthy Play His Final Role . WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Jos--eph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) will play his final role in death Monday in the v s Senate chamber, scene of nis rocketing rise and fall on the American nolitical horizon . 1 Arrangements were announced . yesterday for a 30-minute funeral service at 11 a.m.-(EDT) Monday, after which McCarthy's body will be taken from in front of the Sen ate rostrum and flown to Apple ton, Wis. for church services and burial Tuesday. v Flags were at half staff today on the Capitol, the WhiLe House and other government buildings for the once - swashbuckling senator who died at 47 last night from an acute liver ailment. McCarthy, whose Communist chasing tactics inflamed passions all about him while he was at the zenith of his power, failed steadily after being admitted to the 'Naval medical center in suburban Be j. thesda, Md.,"-last Sunday. Greets Journalism Group companying the students was Dean ,. t . ... . alism Dept., shown standing, second ; i. Logical Relation: R eligion And Jazz - By MARY MOORE MASON If' you had to connect 'any two subjects,""" which (wo would you " To the Rev. A. L. Kershaw, dy namic speaker for the forthcom ing Y-Nite program, the connection L one of the most logical ones. For, Rev. Kershaw says, jazz offers "release for the suppressed cry for human identity. It does not look at the world sentimentally or cynical ly, but the context of deep feeling in jazz is faith and trust, an affir mation that for all life's sorrow and ambiguit3 yet life is good. And the Rev. Kershaw should; only as being an expert on jazz, know what he is talking about be-producer and director of a movie cause he was not too long ago the 'on jazz; editor of the commentary $32,000 winner in the Jazz Category I (See Y-NITE. Page 3) - SAYS FACULTY COMMITTEE Eight Advance Courses To Be Offered Next Fall PRINGLE PIPKIN A program of eight advance courses, one of the two in the na tion, will be offered to superior students in the fall semester, Dr. E. A. Cameron, chairman of the fa- j culty committee on superior stu- dents, announced yesterday. Sophomores will be able to take; history 21. The chemistry depart ment will offer an advanced sec tion of chemistry 43, and seniors and juniors will be eligible to take an advanced course in English 97. During the spring semester there will be advanced, courses in history 22, English 50, chemistry 44 and a new course in philosophy. The students who have been tak ing the special freshman courses will have special courses in Phil osophy 41 and History 136. Other courses are open to all students who are able to qualify. The special , program for fresh men, which will be entering its fourth year in the fall, will be con tnued with courses in English, so cial science, mathematics and che mistry, the first three being "core" courses and the last an elective. Dr. Cameron said this year is the first time that the special courses have been offered above the frosh level, and the new courses are an outgrowth of the freshman, pro gram. An announcement concerning history 21 said, "To qualify, stu dents must have a grade of at least Norval Neil Luxon of the Journ- . , 1 from right, : ; on the $64,000 question quiz pro gram,..,. -' ,r- " As long as he can remember, Kershaw has been interested in jazz. Born in- Louisville, Kentucky, he heard some of the real New Orleans music on the Ohio River excursion boats as a boy. While studying theology at the Univer sity of the South and at the Uni versity of Chicago, he became in creasingly interested in the rela tionship between religious faith and tha cultural expressions of it in the arts, including jazz. The Rev. Kershaw, now rector of All Saints Parish, Peter-j borough, N. H., is well-known not j B in social science and at least a B average for the freshman year." The description of the course in dicates that "Fir-t, it will be limit- (Sce EIGHT, Page 3) Student Legislature Triggered As Long Censure' Measure Appeared NEIL BASS I Thursday night's Student Legis- lature session was triggered ior an explosion. ' - An air of expectancy prevailed. Student lawmakers had been ser ved advance notice that the Long Resolution was siated to appear on the agenda. " ' ' Thus response was immediate when ReD. Tom Lon2 walked to the rostrum to read his resolution "censuring" application of state should you assert your "leader park policy which excluded Uni-' ship" and own judgement? Rep. versity Negro student Leroy Fra zier from the Umstead Park Sun day as the Cosmopolitan Club at tempted to use picnic facilities. Long moved special orders to enable the measure's passage on the same night as its introduction and Rep. Pete Kelley immediately came to his feet. "The implications of the bill (re solution) are such that a committee Hopkins Dies WASHINGTON (AP) John Jay Hopkins, 63, board chairman of General Dynamics Corp., died yes terday at Georgetown Universi ty hospital. He was suffering from cancer. Hcpkins entered the hospital last Saturday. He had become ill while returning to his Washing ten home from a California trip. General-' Dynamics, through a subsidiary, .built the first atomic submarine, the NautHus. Turbulent Volcano BONN, Germany ( AP) NATO leaders warned yesterday that a turbulent volcano in Eastern Ger many threatens peace if the people there are kept in Soviet servitude, j U. S. Secretary of State Dulles and West German Foreign Minis ter Heinrich Von Brentano, mem bers of the North Atlantic Treaty Council strongly appealed to Rus sia to release the East Germans into a free and reunified Germany. At the same time the NATO ministers warned the restless pop ulation of East Germany against any '"imprudence" which could only increase their sufferings, and might touch off global conflict if they attempted a Budapest - type revolt. Churchill Blasts U. N. LONDON ( AP ) S i r Winston Churchill, 82 and still brimming with vigor bounced back into the political arena yesterday with a speech backing the invasion of Suez, and criticizing U. N. actions in that crisis. An organ thundered "Land of Hope and Glory" and 6.000 Con servatives packing the Royal AL pert Hall raised the roof with ap plause for the former - prime min ister "making his first" public ad dress in a year. The tough old warrior was near to tears as he stood with head bowed during the cheering. He showed no signs from having been up until nearly 2 a.m. at a debui dinner dance for his granddaugh ter, Edwina Sandys. 6th Fleet Leaves ABOARD USS SALEM (AP) The carrier striking force of the 6th Fleet wheeled westward Fri day as the Jordan crisis which brought the ships to the "Eastern Mediterranean appeared over. Under orders from Washington, 30 warships of Vice Admiral Charles Brown abruptly quit the flag showing operation off Leb anon and sprinted for Italian wat ers to keep a date with forces of four other nations in NATO ex cercises. Left behind were 1800 Marines of the fleet amphibious force. A Fleet spokesman said the Marines are remaining in the Eastern Med iterranean until the "situation eases."' The Marines Friday board ed six transports and sailed for an unannounced destination after three days of liberty in Beirut. Cheers greeted the new orders the revision of by-laws and dis for this flagship of Admiral cussion of this year's banquet, are Brown. ' i-cheduled to take place. I should have time to consider it,' Rep. Kelley of the University Party It was evident that Kelley had plotted his strategy far in advance of the s-ession. Kelley also told lawmakers he hadn't had time to feel out" his constituency on the resolution's merits. Should you rely .solely on the feelings of your constituents, or Pat Adams (Student Party) asked. Kelley replied that he attempted to "reflect" the feelings of his constituents. Rep. Bill Baum (UP) concurred with Kelley's sentiments on the time issue. Baum said that he favored the resolution's "intent," but felt com mittee deliberation would make it '"applicable" to a wider area. Public Given The. National Institute of Health of the U. S. Public Health Service has granted $2,000 to Dr. J. Wil fred Gallagher, professor of per iodontology and oral pathology and dierctor of the curriculum of dental hygiene of the University of North Carolina School of Den- ! tistry. .This money is to be used for a pilot study of actinomycetes micro organisms and their relationship to the disease procees of the tissues around the teeth. Co-investigators of this pilot study are Dr. Abraham Widra, in structor of mycology, and James Crawford, graduate student and re search assistant, both of the De partment of Bacteriology . in the School of Medicine here. The constant incidence of these organisms in salivary calculus in pocket areas around the teeth j where inflamatory conditions are i present, leads to the belief these microorganisms have a significant and positive action in calculus for mation or' more' specifically the disease process tielf. The frequency of periodontal in flamatory disease is such that 80 per cent of adults have vary ing de grees of it and 65 per cent of adult V : - -:: ! Shewn above are the newly scribe; John Kerr, delegata; Mack Poteat To Speak To SP Dr. William H. Poteat will speak to'the Student Party Monday night in the Roland Parker Lounges bf Graham Memorial at 8 o'clock. Visitors and party members are invited to attend the open meet- ! ing. t Other items of business, such as Thus a triggered majority of the legislature sent the Long Resolu tion to the Ways and Means Com mittee for additional deliberation. It is slated to reappear on the legislative agenda next Thursday night. . Student representatives also stamped official approval on the ! presidential appointment of Son - ny Hallford, former Student Party j chief, to succeed Sam Wells as stu- ! dent government attorney general.; I he legislature s other action was passage of a bill laying the ground- work for organization of a cam- j pus humor magazine. I Abi-entees from the session were: j Reps. Charlie Wilson, Mike Wea- j ver, Val Von- Ammon-, Bobby Per j ry, Julia Ann Crater, Jim Alford i and Floyd Andrews of the UP; and ! Reps. AI Alphin, Tally Eddings. 1 David Evans, Herb Greenblatt, Don i Jacobs, James Everett, Jim John- j son and Whit Whitfield of the 'SIM Health Grant Dental School "J I 'V V 2, f i DR. J. W. GALLAGHER . : . receives grant . teeth are lost because of it.. 1 If it is possible from these stud ies to know more about the opera- j tions- of these organisims, then it would be possible to control them j and reduce the' incidence of per-j iodontal disease. Dr. Gallagher was born in Van (See HEALTH, Page 3) New Grail Officers elected officers of the Grail. Left Patton, vice-exchequer; and Benny Orientation Named For Jerry Oppcnheimer, chairman of the Campus Orientation Com mittee, has released the list of counselors selected for the 1957 Orientation program. 'I think that these men should be congratulated on their ac ceptance and commended for their willingness to serve. It was very difficult for us ta select from a group of over 200 .very qualified individuals, but I am certain that we have one of the finest groups of counselors in recent ears. I wish to extend my sincerest congratulations to these who have been chosen and to re-emphasize the importance of this useful and .worthwhile job which they are i undertaking. The responsibility which thej individual counselor carries is tremendous, but I am ! sure that these counselors will ; successfully complete the job.'" Oppenheimer stated. There will be a meeting of all selected counselors at :uu on 1 Monday, May 6 in Gerrard Hall. This will not conflict with Y Night. The counselors: Billy Allen. John Alley, T. S. Allred, Wayne Anderson. Charlie Ashford, Coleman Barks. . Carl Barrington, Bob Barrow, Bennie Baucom, Bruce Berryhill, David Biren, Jerry Blumenthal, Gerry Boudreau. Smith . Bradiield. Foy Brakshaw, Harry Braxton, Support of the Student Lci--j lature's condemnation of the in j crease cf tuition lor out-of-state ! students has been given by six j state legislators. Don Furtado, speaker of the I student legislature, ha.s received , letter from five senators and one ! representative since spring va ! cation. I He said that he had informed 'the Student Legislature of th j general content of the letters. One state legislator said. "As h J member of the Appropriation-; Committee I am very glad ti have the benefit of the thinking oi the .' members of the Student Li'is'a ture on this matter." j Another commented. "I ;m op j posrd tj Senator Ross's bill and ! shall do al! I can to brin ahmit ! its defeat." t One feared that, if the Univers ity raised its tuition, the other I state s,ehcols in the country would follow suit, and the N. C. students studying out of state would be j forced to interrupt their educa- ti' ns. 1 He also felt that all tuition was j too high and .should be lowered. 'I am deeply interested in a'.J ! matters pertaining to the Univer I ity, and I assure you I will u:ve this matter serious consideraii'-n. said one legislator. "Having received a resolution passed bv the Student Legislj- I tue, I shall be glad to call it to the attention of the Appropria te SOLOSS. Page 3) w I) V to right are: Herman Thomas, exchequer. Godw in. Counselors Next Year Craven Brewer, C.corce Brce. Bob Burge, Bcb Burroughs. Dick CashweM. Matk Cierry. (.'.'. Church. Graham C'laytor. Alex Coffin. Bryan C'onry. Cameron Cooke. Gary Copper. Wilson Cooper. Bob Cowan. Jim Craw ford. Bob Cromley.1 William Crutchfield. Ralph Cummings. Bill Deal. Bill Dorroh. Harry Ellerbe. David Evjn. Don Evan-. Joe Ferrell. Edward Fowlkes. Dick Frazier, Erwin Fuller. Phillip Gerdes, ' Craig Gibbons. Howar.! Goldman. Charles D. Gray. Gary Greer, Joe Hagcdorn. Phil Hairt-. Ken Hall. Henry Harris. Will Heath. John Hunnieutt. Charles Huntington, Everette James. Harold Johnsan. James Johnon. Jerry Jones. Brand m Kincakl, Bill King, Mike Kizziah. Larkin (See ORIENT A TO.V, Parje 3) INFIRMARY LIST Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Jo Dewesse, Shirley An derson, Sandra Wallace, Nancy Stephens, Jean Boissavit, and Timothy Jessup, William Lytle, Robert Pearlman, Don Corbin, Henry Manning, Hi'.rold Clark, David Ansell, James Thompson, Dave Burrows, Wiley. Haithcock, and John Hudson.

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