Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 7, 1960, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
M wl 4, JAN 7 1950 U.TI.C. Library Aerials D$pt. Box 87 (Jhape 87 years of dedicated service to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, vhoe motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." WEATHER Mostly rloudy and somewhat warmer. IHkH near 40. VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 76 Complete ffi Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE 01 sup Avaira pttat Jteen 7x VJ VLX U U U U LH U 11 Li II 11 Ar'l VW 111! W I M-"V I -M J II J J 1 1. J I I 1 Xf3 mm m -aor U M i HI k4 U k it it it it it i? t niversitv Wi u DeGaulle Will Visit America In April By LEWIS GULICK WASHINGTON Charles De Gaulle will come to America April 22 for a weekend of talks with President Kisenhower and prob ably a trip to the West Coast. i The French President will be arriving fresh from talks with Russia's Premier Nikita S. KnniNhehev in Paris. And after Do Gaulle returns to Paris I'isenhow r and Britain's Prime Miiiistr Harold MaeMillan will meet with him there for the F.ast-Wet Mimmit conference starting Ma Hi. A Paris announcement tnd.y aid that after spending April 19 22 in Canada. De Gaulle will come to Washington for a three-day tay and will be in the United States until the end of the month. In Washington, the White Houe said Kisenhower was particularly pleased with the visit. U. S. and French officials are working out details for the IV Gaulle trip. While final decisions have not yet been reached. Dl Gaulle was reported likely to go to New York for a day after h.? leaves Washington and then visit the West Coast with perhaps a top or two at other U. S. cities. Unique Man Who Barked At People Cured By Tranquilizers By HAL It. COOPER LONDON ttfi The singular case of a man who barked at people was placed in the annals of human be havior today by a British psychia trist. The man, now 63, barked like a dog every 10 minutes for a year and a half. Ills bark was so loud it could be heard at a range of several hun dred yards. It frightened his more timid fellow commuters when he was waiting for a bus. U was especially raucous when he was in the hands of his dentist. The psychiatrist, Dr. Sidney Bock- ner, reported the case in the jour nal of mental science. The man was naturally left-handed. He attributed his strange ail Exam Schedule Okay, folks, here it is! Start biting your finger nails! By action of the faculty, the be changed after it has been fixed All permits to take examinations to remove grades of "Exc. Abs." or "Cond." must be secured from the Central Office of Records prior to the exam. No students may be excused from a scheduled examina tion except by the infirmary, in case of illness, or by his General College adviser or by his dean, in case of any other emergency com pelling his absence. 10;00 a.m. clatitt on TThS, . Tue$. Jan. 19, 8:30 a.m. 1:00 p.m. clatset on MWF, Pharm. 10, 'Psych 26 Tues. Jan. 19. 2:00 p.m. 11:00 a m. classes on MWF Wed. Jan. 20, 8:30 a.m. 2:00 p.m. classes on TThS, Pharm.Ec. BA 130 Wed. Jan. 20, 2:00 p.r.;. 3 00 p.m. classes, Chem. 11, Pharm. Chem. 61, ' BA 71, 72, Pol. Sci. 41, and all classes not otherwise provided for in this schedule . .. Thurs. Jan. 21, 8:30 a.m. 8 00 a.m. classes on TThS Thurs. Jan. 21, 2:00 p.m. 12:00 noon classes on MWF Fri. Jan. 22, 8:30 a.m. 2:00 p.m. classes' on MWF, Chtm. 43, Pharm. 15 Econ. 31, 32, 61 Fri. Jan. 22, 2:00 p.m. 12:00 noon classes on TThS, all Naval Science and Air Science ... Sat. Jan. 23, 8:30 a.m. 9 00 a.m. classes on MWF Sat. Jan. 23, 2:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. classes on TThS, Econ. 81, Physics 24 Mon. Jan. 25, 8:30 a.m. 9 00 a.m. classes on TThS Mon. Jan. 25, 2:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m. classes on MWF - Tues. Jan. 26, 8:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m. classes on MWF Tues. Jan. 26, 2:00 p.m. French, German & Spanish courses No'd 1, 2, 3, 3x & 4. Econ. 70 - Wed. Jan. 27, 8:30 a m 11:00 a.m. classes on TThS Wed. Jan. 27, 2:00 p.rn In case of any conflict, the regularly scheduled exam will take precedence over the common exam. (Common exams are indicated bj an asterisk.) , Diplomatic sources said San 'Francisco or Los Angeles, or both, I are being considered as visiting ! points for the French Chief of State. Invitations have been corn in" in from people in other big , cities too. it was suid. One city from which the French Embassy said have come many re quests for a De Gaulle visit is New Orleans, which boasts a tiling French heritage. ' lu Washington. Or Gaulle is - lat d to arrive on a Friday which would give him opportunity for a long weekend with Kisenhower. Diplomatic informants said there is a possibility Kisenhower might invite Do Gaulle to his Camp Da vid retreat in i nearby Maryland. Khrushchev went there during his ;isit last Septernbi-r. CORRECTION I A speech by J. M. Galloway, director of the University Place- I ment Service, reported in yes- ! terday's DTH will be given to- : day instead of last Thursday, as stated. His lecture in Hanes Hall is part of the In-Service Train ing programs sponsored by the Office of the Dean of Women. Case ment to a teacher who forced him to write right-handed when he was a schoolboy. Until he was 63. he barked only occasionally. But then the urge be came uncontrollable and he took to barking six times an hour. "His dentist," said Bockner, "pro tested that extracting a tooth was more unnerving for him than for the patient, in view of the loud accompaniment." Things linally reached the point where the man was fired from hi.s job, and he turned to Bockner for help. Bockner prescribed a tranquilizing drug. The barking became progres sively less ferquent. "And now, after six weeks on the drug, he is almost cured," Bockner wrote. time of an examination may not in the schedule. Present Law Grants Are Offered By N.Y.U. Looking for a fellowship for next year? Carolina seniors are being ottered three widely varying pos sibilities. A Root-Tilden scholarship in being offered by New York Uni versity. It provides $2500 annual ly, and renewable but the appli cant must be in the top quarter ol his graduating class, posse.ss leadership qualities, and be un married. Ka. h Koot-Tikien scholar is assigned ;i sponsor who is a practicing lawyer or judge in the New York are. The Carolina senior interested in teaching can apply for one of George Pea body College for Teach ers" $1500 fellowships. Up to three applicants from Carolina may be Liken. The MA is earned in one lour-quartcr ear and the student Ills a choice of majors. Pea body College is in Nashville, Tenn. Seniors may also apply for a fel lowship of $1800 for education in government leadership at George Washington Univers.ty in Wash ington. D. C. The school of gov ernment there has been recently '(.organized. The applicant must have in his undergrad major an average of B or better. In Wash ington he gets daily contact with the day-to-tiay government opera tions. Polling Places Listed For Tuesday Referendum Polling places for the constitu tional referendum slated for Tues day were announced yesterday by Don Black, Elections Board co chairman. All dormitory residents will vote in their respective dorms with the following exceptions: Kenan residents will vote in Mclver; Smith in Gerrard Hall, and Connor in Alexander. Town Men's I will vote at the Carolina Inn and the Naval Ar mory. The Scuttlebutt will be the polling place for Town Men's II and Town Men's III and IV will vote only at Gerrard nail. Town Women will also vote at Gerrard Hall. All requests for absentee ballots should be made at the Student Government office in GM before 6 p.m. Friday, Black emphasized. In case of inclement weather, Gerrard Hall ballot boxes will be located in the Y Building. Honor System Re - By RUSTY HAMMOND" and MARY ALICE ROWLETTE (second of a series) Next Tuesday, January 12, Carolina students will go to the polls in a special referendum election. It contains four points, all of having to do with the Hon or System, which will be voted upon seperately. If any or all of these are pass ed, they will be added to the Student Constitution under a sec tion providing tor rights of de fendants. It is generally conceded that the most important of these four points is the one dealing with ap portionment of council members. Should this point pass, defendant would have "the right to be judged by a council of students elected under some form of geo graphical apportionment to be specified by the Legislature." It further provides that defendants will have this right only in courts which have the power to suspend, and will become effective after the spring election this year. At present, all but one of the members of the Men's Honor Council are fraternity members. riart tor Lohseum so Would Hold 12,000 Cost $5 Million UNC officials will, ask for a new coliseum at next Monday's meet ing of the Board of Trustees, Pres ident Friday confirmed today. Cost is estimated at $5 million. "The administration," said Fri day, "will present plans for a multi-purpose building, although 'his plan will be preceded by re quests for teaching, research and library facilities." The auditorium of the proposed building would seat the entire student body and faculty, and be used for Commencement exer eises, myjor addresses, and other university and public occasions. A rollout stage with acoustical backdron would disappear for in door athletic events, such as home basketball games. There would be ulequate spectator space. Woollen Gym now accommodates about 5,000. There will also be space for ROTC drills, classrooms, labs, and offices. Athletic coaches will also have their offices there. Woollen Gym would, then be used only for PE classes and in tramurals. If the Board of Trustees passes he request, it will have to get the approval of the executive committee as well as the Advisory Budjget Commission before fur ther plans could be made. The fi nal OK must come from the 1961 General Assembly of the State Legislature. The University hopes to get part of the necessary appropriation from the State and part from pri vate sources. Preliminary plans and sketches for the proposed structure ha,ve been completed, and officials of the institution have been showing the plans around in hopes of getting the ball rolling with donations. President Friday pointed out that the principal of construction of such a building by the use of both private and public funds is well-founded. The 12,500 seat Coliseum at State College in Raleigh began with a $100,000 contribution in G. M. SLATE Activities scheduled in Graham Memorial today include: Campus Affairs Committee, 2 3:30 p.m., Grail; Campus Confer ence, 3-4:30 p.m., Woodhouse; High School Honor System Com mission, 4-5 p.m., Woodnouse. The term of the lone exception, Dewey B. Sheffield, expires soon. All but one of the members of the Women's Honor Council, are members of a sorority. Over 3A of the student body are no sor ority or fraternity members. The passing of this point would undoubtedly bring about more equal representation. Of course, the wording of this section is general and the actual apportion ment would be set up by the Leg islature after the spring election, probably along the lines of the Legislature itself. Jury Discussed Another point deals with the jury. At the present time, jurors are interviewed and selected by the respective councils. Should this part of the referendum pass, jurors would be selected "ran domly," or from the Student. Body at large. This method is of course the one used by our pub lic courts. The defendant would also be given the right to dis miss a "reasonable" number of jurors prior to the beginning of the trial. This point applies only to councils with the power to sus pend, and becomes effective a M u n o 5" era 1941. The new Institute of Gov ernment Building at Carolina was pajd for with $500,000 in private fu$ds and $500,000 in appropria tions. I'he proposed coliseum will be included in the list of requested capital improvements the institu tion will submit in advance of the General Assembly. Many other fa cilities at the University have pri ority, such as the Student Union Litfrary and research facilities. A site has not been determined. PRESIDENT FRIDAY . . . Looking Ahead INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yes terday were the following: Billie Rimmer, Angela McLester, Liia Pickel, Jane Burt, Katherine Pot ter, James Hardison, Davis Wible, Mark Thelin, Les Sutorious, Jerry Fisher, Gibson Inksetter, Landrum Brown, Charles Evans, Thomas White, Dewey Weir, Frank Zach ary, Nelson Miller, Henry Broome, Lewis Rush, Herman Atwater, Richard Leslie, Howard Vann, Douglas Kelly and Robert Mardis. SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY The Elisha Mitchell Scientific So ciety will hold its monthly meeting on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., Jan. 12 in 206 Phillips Hall. Dr. Harold Hotel ling of the Institute of Statistics will speak on "The Behavior of Some Standard Statistical Tests un .der Non-Standard Conditions," and Dr. Virgil I. Mann, Department of Geology and Geography, will speak on "The Lituya Bay Earthquake of July 9, 1958." examined March 1, 1960. At the present time, the de fendant is given the right to d's miss a "reasonable" number of jurors by the Attorney General's office for various reasons. For instance, if the defendant felt that one ofthe jurors knew him too personally to judge him. or that one of them was an enemy, the Attorney General's office would drop that juror's name from the list. However, in the past this has been done simply as a courteous gesture. The pass ing of this point would make it law. The number of jurors a de fendant could drop from the list or the reasons for dropping them would still be up to the discre tion of the Attorney General's office. Student Could Have Counsel A third point to be voted on Tuesday has to do with a counsel for the defense. This would give the student "the right to an ac tive counsel for his defense, sub ject to his own choice from among the members of the stu dent body." Just in the past year, coun sels for defense have come into ::;:: - in i jjfci'''-"'"""'''' NC Hospital Will Receive Large Grants The North Carolina Memorial Hospital has been awarded a grant of $114,494 by the General Medi cal Services Division of the Na tional Institutes of Health of the United States Public Health Serv ice. The grant will finance a four year research project entitled: "Improving Hospital - Physician Relations Through Education." Dr. Robert R. Cadmus, director of the hospital and professor of hospital administration of the School of Medicine will serve as principal investigator. The purpose of this study is to develop within the existing medi cal curriculum an effective pro gram of instruction which will provide to the maturing medical student a better unde-s?.anding of the administrative implications of the practice oi medicine, particu larly in the hospital setting, lt is hoped that with increased knowl edge and with the development of sound and mutually acceptable concepts, these relationships can' be strengthened on a national i level. Many members of the clinical faculty of the School of Medicine j will be directly or indirectly in volved. A local faculty advisory committee as well as nationally recognized consultants will parti cipate in the project. There is no! anticipation that any new or sep arate course will be developed, Dr. Cadmus said, but rather that the new information will be incorpo rated into present teaching pat terns. The rapid injection of many complex social, economic and ad ministrative aspects into the prac tice of medicine, within the last decade, particularly in the hos pital and the third-party agency segments of medical practice, has put great emphasis on the need for developing and maintaining constructive relations between doctors and hospitals, Dr. Cadmus explained. As an example of its importance nationally, some 12 of the 50 resolutions presented to the House of Delegates of the Ameri can Medical Association at its most recent meeting in Dallas concerned Physician-Hospital Re lations. Although much thought and study has already been done in this field, the NTH research grant awarded to N. C. Memorial Hos pital is the first major research project designed to concentrate on this sensitive inter-professional relationship. Bef ore Crucial Referendum general use. The Student Coun sel and Men's and Women's Hon or Councils have allowed the use of defense counsels, but at the present time, they may bar these counsels from the trial if they wish. This section of the referendum also states, "that counsel shall be allowed to ask reasonable questions as adjudged by the, chairman of the council under whom the jurisdiction the case is being tried." This would be ef fective on passage. More simply stated, this point means that the defendant would have the right to cross-examine the witnesses. In the past the Honor Counsels allowed limited cross-examination. The Student Council has not allowed this. Right To Witnesses The fourth point of the referen dum would give the defendant "the right to summons witnesses or obtain evidence for his de fense." This would also be ef fective on passage. As the Honor System court system stands now the defendent only has the right to summon character witnesses. Character I No S urvivors Found On Desolate Coast By CHARLES L. WEST BOLIVIA, N. C, A National Airlines four-engine plane loaded with Northern passengers headed for Florida vacation spots crashed with 34 persons aboard in rain and darkness near here today. Searchers found no survivors. Twenty-five bodies had been recovered by early afternoon. The plane carried 29 passengers and five crew members. V V i : . .. .... J MAP (above) shews Reporters who hurried to 'he woods and fields where parts of the massive nig'at coach tumoied oiu of the murky .skies about 2:4f a.m. 'EST) said there appeared to have been an explosion in flight. The passenger list included Re trod Navy Vice Adm. Edward Orriek McDonnel, holder of the Congressional Medal of Honor and other decoratons. He commanded aircraft carriers in the Pacific in World War II. The big ship was one of two sub stitute flights. Passengers original ly had been booked on a jet flight which was canceled because of a broken windsnield. The other sub stitute flight reached Miami with out incident. Several of the dead passengers were harnessed in Mae West life jackets some of them inflated. Bent against a pine tree was an organe, 25-person capacity life raft, fully inflated. Such rafts inflate auto matically when released. At least three dead men were ; found strapped in their seats. These seats had been ripped from the plane and were scattered about the piney woods. witnesses have nothing to do with the decision of innocence or guilt. They may influence the council as to sentence. At the present time, the Attor ney General's office summons all witnesses and obtains all evi dence used in the trial. Two of the clauses, as stated, specify use only under councils with the right to suspend. The councils with that right are: Men's Honor Council, Women's Honor Council, Student Council, Law School Court, Med School Court, and Dental School Court. Joint Statement Issued Dewey B. Sheffield, Chairman of the Student Party, and Hank Patterson, Chairman of the University Party, have issued a joint statement in support of all points on the referendum. The bill for the referendum was pro posed in Student Legislature by Bill Norton (SP). The fight to get a referendum ballot to the students has been a long and hard one. Earner in the year, the Student Council ruled a similar attempt unconstitution al. President Charley Gray sup ported the Council's stand. Most 7 t J J N rustees ' T&rrmv ills LtVlAi : ... -:..:...-.: location of Bolivia The plane, flying non-stop from New York to .Miami, was last heard from at 2:31 a.m., when she was just south of Wilmington, a river p,rt city 25 miles northeast of this tiny village. Her flight plan called ior her to veer to sea near here and fly 550 miles from heie to Palm Beach, Fla,, over the Atlantic. Bodies of several passengers had dug into the soft earth, the upper portions remaining above surface. Trees of the area were not clipped, indicating a vertical plunge by the stricken ship. The FBI dispatched its special disaster squad of fingerprint ex perts to the scene to attempt identifications. The Civil Aeronautics Board sent four invesligators to try to deter mine the cause. A detachment of 40 Marines from the base at New River flew in by helicopter to help search the area for bodies. In the woods the searchers dis covered a large hole in the mud. Investigators said one of the big engines might have buried itself there. of the members of the old Men's and Women's Honor Councils, and the Student Council, were op posed to the bill, and are opposed to the present erferendum. A Judicial Commission appoint ed by President Gray is still working on other possible court reforms, but has not reported as yet. The current referendum has nothing to do with the findings of that grcup. Pro-referendum leaders have reason to believe the measure will pass on Tuesday. They point out that in a vote such as this, persons interested enough to vote are usually in favor; while those opposed rarely bother to cast their ballots. A very light vote is predicted by most for next Tues day. In every dorm, sorority and fra ternity on campus the measure either has been or will be dis cussed by campus leaders, in an attempt to familiarize the Stu dent Body with the issues in volved. TOMORROW: Honor Council members talk about Honor Council J n
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 7, 1960, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75