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0 4M WEATHER Don't Forget your sweater VOLUME LXVII, NO. 168 Alumni Commencement Events 165th Commencement Awards Will Be Given H C.liKAI.II PETERSON (i(Mn Anna crsary" Awards to t' of 1 '. ,i:d the installa- !.i;i of A!. mini arvi Alumni Asso c,y.tn ofimr.s for 1:"'. will hiph the annua! alumni commence r, it,? events Miy .W-J line 1. ( l.w-s rnmu: start the Iftoth 1". 'r.n,r!K cmrrt program Saturday. M iv .., .ttuirdir. to Association .v a:i'..: M.iivim "Spike" Saun- t t N : !. .,-! U i'..ives vaiII hold sup ; r !!:.;, at pin Saturday : '.' -d n an 8 3U p.m. reception ki,;.; !'.' I !or a! mini, sen ;. t:;- r- partnt and faculty. The -vn n: i-xi i l'.m, l'JJ4. !' : I ' ll J 1 , . rl. I !!'. and l!"4 vi;; .ittirni II.v-U'ns far the event U the I'ni verity W(,;nan",s Club The O'.d Students (.'lab's AnnuaJ ti,rnlifn si lntlulixl for 1 p m. S. ntiay r,,t ear alumni will Ik :!. 11 trd At 8. 3D mote class rc wn on suppers will bo held. Alumni Luncheon The Al : r.r.i luruheon will be Mon :.y. Jane t. at 12.30 pm. He sides t!'. "(luMcn Anniversary" Cert if i t.i'es presentation and the officer ifduv.tiuns. the results of the Alum el Annual will be announced. F.vcnt.s (or seniors start with the rerp?icn Saturday evening. At 1'' 3D a m Sunday dt'grtc candi d.ife.N will meet at the Okl Well in tleir cans and go Arts. The Bac t. laureate Sermon va ill be at 11 a in At 12.30 Sunday there will be a Di'th Luncheon for seniors and tn.-r parents. The University Band Piano Teachers, Students Hold Ninth Annual Clinic Arthur Ixer. pianist, teacher ar.d author, will be among the guest reci'.alists and lecturers for the n nth annual Clinic for Piano Teach 1 rs and Students being held in (a pel Hi!! June 23 through July 2. Arrangements for the Clinic un d r the sponsorship of the UNC Ex tn.ion Division in cooperation with the UNC Mit-ic Department are he ir.; handled by Dr. William S. New- y few. AUTHUR LOESSER Two Music Students Present Junior Recital In Hill Hall Tao UNC maic students. Martha If .! etay and Dana Dixon, will pre vint a junior recital in Hill Hall today at ft p in. Miss llu'aliy. flutist, will be ac- iirip.ina d by Kay Knight in a pre viitat:on of Bach's "Snata No. 1 1 " B Minor;" "Night Soliloquy" by hi tit Kiiinan. an I "Poem" by C;i irle T Griff e.s. Dixon, a pianist, will perform IVHhnun's " Sonata in E-Mat. Op. r .." and I.b.t'.s "Apres une lec 'ir du Dante." usually called the ' D.mte Sonata." G. M. SLATE Attivitav-. scheduled for Graham Memorial Monday include: Audit Board. 2-4 p.m., Woodhousc reference Room; SP, 7-9. Roland P..rker I and II; German Club, 7-3 P n . Wuolhouse Conference Room; r.rile. 7-9 p.m.. Rendezvous Room; I'ancf Committee, 7: 15-8; 15, Grail; Grd, 9 p m , Grail. TV (CP fill? 5) jitl nnPolQiir 4 bnH vkjj QAWky Safe vSJflAtl! kyV will present a concert on the lawn at Davie Poplar at 4:30. Music of Handel Music continues at 8:30 in Hill Hall with the Commencement Con cert. Handel's "Alexander's Feast The Power of Music " will be pre sented by the Chapel Hill choral Club and University Symphony Orchestra. At 11 a.m. Monday, June 1, the University Reception for com mencement guests will be held. From 2 to 4 pjn. the School of Dentistry's Honors Day Convoca tion and reception for seniors will oe held in Clinic Hall. John Foster Is Growing WASHINGTON. May 16 to John Foster Dulles is reportedly growing weaker. The 71-year-old former Secretary of State contracted pneumonia a week asjo after weeks of treatment for cancer that has spread through his body. He has been a patient at Walter Reed Army Hospital here since Feb. 12. except for a brief rest in Florida. The State Department, which yesterday reported a further de cline in his condition, said today there was no further change. The department said medical bulletins will be issued only if Dulles' con dition changes. Three members of the family man, who has announced that reg istrations have already been re ceived from seven states. Other guests at the clinic will in clude Mrs. Margaret Allen, a spe cialist in rhythm work for young children and a teacher at Berea College. Kentucky; Miss Hazel Cobb of Dallas, Texas, composer of chil dren's pieces; and Mrs. Dorothy Berea Silver, former member of Martha Graham's company. According to Dr. Newman, a "encc-in-a-lifetime experience" will be provided when Locsser gives a performance of the entire first vol ume cf Bach's Well-Tempered Clav ier. "When this piece was done by Loesser in Chapel Hill several years ago. he announced that the limb's could be left on so that the audience could follow the score. Al most everyone turned up with a score and many h.id to be turned ttway because of the artist and this music. "The same plan will be followed when lie performs here on Tues day. June 30. and the concert will be open to the public," Dr. New man commented. Martha Holaday, whose, parents live in Alcxndria. Va.. graduated from Westfield, .N J.. High School. Before entering the University, she attended Earlham College in Rich mond. Ind.. where she was a mem br of the orchestra. During the summers of 1935-56. Miss Holaday played in the high school orchestra and honors band at National Music Camp in Interlochen, Mich. A pupil of Prof. Earl Slocum, fche has studied flute with Robert Cavally of Cincinnati and Robert Armer of Los Angeles. She is first flutist with the UNC Band, Sym phony Orchestra and Wind Ensem ble. Dana Dixon, son of Mr. and Mrs. H . B. Dixon, studied piano at UNC while still a high school student in Mebane. N. C. A pupil from the piano class of Dr. William S. New man. he has been selected as one of there citalists to appear in the ninth Summer Piano clinic spon sored by the University's Mufcic De partment and Extension Division. rii-iifiTit iTiiinriiif- Complete cr Wire Service Editor. Will Highlight Commencement ny ROIiERT F. NEAL is the brother of the famous theol A Yale University theologian and ogian Reinhold Niebuhr of Union the editor of the Wall Street Jour nal will give the main addresses that will higlihght the 165th com mencement program that will be gin on Saturday, May 30. Dr. H. Richard Niebuhr, Sterling professor of theology and Christian ethics in the Yale Divinity School, will give the baccalaureate sermon on Sunday, May 31, at 11 a.m. in Memorial Hall. He has taught at Yale Divinity School since 1931 and Dulles Weaker who live elsewhere were reported in the city tcday. They are a son, John Dulles, an engineer in Mexi co City; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Hinshaw, Newr York City; and a sister, Mrs. Margaret Edwards, Rye, N. Y. Other members of the family in addition to Mrs. Dulles are another son, Avery, a Jesuit Priest; Dulles' brother, Allen, head of the Cen tral Intelligence Agency; and his sister, Eleanor, a State Department specialist on Germany. Dulles' cancer condition dates back to 195e., when he underwent surgery for a malignant growth in the colon. Last February Army doctors fourd the cancer had re curred when they operated on him for a hernia. In the following weeks, the Sec retary was given massive radiation treatments with a giant X-ray ma chine and by injections of dario active gold. He left the hospital early in April for Florida. But the sojourn was cut short and he returned to the hospital April 12. Doctors then reported evidence the cancer had spread to his lower neck. President Eisenhower announced Dulles' resignation as Secretary of State on April 15, but retained him as a personal consultant with cab inet rank. Dulles reportedly was determined to step down so that Christian A. Hcrtcr could be ad vanced to take over the heavy du ties of the Secretary's office. Dulles was in a wheelchair when visited las, week by Eisenhower and Sir Winston Churchill. Bri tain's wartime Prime Minister. Morchoad Planetarium Presents New Program A new program demonstrating and explaining current scientific theories of how the universe origin ated and developed has opened at the Morehead Planetarium. Titled "In The Beginning." the program admits that no single theory has been conclusively proven or unanintously accepted by scien tists, but it shows there is some logic in all the theories of how the moon, the planets including the Earth, the constellations and the sun origLrated. The school version of the new program, "In The Beginning." is recommended for students in grades seven through 12. It is given at public performances nightly at 8:30 o'clock and at ma tinees on Saturday at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., and on Sundays at 3 and 4 p.m. The programs for school children are presented Wednesdays through Fridays at 11 a.m., 1 and 4 p.m. Reservations are required for the school programs, but the public will be admitted to them after the stu dents have been seated. INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yester day included: Eugenia Forbes McArver, William Henry Watkins, Johnnie Fredric Spott, Frank Wilkins Carper, How ard Graiy McAllister, Charles Far ris Himis, William Murchison Mon roe, Frsnklin McGehee Jones, Rob ert Gray Merritt, Alphonso James Early and Douglas Stuart Gatlin. r i. in n on "Afin fin-'1 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH Theologian Theological Seminary, Vermont C. Royster, editor of the Wall Street Journal and a native of Raleigh, North Carolina, will give the commencement address at the graduation exercises scheduled for June 1 at 7 p.m. in Kenan Stadium. Mr. Royster received his A.B. de gree in 1935 from UNC and joined the Wall Street Journal the follow ing year. In 1953 he won a Pulitzer Prize for his editorial writing. Maryon "Spike" Saunders, secre tary of the Alumni Association, said that there would be an all time high of over 2,000 degrees confered this year. Along with the usual academic degrees there will be five honorary degrees awarded at the commence ment exercises on Monday night. The names of the recipiants will not be announced until that time. The name of a candidate for an honorary degree is presented to the standing committee of the Faculty Council and then approved by the Co uncil. After consideration by the Trustee Committee; the Board of Trustees takes the final action. Dr. J. C. Lyons, the faculty com mencement marshal, has announced that again this year the large num ber of degree candidates have made it necessary to present only the PhD and honorary degrees individ ually. This year, for the first time, the candidates will enter four abreast and then divide into two abreast to be seated from both isles. This is being done in an effort to cut down the time that it has taken in the past for them to enter two abreast and be seated from one isle. As a precaution against the pos sibility of rain, a duplicate stage is being erected In Woollen Gym. This will enable the activities to get under way without delay in case of an emergency. Immediately following the com mencement exercises the new grad uates will turn in their caps and gowns on the lawn directly behind Woollen Gym. The dean of each school will have a table set up there to issue diplomas and Bibles. 1 4 ' w vm. :n v z r . iC - i X ik. f V - i s ' , nn.i.in.ii.i.n .i ntw- (3' -V. A 1 i " Si b k - iAK - - T X 1 I -t Z? , J , - . r1 - r - s - s f - . i - ; . , r --' 1 - ft x ' - ,. I y 1 H . r, ii - a - ;f Cigarettes Galorel 6,500 packs of smokes or 130,COO weed brought good fortune to the Alpha Gam's here on campus this week as they removed the stereophonic hi-fi set from the lobby of Y-court and brought it to their house on East Franklin Street. Pictured above are Harvey Salz and Lou Brown, who organized the contest and eight of the Alpha Gam's who helped save the mountain of packs. Gather your forces people and try again next year. . j- llt imfciivniiiit-m. JOiQiiiT " " ' "A CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MAY 17, e urviv n Billions Of Neutrinos Are Bombing You Now By ED CREAGII WASHINGTON, May 16 W-Don't squirm now, but at this very sec ond you are being bombarded by hundreds of billions ol neutrinos. You can't do a thing about it, either. The (we hope) harmless little particles come at you from the sun. They bombard every part of you even if they have to come all the way through the earth to do it. r Report To Eisenhower This somewhat bemusing fact is one of many contained, in a scien tific report to. President Eisenhow er. The report, dealing' .mainly w ith exploring the innardsof the atom. urges federal spendin of 135 mil lion dollars a year by(I3 to help find out what matter is really made of. Said the panel of scientists: ''We are peeling an onion layer by layer, each layer oncovering, in a sense, another universe; unex pected, complicated and--as we un derstand more strangely beauti ful." Need Aeeelerator Devices It takes . big money to bombard atoms for study. To get at the in ner secrets of the atom you need such electron accelerator devices as th-i cyclotron, the bevatron and the cosmitron. Hence the multi-million dollar spending proposal Say you're going into the problem of the protons and neutrons, v "The voltage given to z proton by such accelerators," the scientists said, "equals that from a string of flashlight batteries about a million miles long." Reverse Space Explortion This field of particle physics, as it is called a sort of space ex ploration in reverse has turned up many an idea which will shake your grade school arithmatic. For example: subtraction Isn't subtrac tion any more. "When a piece of wood is chipped from a table," the scientists said, "we have two new objects a chip ped table and a piece of wood. But t fM m i i 1959 Officet t Dies! n occasionally some particles may be 'torn' from a proton and still leave the proton intact." Minute Particles To find out these things, scien tists have to detect things they nev er expect to see particles "which are to the thickness of a sheet of p.per as that thickness is to the distance of the moon." Getting back to those neutrinos which are peppering you right now: They're sent out by the nucleus (the core of the atom) somewhat like light waves. Sun Emits Neutrinos "Our sun," the report says, "whose energy is produced by nu clear reactions, emits an enormous flux of neutrinos. Every second, hundreds of billions of these neu trinos pass through each square inch of our bodies, coming from above during the day, and from be low at night, when the sun is shin ing on the other side of the earth." Hmm. No wonder people scratch themselves from time to time. Give Medical Students Time, Says Doctor "Give medical students more free time, train them in the methods of a research worker and you will produce better physicians," Dr. Thomas H. Ham said Friday at the UNC School of Medicine. Dr. Ham, brother of Dr. George Ham, who is head of the Depart ment of Psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine, was guest speaker at the third annual Adara T. Thorp III Memorial Lecture. Dr. Ham is professor of medi cine at Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio .He is a gradu ate of Cornell and previously taught at Cornell and Harvard Uni versities. His topic was "A Clinical Investigator Looks at Medical Edu cation." O. Nir r at oiiifi r if "iT " i -- -i -t r- 1 or s in Graham Memorial Auto n no ill X 1 -J i : : z-:-r-- i "ft- 1 it BETTY JUANITA LOVE East-West Are Talking Of Conference By ARTHUR GAVSHON GENEVA, May 16 iff) East West maneuvers tonight were au thoritatively reported under way here to determine the place, size, time and tasks of a projected sum mit conference. A high British source said these issues are at stake in the outcome of some Big Four talks going on in side and outside the foreign minis ter's conference room. The informant disclosed that British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd suggested to a fellow dele gate the possibility that the parley of government chiefs might be held aboard ship on the high seas. "We can always take the Queen Elizabeth off the Atlantic run for the purpose," Lloyd was quoted as telling his colleague. Whether the British statesman was joking or serious could not be learned. However an idea of this sort could conceivably become i real possibility if Russia and the West failed to agree on a more conventional meeting place. But as things stand now, the chances are that three of the Big Four powers will favor San Fran cisco as the site for the summit with France still pressing for Gen eva. A U.S. spokesman said tonight the American government "has no objection to holding a summit con ferencc in the United States if the other powers want it there." Assistant Secretary of State An drew H. Berding also said the United States has had "no ap proaches from other powers, and has made no approaches of its own" about when and where 3 summit conference might be held. Copy Material Copies of reference material that can't be taken from library can now be obtained for 10 cents and a few seconds. This new service is the result of a Thermo-Fax duplicating .machine which the Wilson Library has re cently obtained from the Minnes ota Mining Company. This machine is capable of re producing a sheet or a page in any book up to the size of a Life Maga zine. It can also be used to copy microfilm. The duplicating machine is lo cated in the stacks. A charge of 10 cents a copy is used to pay for the reproducing paper and main tenance. Alpha Chi Sigma Gives 8 Scholarship Awards Alpha Chi Sigma; professional chemical fraternity presented eight scholarship awards Fridy night. Recipient of the Francis P. Ven able MedgJ as the outstanding grad uating senior in chemistry was Lawrence Lohr Jr. Bryan Roberts won the junior award, and Robert V. Fulk and Thomas L. Isenhour received sopho more awards. Freshman scholarship awards went to Maurice Barnhill, Grover Everett, Pat Browder and Philip Sowers, f-r t l( mi j r-.. in r iti.i - if i r on HONOR SYSTEM ... A few parting remark bout the judiciary, set pagt 2. FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUI IT air Betty Juanita Love, 22-year-old senior coed, was fatally injured in a one-car accident early Saturday morning on the Durham highway at Whitehall Antique Shop. Her fiance, Donald J. Kroc, also a senior at UNC, sustained a frac tured vertebra in the accident. Miss Love died of internal in juries at 2 a.m. Saturday in N. C. Memorial Hospital, where she was taken after the accident. Kroe's condition was reported as satisfactory by hospital sources Saturday afternoon. Funeral services for Miss Love will be held at 3 p.m. today in the Andrews Mortuary Chapel in Wil mington. Burial will be in Oakdale Cemetery in Wilmington. The body will remain at the funeral home until the services this afternoon. Kroe and Miss Love were head- in the direction of Durham on Highway 15-501 at the time of the accident just after midnight Sat urday. Kroe was driving a 1955 Chevrolet. She was the only other passenger in the car. After Kroe pulled out to pass a second vehicle, his car ran off the shoulder on the left side of the road. He pulled the car back onto the highway, but it went off again and hit a telephone pole. The Chevrolet was described as a total loss. Local policeman Charles W. Etheridge, who investigated the ac cident, did not indicate the rate of speed of the Chevrolet. By Saturday afternoon, Etheridge had been unable to talk with Kroe, who was under sedation, except briefly after the accident. Although formal charges have not been filed against Kroe, he will be cited for involuntary man slaughter, which is a technical charge. Miss Love was majoring in edu cation at UNC and would have graduated in June. She and Kroe had planned to be married May 31. Before entering the University, she attended Flora McDonald and Wil mington colleges. The young coed lived in Alder man Dormitory on campus. She is survived by her mother. Mrs. Juanita Bordeau Love of 1912 Ann St., Wilmington; one brother, William Walter Love Jr. of Wil mington; the maternal grandmoth er, Mrs. Juanita M. C. Bordeau of Wilmington, and the paternal grandmother, Mrs. Betty Johnson Love of Asheville. Miss Love was born April 11, 1937, in Charlotte. Groups Hear Talks CILVFEL HILL Chemistry groups in Tennessee and Alabama will hear four talks during the coming week by Dr. Charles N. Reilley of UNC, who will make a lecture tcur for the American Chemical Society. Dr. Reilley. an associate profes sor in the UNC Department of Chemistry, will speak Monday night in Kingsport, Tenn. to the North east Section of the ACS. On succeeding nights he will ad dress ACS gatherings in Nashville. Tenn.; Birmingham, Ala.; and Au burn, Ala. All four talks will be on "The Chelon Approach to An alysis." Forensic President Elected Clay Simpson has been elected president of the Forensic Council for 1939-60. The Forensic Council consists of two representatives each from the Carolina Forum, the State Student Legislature, the UNC Debate Squad, the Dialectic and the Philantliropic Societies. The Council promotes these organizations and controls their financies. Simpson, a rising senior from Lexington, Ky.. is a member of Kcvppa Alpha fraternity and has served as president of the UNC De bate Squad this past year. He will represent the Carolina Forum on the Council, Accsc enf 1:
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 17, 1959, edition 1
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