Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 1, 1957, edition 1 / Page 1
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tJ.H.C. Library S-rials Dept. V E A T H E R Mostly cloudy and continued cool with scattered mostly light rain and drizzle today. DUPLICITY Students' eyes full bf pulled ever wool? asks the editor on page two. VOL. LVII NO. 10 Complete W Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE I I 111 ': v Vx I -- -ir - 17 ' V -If--;1! Leader Warns UNC May Lose N5 A Committee Local National Student Associa tion officials today called for campus-wide interest in keeping I lie desegregation cnrmittee of ' NSA at the University of North i Carolina. Local NSA Chairman Whit Whit field said UNC is faced with losing headquarters tor the top NSA committee unless "forceful leader ship and sincere interest" can be rallied here for the group. White HJ n use 1 In S ted Hallford Named Officers Will Name Advisor From Faculty Sonny Hallford, student govern ment attorney general, was a elect ed chairman of Carolina Sympos- eke Symposium Head : Demonstration Hodges Is Recognized For Service To N. C. Whitfield said "several"' other j ium on Public Affairs by acclama universities have indicated their i tion; at a meeting of the Symposium interest in sponsoring the commit- general committee yesterday in toe. which UNC will lose unless Graham Memorial Building. Governor Luther II. Hodges was honored here Monday at a luncheon at 12:30 p. ,m. in Lenior Hall on the University campus by the North Carolina Business Foundation. WORK PROGRESSING Construction continued this week on the new Ackland Museum of Art, Col umbia Street, and a new men's dorm behind Navy field. The dorm will house about 500 men. (Norman Kantor Photos) i ; t. ' . - . ' l r- -c Vv 'lV 1 . . y '. i f' -J , - - ' : - - . - ' U- . " ;- . " ' " ' - -1 . ' ' " 1 . - 14 , vv : - , . "."". - - " i ' . . " -4 -. . .. ww , - I t ; I ' v ......... " .. i .. an i iiOT1imr1MiiHiat ' mn '' ' i1" iK "we act Immediately to keep it on ci-mpus." j Purpose of the committee is to ; disseminate information and ques tionaires to schools all over the i j nation, then mmipile results for the national office of NSA. "Rather than do a poor job, we'd prefer that another university et the committee," Whitfield de clared. "But with forceful leader ship and sincere interest we can keep it on the UNC campus." Whitfield said any persons inter ested in working with the com mittee should contact him 'hrough the student government offices. Other officers elected Connie Whitaker. vice chairman; Mary Jane Fisher, secretary; and Al Goldsmith, treasurer. Governor Hodges' extraordinary include: ! services to the state in connection with business expansion and ef forts to enhance the economic well-being of North Carolinians Hallford Will Index Actions ART MUSEUM ALMOST COMPLETE Health Policy Date Extended I 'i !w dr;i llim- I'M' enrolling in the ;i(Til-ist .iml Iv.ilMi inv.inttue n!.(. ottered Cnrolum student h.i l en exten i"d to Octcher 13, .it i 'ird.114 t !!j .letiene-., aUt .i i t t tlif de.iii of student affairs. World In Brief Jet fines sjid both lie and stu dent 'ovenniu'iit officers urge Oirolin.i stud:nts to take advan of this policy which offers "terrific coverage fnr the money." .lelferics crnphasi.ed the policy f-T inarrud .students which can ! had for Si 4 with c lveraue for husband, wife and dependants. Storm Deaths Climb NAIIA. Okinawa (AT) Typhoon Kave. tlie most savage storm in recent Okinawa history, is believed to have killed at least b"0 persons and perhaps more than 100. Twenty are known dead includ ing one American Marine- from the surprise assault by 14G M.IMI. winds that raked the U. S. fortress island for 10 houra Thursday. The Syria Not Threat Saud DAMASCUS. Syria (AT) Escort ed by a squadron of Syria's new Soviet Miys. Arabia's King Saud flew h .:ine expressing belief that this country's deals with Moscow are no threat to Ikt neighbors. In a departing statement, broad cast by Damascus radio, he de clared: "1 am certain from what I felt during my brief stay in this U. S. Army reported 49 other Oki- sister country that Syria poses no nawans missing. Other sources put : threat to any of her neighbors and the figure at 100, mostly fisher-! it is unreasonable that there should men be any such inclination." At the same time he announced, So mil a i , i far this year. l.fiOO have en I in the policies for single married students. Jefferies said thi numlx r . numb' enrolled plete policy las is in a ear. below the less-com- Arnone interested in taking out either -f the two policies offered by Chambl.'e Insurance Agency of Kalemh is asked to go by the dean of students affairs office. Students already enrolled in one of the policies can pick up the identification dean's office. cards from Mitchell Society Meets Next Week "Break Arms And Legs" WASHINGTON (AD A former1 officer of the Michigan Federation of Labor has testified the Team sters Union used death threats, rigged elections and links with the underworld to build up power in i his staff. Robert Scott also told the Sen ; ate Rackets Committee that James i R. Hoffa, midwest boss of the team jsters, threatened "to break both I my arms and legs" when Scott threatened to resign from the fed eration in protest against the way Hoffa and others were changing thr constitution. Scott said he re signed anyway. Lied aper lion d ii.'hv members and paper- b two University of N r1h Carolina faculty members are plar.nrd lor the first meeting of the Iilish., Mitchell Scicntlic So il t. this vear en Tuesday. Oct. The meeting will get underway at 7:30 p.m. in Room 20fi. Phil lips Hall. A paper on "Outlines for the Theorv of Superconductivity" will be presented bv I!. L Clover of. the Phvsics Department. ! G K. Summer of the Pediatrics Itepnrtni'nt will present a paper i. ii "Protein Fractionation in Health Diseases. The m"eting is open to all per son interested in scientific sub jects. President of the society is C. W. Hooker of th? Anatomy Department Elopement To larceny FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) Huw Williams, the former Senate page who ran away with the daugh ter of a Swedish diplomat last sum mer, has been charged with grand larceny by Fairfax County police. The If' year-old youth was called out of Falls Church High Schod and arrested on a charge of the theft of six automobile tires Sept. 1 from a gas station. "with complete frankness." that Saudi Arabia would resist aggres sion from any direction against Syria or ary other Arab country. AAorse Attacks Faubus WASHINGTON (AP) Sen Morse (D-Ore) has described the speech of Arkansas Gov. Orv al Fau bus last night as "intellectually dis honest and deceptive." In a statement, Morse said of Faubus: "He forgot to fell the TV audi ence that he, more than anyone else, is responsible for the neces sity of sending federal troops into Little Rock because of his use of National Guard troops to keep nine Negro children from attending school in accordance with a court order. The student body attorney-1 , general and his staff this year j ! plan to can y out a plan of codify- j j ing legislative actions, according j to Sonny Hallford. attorney-general.! j "We have long felt the need for j i a romnilallnn nf jtr4inn (jiliAn hv I i the legislative. , M. will Ji..rve in the capacity of lending eontinui- i ty to the actions taken over the , years," Hallford said. ! I "It w ill serve as a reference for ! actions of the past, present and a 1 place to add future actions. Thus i I we will be able to see at a glance (what has taken place in our legisla-j tu:e." he continued. ! The first edition of legislative actions included those acts between i May 194(5. and May 194. "We ; hope to bring up to date the idea j begun in 1954 and to keep the cod 1 if teat ion up to da-te by inserting i future acts in their proper places," Hallford stated . j As was done in the first edition. ; the legislative acts will be grouped by general subject matter into divisions with appropriate headings. The divisions will be further divided into chapters, each of which deals with a particular phase of the division subject. Under the chapter headings will appear the titles, each of which is a separate bill or other item. There was no discussion of program for the spring Sympos- ! ium. since the newly elected of ficers will have to meet and ap point a faculty adviser. Former Oliairman Frank Crow ther. who presided at the meeting until the new officers were elected, resigned his post during the sum mer reportedly due to a conflict be tween Crowther and the general committee. The election of officers was the only business taken up at yester day's meeting. The nominating committee pre sented a slate of two candidates per office on which the members of the Symposium voted. The newly elected secretary, Mary Jane Fisher, was nominated from the floor. Other nominees for the offices include the following: Martha Richardson for chairman, Dorrity for vice chairman, Albert and Barbara Moore scretary and . Ed Levy for recognized. the ! u'erc Chancellor William 13. Aycock today said, "The School of Business Administration and indeed all of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill are pleased to cooperate with the Business Founda tion and to have a part in honoring Governor Luther H. Hodges. "It is proper to do formal honor to Governor Hodges in recognition of his energy and vision in mar shalling our state's educational, in dustrial, financial and research re sources and bringing them to bear on building up our state's economy and improving the well-being of all of our people." The Business Foundation agency which financially under girds the UNC School of Business Administration. Organized after World War II. it has bolstered the financial foundations of teaching and research in business. Governor Hodges was presented by President William C. Friday. Dean Maurice W. Lee of the School of Business Administration expressed "New Viewpoints on Business Education." v A is an GOV. LUTHER HODGES Loyd Jody for trea- UNC Physician Lauds Respon sibi lity Setfor Today, Kasper Asserts WASHINGTON (AD John Kasper, self-styled rabble rouser and campaigner against classroom integration, said Monday the Sea board White Citizens Council will picket the White House today. Kasper, executive secretary of the council, said pickets will pro test against use of federal troops to help enforce integration in Lit tle Rock. I He said the marchers also will protest against today's meeting be tween President Eisenhower and four southern governers. The gov ernors will discuss with the presi dent the problems of integration. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Gov. Faubus said Monday he likely would call a special leq islative session to deal with in tegration at Central High School where nine Negroes began their second week of integrated class es, still under the protection of paratroopers. "At the moment, it Appears very likely there will be a spe cial session of the Legislature," Faubus said, adding that legisla tive action new appeared to be the only "recourse for a peace ful solution of the problem." Faubus, walkinq into his can itol office which he has avoided most of the timo sim -the in tegration trouble began, was by acclamation surer. Elected Chairman Hallford. Vice chairman Connie Whitaker and Treasurer Al Goldsmith. Ily Robert II. Bartholomew Grad Returns As Instructor Edward Marvin Smith, a Univer sity of North Carolina graduate from Matthews, has returned to Chapel Hill as an instructor in the UNC School of Pharmacy. Dean E. A. Brecht today an nounced the appointment of Smith as instructor, to teach courses in drug store (management, ing and pharmaceutical OCHCC. A 1953 graduate of UNC with a were j "Our great writers have given us much of our finest literary herit age through the seething and hectic crucible of newspaper reporting." This statement was made by Dr. Warner Wells of the University North Carolina School of Medicine. Dr. Wells, this year's winner of the O. Max Gardner Award, had been asked for a statement on the American press in connection with i i the observance of National News-1 paper Week. Oct. l-o. Perhaps no other physician in North Carolina has had as much dealings with the press as Dr. Wells. In 1950 he became surgical account-j consultant to the Atomic Bomb jirrispru- I Casualty Commission. which im I mediately brought him in close contact with the American press. experience of tlie 'Hiroshima Diary' development," said Dr. Wells "was the concept it gave me of the decency, the qual: y and the moral-I ity of the American press." Dr. Wells is well known io his colleagues as a medical historian. , I soon surrounded by newsmen. When asked if he Thought that there would be no more violent incidents at the school, Faubus replied: "I hope so, but I don't know." Kasker said in a statement thr White Citizens Council, other nn- GM's Slate Activities scheduled for Gra ham today are: Woman's D evi dence Council, 6:45-8:45, Grail Room; Graham Memorial Activi ties Board, 4-6, Grail Room; UNC Cardboard, 7-8, Roland Par ker 1; Pan Hel P.O., 9-1:30, Ro land Parker 1; Pan Hel P.O., 9 1:30, Roland Parker 2; Univers ity Club, 7-8:30, Roland Parker 3; Women's Residence CounciL 3:30-5:30, Woodhouse Confer ence Room; APO, 7:30-9:30, APO Room. B. S. degree in Pharmacy, Smith j When Dr. Wells returned from recently completed his active duty i Japan, he brought with the diary U. S. Navy officer. In his of Dr. Michihiko Hachiya. an eye witness to the atomic bombing Hiroshima. Dr. Wells translated and edited the work and it was published two tais ago on the 10th anniversarj of the historic bombing. The title of the work was "Hiroshima Dairy" and it immediately became a best seller. As the popularity ot the book grew it was published in He talks as easily on such great in men in medicine as Pasteur, Lister. Vasalius. Galen or Hippocrates as he does on the effects of an atomic bomb on the human body. His fiends say that aside from being a scientist and historian. Dr. Wells also is a philosopher. He took a philosophic attitude when he said, "The troubles of this world will ultimately be solved by enlightened press operating in field of international comparative journalism. It must be encouraged and supported, for informed peo J pies is the ultimate answer to all I our problems. You can't shut out as a undergraduate days he was a mem ber of Rho Chi, national honorary society in pharmacy, and was president of the Dialectic Senate. He received the Pharmacy Senate Award upon graduation. Light Storm Damage By The Associated Press A coastal North Carolina storm left only light damage and no re- numnuus 101 t,s" eaiuons the writers ot tne tourth estate j sought Dr. Wells for interviews. I This snrinf Dr WpIIs was nrp. - - - - r - - - - T - - - - - ' ' I - sented the O. Max Gardner Award. This award goes yearly to the , faculty member of the Consolidated I University of North Carolina who renders the most outstanding serv ice to mankind. "Hiroshima Diary" won the award for Dr. Wells. "The finest thing in the whole ported injuries in its wake. It ap parently was confined to the Wil mington area of the state's south eastern coast. Residents checking damage un der sullen, threatening skies found the biggest problem was thick slime carried into homes in low areas by tides which arc running five to six feet above normal in some places. I (Sec NEWSPAPERS, page 3) of i I rv ''www'v r I DR. WARNER WELLS W. B. Aycock iWill Be First Installed Chancellor Of UNC named organizations and individ uals will begin marching along Pennsvlvania Avenue in front of the White House at noon. FDT. to morrow. Meet in? with Eisenhower will bo Gov?. McKeldin of Maryland. Cle ment of Tennessee. Collins ?f Flo rida and Hodges of North Caro lina. Gov. Griffin of Georgia also an i had been named by the recent soo the J thern Governors Conference to go to the White House. However. Griffin announced on Monday he will bovcott the meet ing because it will tak? up inte gration in general and not be lim ited to the Little R ck situation. The Governors Conference pro posed only that the committee talk about measures to get troops out of Little Rock. Eisenhower in ag- , reeing to the meeting broadened t the subject matter. Kasper said the four southern governors who will meet with Eis enhower "have long ago commit ted themselves to the same race war against their own white peo ple ... as Eisenhower and the Su preme court are spawning on a national basis." He said the meeting should bring together Eisenhower and Griffin, or the president and Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas, whom Kasper described as "the greatest states' rights leader of all time."' The Seaboard Whit? Citizens Council has several thousand mem bers in the District of Columbia. Maryland. Virginia. Kentucky. Ten nessee. Florida and Alabama. Kas per said. He declined to give an exact figure. Trv Aqain OAKLAND, Calif. (AIM A Trans World Airline's plane from New York and Denver overshot the air field runway todav and bogged down in a muddy field, but none of th.1 51 passengers was believed inj u red. The plane. Flight Ml. made a rough landing. It continued about 250 feet into a muddy field and bogged down to its axles, By ANN FRYE William Brantley Aycock will become tlie first UNC chancellor ever to be installed in that ad ministrative post in ceremonies Saturday, Oct. 12. in Kenan Stad ium. North Carolina and University officials will be present for "red letter" day activities honoring the new chancellor. In add.'.ion to installation ceremonies, the University will be celebrating University Day on Oct. 12. Classes will cease at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 12 and University offices will close at 10 a. m. to enable stu dents and staff members to at tend the ceremonies in Kenan Stadium, which will get under way ta 10:30 a. m. Various receptions, luncheons and exhibits on the Carolina cmapus are scheduled in honor of the chancellor. Three North Carolina television stations have Indicated coverage of the installation ceremonies. Chancellor Aycock was appoint ed to the top UNC post last February 23 by trustees of the Consolidated University on re commendation of President Wil liam Friday and trustee com , mittees. Aycock was named to replace oh-mer Chancellor fcribert Hse, who retired in June.. Wlien House first took office, he was known as Dean House in the capacity he ocenpied . The title of his office was later changed to chancellor. When Aycock was appointed in February, University, Vice Presi dent William Carmichael said he "has the character and character istics enabling him to fullfill the promise of the noble name (in education which he bears." The 41-year-old chancellor is an alumnus and former dean of the University Law School. During one summer he was in India and Pakistan as personal - assistant to Dr. Frank Graham. United Nations representative to these countries. Chancellor Aycock is co-author of a book. "Military Law Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice," written in collaboration with Col. Seymour W. Wurfel, judge advocate of the Fifth Corps in Germany. An outstanding scholar, Aycock received his master's degree from Carolina in 1937 and bgan teach ing history in Greensboro High School that fall. For three years he taught in Greensboro, then took a job with the state head quarters of the National Youth Administration in Raleigh, helping set up vocational projects. In 1942 he was called into active duty with the Army as a first lieutenant, and achieved an out standing combat record, winning the Silver Star for bravery in action in Germany and also the Bronze Star Medal and the Legion of Merit. After the Army, Aycock re sumed his studies at Chapel Hill to fulfill an ambition to become a lawyer. He led his class here and was winner of the top job in tlie Law School, becoming editor in chief of the Law Review. Aycock remained in the Law School as an assistant professor, later became dean of the Law School and finally ' chancellor of the University. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the" Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Dorothy Pitman, Eula lie Durhan, Ingrid Clay, Con stance Von Bramer, Mary Tin--cate, Marcia Sampson, Mabel Bridgeman, and Edward Jen nings, York Larese, Carl Bark ley, David Jones, Henry Cald well, Stuart Golann, Philip Ord way, Jonathan Ordway, Thomas Bost, Alvin Secrest, James Hood, John Brooks, Jesse Caston, Carol Martin, Robert Krain, Leonard Carpenter and William ZtcWaros. I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1957, edition 1
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