U.".C. Library Eox. 870 Chaps 1 Hill, II. C. See Edits, Page Two G f c 1 Weather Partly cloudy and continued warmer. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service liearin 1 - 7 . i 4 ft Shearing . Piano Magic Committee Appointments Executive committee member ship appointments were announced last nijzht at Student Legislature in a communication from President Inman Allen's office. The appoint ments will be considered by legis lature and voted on Thursday. The appointments not listed be low include the Elections Board, Budget Committee, Student Audit Board. Student Carolina Athletic Council. Carolina Forum, Secre tariat. Honor System Commission, Dance Committee, Publications Board, International Students Board, Toronto Exchange Commit tee. Student Entertainment Board, and Library Committee. These will be listed in tomorrow's Tar Heel. COMMUNICATIONS COMMIT TEE: The purpose of this commit tee is to inform the campus and state of the activities of Student Government. Members are: Bob Spearman, chairman; Bill Graham, Mike Channin, David Raney, Mike Pittman, Owen Bishop, Louis Samsot, Steve Nanheine, Arthur Pearce. and Judy Gray. ACADEMIC AFFAmS COMMIT TEE: This committee studies courses and academic procedures. Results of investigation provide a basis for recommending improve ments. Members are: Fred Wed ler, chairman; Carl Rhodes, C. Michael Smith, Lucy Ann Wood, Wayne Flye. Jeff Bayer, Tony Smithson, Doug Fambrough, Rich ard King, James H. Barnhiill, Judy Johnson, Jim Wagner, and Peggy Stephenson. CONSOLIDATED UNIVERSITY STUDENT COUNCIL: The council is composed of representatives from each of the three Consolidated Uni versity schools. They meet to dis cuss mutual problems and plan inter-campus activities. Members are: Gerald Thornton, chairmain; Judy Clark Wins Judith Gates Clark, a student iniCraige Gray Award given annually the School of Education, has been (to the woman member of the Jun named recipient of the Jane'ior Class who is voted most out If v - KD President Gail Woodward Presents Miss Plenty Of Seats Available g App ears g WWW 'W V - v -.Si. X4 Cecil Collins, Johnsye Massenburg, Donna Baily, Richard G. Lewis, John L. Currie, and Bob Rearden. CAMPUS COMMITTEE OF NA TIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIA TION: The campus committee co ordinates activities with the na tional association which has 400 member schools throughout the country. Last year, the Campus N.S.A. co-sponsored the "Opera tion Abolition" debate. Members are: Harry DeLung, chairman; Lynda Colvard, Allen Ashby, Ford Rowan, Anne Lupton, Bill Straughn, Charles Cooper, Rick Edwards, Jim Riley, Doc Fields, Alan Goldsmith, Mike Putzel, Mike Bissell, Mike Owens, David Hendrix, and Johtn Ulfelder. ATTORNEY GENERAL'S STAFF: The staff is responsible for investigating all reported violations of the campus and honor codes. They advise and protect the rights of defendants. It is their responsi bility to present all cases to the Councils under direction of the At torney General. Members are: Buzzy Stubbs, At torney General; Bill Hoyle, Mac PUB BOARD MEETS The Publications Board will meet Wednesday at 3 p.m. for the purpose of interviewing can didates for Yack editorship who have not already been inter viewed. Other selections to be made in clude editor and business man ager for the summer school . paper; editor and business man ager for the Carolina Quarterly; business manager for the Yack; and business manager for the DTII. New Publications Board offi cers will also be selected. SPONSORED BY KD'S i , 4 s i - ' v if'' '' s s I ---- -- ::..,v,-f'-- Tonight George Shearing, world-famous jazz pianist, will play with his quin tet in Memorial Hall tonight at 8:00 p.m. The performance is sponsored by Graham Memorial. Students will be admitted free with ID cards. Student wives' ad mission is $1.00. The general pub lic will be admitted at 7:45 for $1.50 apiece if space is available. Born in England, the blind pianist is a naturalized citizen of this 'country. His "Lullaby of Birdland" is among the most recorded jazz pieces of all time. He is recognized as an arranger as well as com poser and musician. Outstanding albums, include "Velvet". Carpet" and "Satin Affair." Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yes terday were Mary Allen, Richard Freeman, Morris Cramer, Abdo Bardawil, Spencer Womack, Anne Lupton, Robert Lowe, Gary Woods, Frank Anker, Howard Marsly, Har vey Whitley, Donald Carver, John Southard. Boxley, Bryan Wright, Charlie Brown, Tim Oliver, Julie Latane, Jean Yoder, Clay Moore, Carol Matthews, Sara McClure. More Than 4, 000 Will Pre-Register By HUBERT HAWKINS More than 4,000 students will preregister for the fall semester, Assistant Director Frank . Giles of the Central Office of Records said yesterday. Preregistration continues in the College of Arts and Sciences and certain upper schools through Wed nesday. Students will sign up for courses in the summer and fall sessions at this time. "Preregistration will help insure getting the courses you want," Giles said. "It saves time for the student and it saves time for us. Most students learn the value of pre-registration by the time they are juniors or seniors." Machines are being introduced in Central Records to increase the accuracy and speed of registra tion.. "They are not infallible," he explained, "but they make many fewer mistakes than people." Opening a door to a room full of grey machines in the basement of Hanes Hall, he described how the tickets are punched in code. The cards are sorted according to classes and kept during the term. Then they are used to distribute individual grades at the end of the Jane Gray Award standing in character, leadership, and. scholarship. A reception honoring Miss Clark ...... : x i t 4 , I :3 t ' F 4 1 f 1 I , i - I'- i Clark With Gray Award Photo by Jim Wallace Sanford Advisor Knocks Political Disinterest Here Joel Fleischman, legal adviser to Gov. Sanford and a UNC gradu ate, told the freshman roundtable discussion group Sunday night that he was greatly concerned at the lack of any political turmoil on campus over major national is sues. Fleischman was the third guest speaker in the series of discussions on state and national affairs that the freshman class has sponsored. The class officers hope to continue the discussion series next year as a regular weekly part of the Uni versity program. In speaking on state affairs, Fleischman stated that a major re apportionment of voting districts in North Carolina was not likely in the near future. The voting balance in this state, he said, is not uneven enough to present a major prob lem. Rather than reapportionment, Fleischman believes education to be the most pressing problem of state government in North Caro lina today. Due to the state ad ministrative setup, the governor can exert only indirect influence over education policies. To correct this problem, Fleisch man urged the adoption of a short ballot for the state in which the superintendent of education and other administrative officials would be appointed by the governor, in stead of the present system in which these officials are elected by popular statewide election. Fleischman graduated from UNC Law School and has done gradu ate work in law at Yale. term. The same machines print checks for UNC employees, as well as light and water bills for Chapel Hill citizens. "Our registration process has been complimented by a number of colleges, and we think it works very well. The personnel is very good, and we are fortunate to have faculty advisers assisting this process." Certain universities simply dis tribute class schedules and open classes. The students find their own preferred sections on a first come, first-served basis. The in structors then collect class rolls and send the names to the records division. Registration and drop-add are unnecessary. Asked if this process would not eliminate much red tape at UNC, Giles replied: "I have heard of such processes. But it seems to me that drop-add might still be necessary. Some stu dents might find their way into the wrong classes. Or there could be a dispute over who got to a given seat first in a popular class." Registration will be on Septem ber 19-20 for those students who have not preregistered. was held yesterday in Kappa Delta sorority house. Charles Shaffer, di rector of the UNC Office of De velopment, presented the award. Miss Clark, from Tuscumbia, Alabama, has been active in Stu dent Government as a member of Legislature for three years. The past two years she served on the budget committee and was Clerk of Legislature in 1961. She is a 1962 inductee of the Valkyries and the Order of the Old Well, honor or ganizations at the University. She has been a member of the Consolidated Student Council, the Toronto Exchange and the Canter bury Club. Last year she directed the Freshmen program of the Woman's Orientation Committee. Within her sorority. Alpha Delta Pi, she has been Activities Chairman and representative to the Carolina Sweethearts. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Leslie Clark, and has been enrolled at Carolina since her freshman year, entering as a Medi cal Technology major. The award is given by the Beta Chi Chapter of Kappa Delta so rority in memory of Jane Craige Gray, wife of Gordon Gray who was University President from 1950-1955. TTftT! 1 IVT T! II ULJLJL Chairman; Curtis Succeed. HARK THE SOUND - r t? fVVl A i $ MM f 4- , : I HARK THE SOUND The U.N.C. Men's Glee Club is now recording an album of Carolina songs. The record will contain favorite songs of the University and the State and will also in clude various religious, secular, and folk songs' S Q Q Q nP P v But It's All On Paper Seven Carolina students are gathered around, talking animated ly in what appears to be a routine bull session. But the subject this time is detergents how to make them, how to sell them, how to make profit for the stockholders. Down the hallway, in another classroom, are seven more students in the UNC School of Business Administration. They comprise an other company in the detergent business, and they are in competi tion with the first company. In another part of Carroll Hall is assembled a third team, this one of eight members, also in the detergent business and competing against the other two companies for a share of the market and for profits in a free enterprise system. They are running their own busi nesses in what is known as a management simulation in the U.N.C. School of Business. All 22 are undergraduate students in Busi ness Administration and have been operating their simulated busines ses since last September. They hire laborers, build plants, purchase raw materials for soap, manufacture different kids of de tergents, advertise them, merchan dise them, set up warehouses for storage, borrow money, invest in government bonds, pay out divi dends to stockholders, and do most of the other things that managers must do daily in the detergent in dustry. They make decisions, and they make mistakes. When right deci I Campus Briefs NAACP Tlie NAACP will meet tonight at 8:30 in 203 Alumni. Plans for the national convention will be dis cussed. WATERMELON CUTTING A watermelon cut for all campus women will be held on Mclver lawn Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. It is sponsored by the CWC and the Pan-Hel Council. Entertainment will be by folk singer Dan Brock. FOREIGN ORIENTATION The last meeting of foreign stu dent orientation counselors will be Thursday at 7:00 p.m. upstairs in Y-Court. AFS The American Field Service will meet upstairs at Lenoir Thursday at 6:00 p.m. JUDEA REFORM . Judea Reform Congregation re ligious services will be held at 8 TO SERVE UNTIL R mitJa 'T4 &S TO mm if i 1 that are popular recording, to be will be available semester. 3 Soap Companies Operated By S tudents With sions are made, or wrong de cisions are discovered, a company loses or gains ground in the hot competition, the students huddle together and decide what is best to do the next time, how to change their policies or strategies in order to sell an optimum amount of soap and make the most profits. Progress Checks They are able to check their progress weekly by means of print ed outputs from the Remington Rand Univac 1105, the giant elec tronic computer at Chapel Hill. The Univac constructs the indus trial environment and generates the reactions to the weekly deci sions. This complex management game was originally devised at Carnegie Tech; the model current ly programmed for the Univac 1105 at Chapel Hill is a revised version of the original game. Students in business feed their decisions into the Univac every Friday afternoon at 5 o'clock. The computer "pro cesses" the decisions made by the students and produces a new set of operating statements available to the firm on Monday. The students know then how they have fared, wether they err ed, or whether they bettered their competitors. What is more, facts and figures on which they make new decisions in a new week are clearly indicated. Actually one week in school time means one month in the detergent market in the course which is designated "B.A. 199, Management' p.m. Friday, May 18 at Friend's Meeting House on Alexander Ave. in Durham. Lay members of the Congregation will conduct the services. BOOKS TO KOREA The International Affairs Commit tee of the YW-YMCA will collect money for drama books to be sent to Korea in the lobby of Lenoir Hall. There will be a committee represenative there at lunch and supper Monday through Friday. LOST LOST A Bulova wrist watch be tween GM and Franklin St. It con tains highly explosive materials. Please return for disarmament. Call Don Curtis at 965-9026. Gigan tic reward. SPANISH CLUB The following are officers for the Spanish Club: Luis Martinelli, President; Carole Meadows, VP; Dixon Jordan, Secretary; Tommy Harnilton, Treasurer. FALL ELECTIONS A '' 1 1'-' ft H t J A .: . . . . At - ',Svi'iVrt'f , with all men's glee clubs. The called, HARK THE SOUND, at the beginning of the Fall Photo by Jim Wallace Simulation." Once every three weeks (or three months in the; detergent market), the students j meet with a board of directors of three faculty members. The facul ty directors don't tell the students how to run their business and they don't attempt to make any decisions for them; but they do put the students on the griddle with questions. Students are call ed upon to explain why they made the decision to buy more raw materials than they needed; what caused them to decide to build a new factory; why they have or have not paid out larger dividends to the stockholders, why they skimped (or plunged too much) in advertising. The directors call on the students to justify and explain their actions and to keep attention focused upon the need to develop long-range plans and provide for their execution. Thus the students obtain an evaluation of their op erations of the firm. In Earnest It's not just a contest of "wheel ing and dealing" and making de cisions with the toss of a coin. The teams are in earnest. They stand to lose millions of dollars in a wrong decision. Success versus bankruptcy are stakes in the com petition. And when the scorers come to make up the grades at the end He Gets Another One . . . lrr w i I ! ; - - TWO-TIME TANNER AWARD Winner Dr. J. R. Caldwell (cen ter) added another trophy to his string recently as he became the first recipient of the newly established Freshman Class Teaching and Service Award. He was presented the award by Freshman Class President Bob Spearman (L) and Park McGinty, (r.), Scholar ship Committee chairman. JPboto by Jim Wallace P Allen's Manager Will Organize Party System Chairman of the University Party Phil Smith announced his resignation yesterday and said that Don Curtis, has been appointed Party Chairman until elections next fall. "The need for someone who will continue party policy through the summer prompted the appoint ment," Smith said. "It is senseless for me to set up an organization I won't be working with." Curtis was campaign manager for Inman Allen in recent elections and is dorm manager of Old West. Smith said that the reason an election will not be held for the post is that it is so late in the semester. In addition, only one other person showed mild interest in the position. Curtis said yesterday that he plans to set up committees for freshman orientation, draw up election strategy for fall elections, and plan election of party officers in the fall. IBM Aid of (May, attention will be given not only to who wins and loses, but how the game was played, why decisions were made as they were, and what knowledge of Business Administration and Economics was displayed by each student as he participated in the management of his detergent company. Each team has a president anI directors of marketing, production and finance. Each business quart er, they change poistions, another student taking over as president, etc. so that each may find out more about the different opera tions. Prof. Richard I. Levin who teaches in the Industrial Manage ment Department of the Business School is coordinator in charge, and nine faculty members are in volved as members of the board of directors. Dr. Levin explained that each company started off the business year last Stptember with the under standing that central headquarters was in the middle of the United States, equi-distance from all parts of the nation, and that the country was divided into four sections or regions for selling soap. The peo ple of the United States, as con sumers of soap, comprise the mar ket. Each company has two soap products to begin with, and a third product may be added, if they (Continued on page 3)

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