Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 27, 1958, edition 1 / Page 1
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I U.U.C. Library Gsrial3 Dept, Box 870 Cha?2l Hill, N.C. V E A T H E R Scattered showers and thunder storms, windy and warmer today. Friday, windy, partly cloudy and turning colder. CAMPUS CHEST As of last eight the Campu Chest committee reported the col lection of approximately $650. VOL. LXV NO 103 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1958 Complete UP) Wire Service , FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Give I. he Com pus Chesf lo I oca ay ! a n r? no i r.. WOW ;:v si annro niiiMp LTT1 Fray Shows That Red Tape Exists The current conflict lctween the State Board of Higher Fxlncation and the UXC Board of Trustees has pointed to the general problem of red tape that must he t ut in many policies of the University. The red tape difficulties were referred to earlier this year by Chancellor Villiam B. Aycock when he told the Faculty Club of limitations on policy flexibility as a result of the many channels of authority for approvals. The Chancellor spoke of such normal channels as: a Consolidated University office, the Board of Higher Fduca tion. the Department of Administration, the State Personnel Department y $ ?5 , 1 f r t . A si; GOV. LUTHER HODGES ? Boards To Settle Differences 'Will Be A Calamity' If They Don't Agree RALEIGH, Feb. 2( (AP) Gov. Hodges today called oh committees representing the Board of Higher Education an'd trjistees of the. Consolidated University of North Carolina to work out a plan to settle differences between the two boards. The Governor said if changes in the law are needed to clarify authority, the two committees "must agree on what the changes are to be. He expressed confidence that an agree ment would be reached, but declared "it will be a calamity if they don't." "My opinion is there is more propaganda and misinform: tion on it than there are real differences," Hodges told re- Advisory MAR Dl GRAS ENTERTAINER For all the Carolina gentlemen who want to know the name of the lovely lady she's Kack Anthony of Gastonia, blue: songstress, who will be a featured entertainer at tHe Mardi Gras Dance Friday night. A Chi Omega pledge, Kack attended Salem before coming to Carolina and formerly sang with "The Embers." (Buddy Spoon Photo) Legislature Will Hear Council Bill Mardi Gras Royalty To Be Selected Today Voting fur the Mardi Gras King and Paul Carr. ADPl's; Miss Betty and (Jut-en will be conducted today j Johnson and Danny" Lotz, Melver Tin- Student I.t islaturt- will uuet t"ML;ht t' reeon-idcr the bill! 1.. iei-i the present Hunor Coun-j til ;mil will t k i attnm on the, anvr.diM-ntN t' this hill tonight at 7 :u .n the i 1 . . r of New Kat. 'l he ('i.in. e will mehi'le amend iri-i;S tu the Student Constitution; t., ni.iki the present bill constitu- ' tluU.il. b.ll with anu-ndments Student I.eihiture and h the Sludent Body then the students will imendmcnt.s which will pl.u e jundit turn for Honor Code violations under the new sinie f. unci!. r,;!U intnxluced by Tat Adams iSpi, orn- lmutin'4 the campaign r)i iiM-. ( if the candidate for edi tor of 'I he I.ul Tar Heel to $30 an li the p.iws fie is m n e 1 1 'reidt nt. ote on ; from 7.30 a m. to 4 30 p. m. in ! V Court. I Accordum to Mardi Gras Vice Chairman Jim Menel the election will be conducted much like a general campus election except I that there will be only one polline 'place Student's identification cards i will be stamped when they vote. ! Candidates for the honor include ' Miss Patsy McCauley and Bob Lassiter. sponsored by the Phi Gams; Miss Mary Moore Mason Dormitory; Miss Margaret Thomp son and Willie N'orthcutt. Lewis Dormitory; Miss Edith MacKinnon and Charlie Sloan. Delta Upsilon; Miss Beverly Keesler and Sully ! Darden, Carr Dormitory and Miss Libbv Gravson and William Deal, Tri Delts. i Trophies will be awarded to the ; winning couple. The King and Queen will be crow ned during the dance I Friday night. Carolina Mardi Gras To Begin Tomorrow and the Budget Commission. These agencies compose what Chancellor Aycock called a "supei structure," which is one bulb ot an administrative hourglass for tb' University. With himself in the narrow neck of the hourglass, the Chancellor saw the flowing of the sand of administrative autnority from the bulb of internal administration in to the bulb of the superstructure. He said that this flowing "means a limitation on flexibility of the departments, schools and divi sions." The overall rigidity "can seriously hotibTe "3 'University, tic said. No Reference These observations were maae by Chancellor Aycock in January. The Chancellor made no reference to conflicts within the superstruc ture itself, but rather confined himself to the limitations from the actual presence of the superstruc ture. The current controversy be tween the Board of Higher Educa tion and the Trustees concerns i conflict of power. The Trustees on the one hand, had recommend ed one thing; and the Board had recommended another. ' The rift came into the fore I ground at a meeting of the Trust I ees this week when a report from the Visiting Committee was read and approved by the Trustees Symposium Secures More Speakers For Classroom Meets And Seminars Ihe p o s 1 1 I ( 1 1 . Will he t lire other changing the com of the selections board n !ed upon by the I,cgi.la- Selections Board ; new hoard would be com- i o the two party chairmen, ! an elected n-n saiarieu ineinoe. , thp Mardi Gras Commiltce ha the new paper stall, an elected ex- ! ecutive member of the staff, tne ' Ti pose Tomorrow afternoon Carolina's Mardi Gras weekend will get un derway. I From 3 to 5 p.m. Buddy Morrow I and his Orchestra, featuring siny i er Betty Ann Blake, will give a i concert in Gerrard Hall, j Tomorrow night, from 8 o'clock I to midnight, the Mardi Gras Bail will be held, with Morrow provid ing the music. During the breaks t h.ni man of the University Facul ty and an a pointed member of the School of Journalism. I hese bills came from the news paper rc-earch committee of which Ad. mi-, i chairman. Al i hfmith's (IT) lull to de l.'e tion a bill the requirement that s coordinator attend a na iSrr i.l.CISl.ATl'HK inie :i) lined up several student entertain ers to perform. Kack Anthony will sing and Nick Reams' Combo has been tentatively scheduled. On Saturday, from 2 to 5 p.m.. the ground floor of Graham Me morial will be open only to ticket holders who will be able to dance to free juke box music and play pool free of charge. Saturday night a local combo will play for a Bermuda dance in Cobb Basement from 9 o'clock to midnight. Tickets for both days' activities cost only three dollars. The tickets are available at Milton's, Kemps', Stevens-Shepherd, Campus Clean ers, GM Information Office, the check cashing booth in the Y Building and from members of the Mardi Gras Committee. By BILL K INC AH) Additional speakers have been made available to the faculty for classroom and seminar invitations butor to Commonweal, Tuesday and during the Carolina Symposium Wednesday mornings, March 18 and March 16-21, according to an 19. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LEC TURE Jules Cern of New York City is here in Chapel Hill to de liver a lecture tonight at 8 o'clock in The Playmakers The atre on the subject "Christian Science: The Divine Solution to Every Human Problem." Spon sored by the Christian Science Society of Chapel Hill, the lec ture is open to the public with out charge. Orientation Interviews Continue Until Friday Interviews for selection of Campus Orientation Com mittee members will continue today in the Wooclhouse Conference Room of Graham Memorial from to ( p.m. and Friday from 2 to p.m. in the Woodhouse Conference Room. A bi-partisan committee is conducting the interviews for the Orientation Committee which will pi. maud conduct Orientation Week this year Eighteen positions are open on the committee. eleven for men and seven for women. series announcement made today. In addition to the main addresses by a group of distinguished persons, many faculty members, several local ministers and others outside the University community have con sented to participate in the Class rotinl aha" 5 Seminar Prbgra ni of the Symposium. These persons aVe willing to dis cuss Symposium topics of their choice in classes throughout the University. The theme for the Symposium is "The Dimensions of Survival; A merican Culture in World Focus." Faculty members who wish to in vite these speakers to their classes have been asked to contact the Symposium Office before Wednes day, March 5. and reserve a time for the talks. In addition to local speakers, the list of speakers and times they will be available includes: Robert I. Biren. director, manage- j ment planning. International Co operation Administration. Foreign Aid Programs, March 17. Chalmers ' G. ' Davidson, of library and professor tory at Davidson College. Morning, March 17. Harry Golden, editor. The Carolina Israelite, Monday and Tuesday, March 17 and 18. Michael Harrington, Fund for the Republic staff member and eontri- porters at his news conference when asked about the differences which broke out into the open at a meeting of the University trust ees in Greensboro Monday. The governor said the two com mittees were appointed some time ago presumably as the result of a disagreement between University officials and the Board of Highet Kermit Hunter, playwriter and I Education over providing housing professor at Hollins College, Va., for married students at North Car Tuesday morning, March 20. . lolina. State College. William J. McAnally, Jr.. direc-1 The University officials wanted tor. Federal Civil Defense Adminis-1 to build a 500-unit housing deVel tration, Region III,- Thomasville, I opment, but the higher educatibti Ga., M. D. and interested in the 1 board Teduced it to SOO unita. Vhe role of "medicine "in survival, W'ed-I University" trustees Monday ado&t- director of his-Monday Greek Week Postponed The annual Greek Week activi ties of fraternity pledges have been postponed until March 10-13. Originally scheduled for this week, Greek Week was changed because of other conflicts. nesday, March 19. Thomas W. Schmidt, physicist at the Office of Research Ordinance at Durham, and ballistics expert, Wednesday, March 19. Ben Segal, education director, radio, electrical and medicine work ers, AFL-CIO. Monday and Tuesday mornings, March 17-18, with a limit ed number of openings available. Gertrude Smith, professor of classics at University of Chicago, limited engagements with special interest in Greek tragedy, literatuer and fine arts and difference in cult ural concepts. Faculty members may reserve any of these speakers on the dates indicated by writing the Carolina Symposium on Public Affairs, P. O. Box 538, Chapel Hill or through campus mail addressed to Graham Memorial. 1 54 Competing For Morehead Scholarships Final competition for Morehead Scholarships will begin Saturday. Fifty-four applicants will appear be fore the Central Committee on Sat urday. Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday the Trustees will interview those who pass the com mittee. Names of the winners of ed a resolution units are needed. saying the 500 Hodges Hits Harris Hodges pointed out that at the trustees' meeting there was only one speaker, State Rep. W. C. Har ris Jr. of Wake who criticized the Board of Higher Education. Hodges was sharply critical of One statement which Harris made. Hodges said Harris, whom fce did not identify by name, "gave the impression" that the Univer sity "is so tied up with bureau rocracy" it could not buy a dish washing machine and the dishes went unwashed. "That's completely in error ani if he had checked with anyone, if he had done his job as a trustee, he would have known it," Hodges declared. y The governor made it clear he was not taking sides in the con troversy since he is chairman cl the University Board of Trustees and he appointed the "group of distinguished men" on the Board of Higher Education. Challenges Newsmen Hodges said that at the trustees' meeting he made a statement lit which he said "never before in the history of the State Budget Bureau" had Consolidated Univer sity officials 'had as much free- A Desire Circle 9 To Sing Together Started Songsters On Their Way GM SLATE the following activities are scheduled for today t Graham Memorial: Panhellenic and Interfrater nity Cauncils, 7-8 p.m., Grail Room: Rules Committee, 4-5 p.m., Roland Parker Lounge 2; YWCA and YMCA, 4-6 p.m., Grail Room; Chess Club, 6:30-11 p.m. Roland Parker Lounge 2; Univer sity Party Caucus, 6-7 p m., Grail Room; Orientation, 4-6 p.m., Woodhouse Conference Room; Student Party Caucus, 7-7:30 p m., Woodhouse Conference Room; Women's Honor Council, 6:45-10 p. my Council Room; GM Dance Lessons, 7-8 p.m.. Rendez vous Room; GMAB, 4-6 pit)., Rendtivous Room; Nick Kearns, 6 30 8 p m, A P O. Room. By BEN TAYLOR When a small group of Chi Omegas decided to combine vocal talents. quitcx a lot more resulted than a lineup'of pretty faces. Nine Carolina co-eds are now grouped together in the singing of before civic groups, fraternity par ties, and tonight they will make an appearance with the Men's Glee Club in Raleigh before the annual banquet of the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce. Repertoire Two songs of their repertoire well known songs, rearranged and whk,h lhpy wiU prescnt in public stylized to suit the groups vocji capabilities. Dubbed the Circle Nine, the group builds its songs on show tunes; each one embody ing a moving style of harmony all its own. liedecked in bright red sweaters, these same girls minus the two who have been added since then known as the Circle Seven, appear ed in the Carolina Calvacade of Talent Contest held in Memorial Hall last fall. tonight will be "Stepping Out With My Baby" and "C'est Si Bon." Many of the girls have sung in conjunction with small men's en sembles at Yale, Princeton, and other northern colleges before transferring to Chapel Hill. Han nah Kirby, the group's leader and spokesman, explained, "We knew that if we were ever going to sing together, we'd better do it now." So, with those words, the Circle i Since then, they have performed i Nine was founded. "We like to use songs people know pretty well. We attempt to give old songs a new twist; using our own harmony versions of the songs," Miss Kirby said. The girls have now adopted a "uniform" in the form of black dresses, hish heels, and their trademark; the golden circle pin ned to the neck rim of their dresses. Musical Sorority The Chi Omega sorority house is filled with melodius music each day from 1 to 2 p.m. when the group practices diligently. Since their introduction, such consistent practice has emanled the girls to comprise a repertoire of 6 songs; all personally rearranged in har mony to suit their respective vocal ' style, nr- - J'r -4 fry X0X-- f I- if H jr? ft I i CIRCLE NINE Members of Circle Nine, which will perform with the UNC Men's Glee Club tonight in'Raleigh are front row, L to R, Hannah Kirby of Louisville, Ky., Kack Anthony of Gastonia, Anne Riggins of New York, N. Y. and Daryl Farrington o f Short Hills, N. J. Back row, L to R, Es Bruner of Knoxville, Tenn., Mary Tod Baker of Knoxville, Te nn Punkin Coe of Washington, D. C, Libby McCord of Spartanburg, S. C. and Gail Minnich of Atlanta, Ga. a i .li 1. r ...mi i 1 J me scnoiarsmps w,u ut- le.eeu j dom in making expenditures is Wednesday night. they haye tf)dav He challened There were 686 applications for1, newsmen to check lhis with Un. the scholarship this year. versity officials. ' '. In discussing the disagreement over housing, Hodges said tnst whether the Board of Higher Edu cation "was right or wrong" ii had a responsibility under a Uw enacted by fhe 1957 legislature which authorized self-liquidating student housing projects. Under the law, Hodges said, such projects at the University must be approved by the trustees, the Board of Higher Education and the Advisory Budget Commission. Building Committee Continues Interviews The Building Committee of th Graham Memorial Board of Direc tors heard suggestions yesterday regarding the facilities of the &2, 000,000 student union to be btiilt on this campus soon. The committee will meet today at 4 p.m. in the Rendezvous Rocan of Graham Memorial, and all per sons who have any suggestions .s to what facilities should be in the i new union are invited to attend.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1958, edition 1
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