'TJVt.C. Library Serials Dapt. Box 070 Chapai llill, 1LC. weather fiT n 5fl rr rt Pair and cooler tHlay with e,. T i Ml fly j CVlH il Tl Pll S "J I ff EMPLOYEES The action of the GM board of directors is commendable. See Page 2. ' L ! VOLUME LXVI NO 25 " 1 . . . Complete tf Wire Service chappi mii i moptu rXo. . . Grimes Dorm Nixes New Laws Of IDC Crime, Dormitory will not sot up ( Ing to Graham Adams, dorm presi iWminry Council Court, accord- dent. FBI Charges 5 Wiih Bombing; law Is Serious ATLANTA i.P Five men were 1 1 arced Friday with the bombing i! Atlan a Jewish Temple under . law tint could bring death sen- ll IH CV The fe. rounded up by police ftwt a larL:e force of FBI agents, were indicted by a grand jury five nf'er the Sunday dynamiting vt the Temple. They were charged with deMroying a house of. worship. Name I in the indictment were Wallace II. Allen. 32; George Bright .V. Knurl!) Chester Griffin, 32. I.'l)ert . Howling. 2.3, and Richard H .wling. The latter twoare broth Huhaid ltouliiv; lijis not been i : rested l.uther Kiii'! Corley. Z.. who had In In M (,., a vayram y charge Uihij: the investigation, was freed ii ait .illei iioou hearing. Allot-leys for the suspects at- timpu.l to Saia release of all of the n,Ca,,t that thc DCC Wou,d nt be lae in custody at the hearing. The acCcPtaD'e under any conditions I. wycru charged the quick indict-' "unlil tne Principle is changed." f i "l mu ked of an underhanded" " method. Ju(U;. vtriyn ii. Mwre of Fuiton' Interviews Tuesday M-Pi-rifr cmirt set a hearing for Student Body President Don Fur ( fl- al 10 U m ' vlH-th- tado will be interviewing graduate the suwn should be granted .students for an appointment to the ;u, . e runon u.uniy prosecutor. I -ul Uet.h. announced he would .vi release or tne men on bond, Only Two Saturdays Left To Register For Elections Stamping an X on a ballot bcdiate family may make the request jkIc a favorite candidate's name i;for him. only ;i small part of voting in the North Carolina General Elections, Nov. . Besides bein? 21 years of age by rlcctijn day, tho prospective voter must have been aTesident of the State for one year and of his vot ing precinct for at least 30 day, acroriing to "Votins; Information," a bocklct prepared by the Depart ment of Defense. Any-one not registered to vote must do so in person at the office f the Registrar in thc county of his legal residence cither today or next Saturday. Persons who .lave registered and wish to vote by absentee ballot should write for an Application for Ahsentre Voter's Ballot from: C hairman. County Board of Elec-IOr they may call Henry W. Lewis tions. Or a member of his imme-lat the Institute of Government. Second Talk On Radiation Set For Today By Wells Dr. Warner Wells of UNC will de liver the second part of his lecture or. "The Atomic Era Survival or Extinction" at the School of Medi cme today at 11 a.m. Tie lecture will be given In the Clific Auditorium. This is the sec ond of the four-month long Medical' Sciince Lecture Series sponsored by the School of Medicine. The public has been Invited to attend the serlr.? of lectures, which Ih i:iven each Saturday at 11 a.m. Tht lectures opened with the first part of Dr. Wells' lecture on Sat in day. Oct. 4. No lecture was held tliij. past Saturday because of a conflict in the celebration of Uni ersiry Day. University Day com n.cmorates th-; physical founding of INC. The cornerstone for the first G. M SLATE The fi.llowjnf activities are 'redilrd fnr Graham Memorial tcdjy: !Mrerinir Committee of the I'mrth Southern Regional Instl tite on Hospital Recreation. 9-12. Rtland Parker I; Political Scl rre discussion (roup,. 1M1, Wood hm.r Conference Room. Under the dorm court revision laws passed by the Interdormitory Council Wednesday night. Dorjnitory Council Courts in each men's dorm were provided for. These courts have original jurisdiction over vio lations of dorm rules committed by residents of the dorm. Previously, all dorm rule infrac tions came before the IDC Court, which now has appellate jurisdiction over such violations. NO JUSTICE Graham Adams -said yesterday his dorm Is not setting up a Dormi tory Council Court (DCC) "because the dorm executive committee does not feel there can be justice through the Dormitory Council Court." I The dorm executive committee.l ri der the dorm court revision laws, j v.uild sit as the DCC with a three- , m:.n j iry.) I DISAGREES IN PRINCIPLE j Adams said. ' The executive com- r.iittee dms no? agree in principle with the Dormitory Council Court. At.d even if the committee did srcp. they could not set up a I court as the law is written." By this last statement Adams Student Library Committee Tue day afternoon from 3:30 to 5 o'cloc s- clock in his office This is simply an application not the ballot. The ballot will be sent when the completed applica tion is returned to the County Board of Elections. Voting by absentee ballot must be done in the presence of a No tary) ublic. Mrs.- W. II. Branch, secretary to Chancellor William B. Aycock, has offered to notarize ab sentee ballots free of charge for UNC students. She may be reached on first floor, South Building. The ballot must be received by election officials no later than 3 p.m. Nov. 4 to be counted. Students who are out-of-state res idents and wish to vote should write election officials in their own state for' information concerning registration and absentee balloting building, Old East, was laid Oct. 12. 1793. The entire series of lectures Is in the general field of radiation. Dr. Wells Is eminently qualified to speak in this field, having made a decade-long study of the subject. In 1949 he went to Japan to make a two-year' study of the long range effects of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The pro ject was undertaken at the invita tion of the U. S. Atomic Bomb Ca sualty Commission. Other forthcoming speakers in the series, and their subjects, will be: Dr. .Maurice Whittinghall, UNC Department of Zoology, "Radiation Damage - Unexpected and Unrecog nized." Oct. 25; Dr. Gordon Sharp, UNC School of Medicine, "Radiation Physics for Medical Students," Nov, 1; Emil Chanlett of the UNC School of Public Health and John Lums den of the N. C. State Hoard of Public Health of Raleigh will speak on "Environmental Measurement of Exposure" on Nov. 8 and 15.. Their first lecture will deal with "Units and Limits" and their second lec ture will be the subject of. "Instru ments." Later la the series guest speak ers from other institutions will be presented. H In e H Cam ma 1958 Queen To Be Shown Today At Game The 1938 homecoming queen and l er 10-member court will be pre sented during halftime at the foot ball game this afternoon by Stu dent Body President Don Furtado Miss Judith Bunn of Hunting ton, W. Va., has been chosen 1958 Home-coming Queen. Miss Bunn was chosen last night by a panel of judges, alonq with members of her court. Members of her court include Misses Mary Britton, Raleigh; Carol Carruthers, Charlottsville; Sharon Footh, Birmingham, Ala.; FaY Gooch, Durham; Maxine Greenfield, Chapel Hill; Diana Johnson, Asheboro; Jane Newsom, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Charlotte Po-, Albe marle; .Carol Tieslau, Ports mouth, Va.; and Lynn Walker, Winston-Salem. rnd University Club President Dave Jones. The queen and her court were se lected yesterday afternoon from a field of 33 entries. Also during halftime, three tro phies will bo awarded for the best homecoming displays in the three divisions: men's dorms, fraternities and women's. The displays will be judged this morning by representatives of the Interfraternity Council, Interdormi tory Council and Carolina Women's Council. The queen and her court were se lected yesterday by a panel of judges including: Mrs. William Friday, Mrs. Kay Kyser, Miss Mar garet Carmichael, Ty Boyd and Don Furtado. YACK PICTURES THRU WEDNESDAY: Freshmen Basement GM 1-6 p.m.' MEN: ties, dark coats, white shirts WOMEN: black sweaters NEXT WEEK: Medical and Dental Students i i ( I .It- U'V r HE'S A ONE-WOMAN MAN 'With me it's all er nuthin' is one tf the featured songs in the Caro lina Playmakers' production of 'Oklahoma sched uled to ojiin Friday night at 8:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall for a three-day run. Pictured above are Mar- SsGkina QQ IS nog C omecon S I'ia Sit fi v 1 ' ifiiii uiiw ui , uavw o. 1 v - r"3 I f ' . I . ? ' , -v ' ' ' I if '1 v - vi - j ' J! 1 L t 1 " I ""v "J'1&- f VJ V jKa, V$! jr xc- -iVkMt --vs - t;sx " s t j . PLANNING CONFEDERATE FLAG The Card board Club plans another one of its famous half time shows for today's football game. Shown working above on Ihe flag are (left to right) Halftime: UNCs Cardboard Section Ready For Action By EDWARD NEAL RINER It's halftime in Kenan Stadium. The teams run off the field, the band marches on, and the Universi ty of North Carolina Cardboard gets get for action. Pat Dooley of Raleigi, Cardboard president, steps up on the platform in front of the nearly i:,100 students and their guests, who are seated in the card section. Using a public address system. Doodley begins directing the opera tion which -provides color and en tertainment for the spectators at halftime; AT NOSE-LEVEL After the ushers have distributed 18-inch-square multi-colored cards, Dooley gives the signal for the first stunt: "Okay, all carJs down . . . now raise your card and hold it at nose-level.' After a pause so that the picture may be recognized by the spectators on the north -side of the stadium, Doodley calls, "Lower the cards and get ready tor the next stunt .. . second stunt, all cards down and so the cardboard performs about ten stunts with in , 15 minutes. v. fc v y ,. ix & ts. i 1 Vs 1- 4 ., V- ' 'f sV) 111. ff -:vO.. If t ...... . ii .. ...... jt..... iata... .ftisi.:. ;.. ' ' vnivuLIIKH, 5MIUKUAT, OCTOBER 18, 1958 a onres F Norma Walker, Riner, and Peggy This is the procedure followed-at home games; however, this is cer tainly not all the work involved for the Cardboard Club. The production of a stunt from an idea in the mind of a Cardboard member to the finished presentation before 20.000 spectators involves many hours of planning and tech nical preparation of materials. The paper work is carried out in Card board offices in Emerson fieldhouse. Illustrative of the problems faced in devising an elaborate stunt is the Confederate flag which will be presented at .today's game with Maryland. Suggested by a club member, the idea was turned over to Law-rence Wilson, who heads all art work. Af ter his approval, artists begin draw ing the flag on graph paper, each square representing a seat in the card section. Three problems occur when an idea is transferred to a drawing: the picture must be in proportion and not consist of any curved lines, colors must be accurate to describe the scene, and the colors must not ciash but stand out so that they Ns m it ii:-:': ;s V. mm -- . .. t-t ' J "4 'A S. h 3 j ire 1 i ap .sUK i garet Starnes as Ado Annie, and Darwin Solomon as Will Parker. Tickets for the performance are : available at 214 Abernethy Hall and Ledbetter Pickard's. All seats are reserved at $2. Third I oday av.onte Over Mary and Grady Philips, Cotton Hale, Ed Smith. Photo by Chuck Flinncr are clearly seen across the field. by the people FLAG ON GRAPH Someone using colored pencils draws the waving flag on the graph paper. To the artist it might look odd because instead of the flag flowing with gentle curves, it is squared at each fold. However, when the stunt is seen from the north side ofthe stadium it appears to be composed of only curved lines except for the staff, which in real ity i-s not straight but jagged. With the completion of the graph drawing, the picture is enlarged on a large sheet of poster paper so that, the folks in the card section will know how the finished stunt will appear. This process is re peated for each stunt. - Sometimes there is a flip stunt, in which a sequence of scenes shows an action, as in the tree stunt. Here the first drawing shows a tree in the summer full of leaves. The next flip illustrates the tree with its bright autumn leaves, and the stunt continues by showing winter when the tree is leafless, and then spring when new leaves begin to appear. After the overall design has been worked out, the individual instruc tions for students seated in the card section must be stamped out. The color assignment of the seat holder for each stunt is listed on a small direction card which he will find clipped under his seat in the stadium. As the halftime approaches at the game, ushers distribute general instruction sheets and then pass out the bright cards, four to each student, which cover the color range: red, green, while, black, orange, - yellow, purple and blue. Then Dooley takes over at the microphone giving the signals to synchronize the movements of the 2,182 card-holders s0 that a waving flag is seen by the viewers across the field. Perhaps the best of the cardboard stupts is the UNC script in which these letters are spelled in a di agonal line from the upper left cor ner to the lower right. STUNT FORMULA The formula for the stunts is that they should represent something pertaining to the Universiy or cf local interest. Stunts are also given on the serious side. This year there will be a picture in connection with the T. B. Christmas seals. Officers for the -UNC Cardboard this year, in addition to President Dooley, are the club's vice presi dent and secretary, Patricia Sweeney; office head. Offices in Graham Memorial St might In K Defense To Get Workout Against Gambling Terps By RUSTY HAMMOND The Maryland Terrapins meet their former Coach Jim Tat urn's Carolina Tar Heels here today with a team coach Tommy Mont has described as liavins sticks of dynamite (the line) and 4 fuses (the backs)." All these explosives have been successfully kept silent for the last two games, as the Terps have been beaten bv 'Around World In 280 Seconds' Band Theme By CURTIS CROTTY and EDDIE FOWLKES "Around the world in 280 sec onds" is the theme for UNC't. Marching Band in its halftime show this afternoon. "Carolina Joe" will be sped away on a rocket trip by the 90-piece band into far-off places and finally back again. Carolina Joe i? loafing around a guided missile center, just happens to climb aboard a rocket, and be fore he knows it. "Whosh," it goe up in a cloud of smoke. SEES NEW CARS The first thing Carolina Joe knows is that he is high above the United States nd looking at-the parade of 1959 cars. High up in the rocket . over Russia Carolina Joe sees the Rixer Volga and none other than the famed Volga Boat men sculling a scow. ., , . Later, Joe looks down from his rocket ship and sees on the ,side streets of mysterious Calcutta a native snake charmer with a snake that just won't stay in the basket (here, the -Carolina majorettes snake their way out of the basket) Just as things get going well, thc rocket explodes. ,' It's a good thing that Joe has 3 parachute to carry him back to Kenan Stadium just in time for thc second half. MILLER TUNE A special attraction for today's halftime show is the band's major ette team, headed by Jo Carpenter. The girls will dance the "Shake. Rattle and Roll" and dance to thr Glenn Miller arrangement of "Thc Volga Boatmen." Today's halftime program, and all others, are planned by Ban? Director Herbert Fred and his as sistant directors, Calvin Huber and Earl Gates. Officers of the UNC Band are: John Gardiner, president; Bill Kel lam, vice president; Ron Hamilton, secretary-treasurer. WUNCTVV New Position To Studdiforcl WUNC-TV, North Carolina's pi oneer Educational Television sta tion, has announced the appoint ment of James E. Studdiford as di rector of Special Projects for uie Chapel Hill Studio. Studdiford was formerly the Pro gram Co-ordinator for the studio, located on the UNC campus. One : current contract ' for a "spe cial project by WUNC-TV is a se ries of four "Heritage" films on the noted North Carolina author and poet, Carl Sandburg, for the Edu- A cational Television and Radio Cen ter in Ann Arbor, Mich. Other contracts for special pro jects include a series of 14 safety kinescopes for the North Carolina Highway Safety Division, 13 drama- tic programs for the North Caro- lina Bar Association and 10 teach ing kinescoDes for th Dent, of Psv- chiatry at UNC. j Studdiford, a native of Florida. ' ; will receive a masters degree in communications at the University i next year and has a bachelor of. , arts degree - in dramatic art ' from Tufts University in Medford, Mass. : FOUR PAGES, TH'S ISSUE W in eooo; Clemson and Texas A & M. and the j Tar Heels will hope to do the same J and start a few fireworks of their I own. j Carolina, after losing its first two ! games of the season, has found it j .-.elf in a sturdy defense, good j enugh to take two straight from j highly touted Southern Cal and ! South Carolina. I i The probable starting line-ups: i Pos. Carolina ' Maryland LE John Schroeder Ron Shaffer LT Phil Blazer Ed Nicla LG F. Swearingen R. Breedlove C Ronnie Koes Vic Schawrtz KG Fred Mueller T. Gunderman RT Don Redding Fred Cole RE Al Goldstein' Ben Scott QB Jack Cummings B. Ruselvyan LIIB Wade Smith Gene Varardi RUB Emil DeCantis Bob Layman FB Ed Lipski Jim Joyce The Tar Heels will enter the con test as slight favorites today on the basis-of their performance in the last two games. Although the Heels have bogged down in enemy erritory. the defense has been su perlative. This game, however, has had a habit in past years of being a sur prising eye-opener for fans from both schcols. Two years ago Mary land entered Kenan heavily fav ored to beat the down-trodden Tar Heels and got smeared, 34-6. Last year the exact reverse was true as the Queen of England watched the underdog Terps take the Tar Heels apart t0 the tune bf 21-7. TERPS TAKE CIUNCES Carolina's fine defensive contin ent will definitely have its work cut out for it today against the gambling Terps. Maryland takes chances, and often makes them pay dividends. They pass a lot on first dewn and run from every offense n the book. Carolina will hope today t0 solve its offensive problems. The Heels have moved the ball consistently all year until getting under the shadow of the goal post. The full back problem is still wide open, for though Ed Lipski. has been named starter in today's game, any one of four other players could see action in this spot. Bob Shupin, golden-toed Don Coker, or even Nelson Lowe or Don Llochak could get the call. LINE IS SET The Tar Heel line is fairly set. although John Schroeder will be starting in place of the injured Don Kemper . for the second straight week. Schroeder played a fine game l2st week against the Gamecocks, along with counterpart Al Gold Stein. This series began in 1896, the Tar Heels lead it 14-9-1. and GRADUATE CLUB The Executive Board of the Grad uate Club will meet Monday night at 6 o'clock in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall. All members of the Graduate Club have been urged to attend this meeting because the revised con stitution of the club will be pre sented at that time. INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes- day included: Evangelos Stavaros Stassinos. Dennis Wentworth Lee, Albert .Douglas Barbee, Charles Knox Masser, Charles Thomas Davis. Frarklin Pope Inman, John Norris O'Bannon, Happy Hal Pulliam and Julian Leroy Sessoras.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view