TJ.TI.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chapel Hill, H.C. 4 WEATHER Partly cloudy and rather warm with scattered thndarshowers. PARKING The student might suspend buy ing a little while in order to bo ef fective. See page 2. VOL.LXV NO. 156 Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1958 Complete UP) Wire Service , FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Clvl) C -Jini Arkansas Crisis Gains Three Pulitzer Prizes NEW YORK. (AP) Coverage of, editorial writing; and Associated the explosive integration crisis a ' Preys Correspondent Relman (Pat) Little Hock's Central High Schojl 1 Morin for his eyewitness account won three separate 1958 Pulitzer of nob violence outside the school Sept. 23. Morin, a Pulitzer Prize Winner in 1951, was one of two winners this year for national reporting. The other was Clark Mollenhoff of The Des Moines Register and Tri bune, who was cited for his investi gation of labor racketeering. In the case of The Arkansas Gaz ette, it marked the first time a new spaper captured the public ser vice award while one of its editorj prizes in Journalism yesterday. They went to the Little Rock, Ark.. Gazette for meritorious pub lic service; the newspaper's execu tive editor, Harry S. Ashmore, for Dental School Must Expand, States Dean power '.iv's who discussed dental in North Carolina at session of the North m:m-Mim-Caro- PINKlIt RST. N. C. t,P Expan-1 was winning tne editorial prize tor sum of t!v I NC School of Dentistry ine sanie news event, separate cn hy at least .V per cent of the pres-' lauded the .newspaper and its cut enrollment must bo accomplish-1 editor for objectivity in the face'of ed if the state Is to beuin to solve mounting public tension. in shortage of dentists. I Tnp 1958 fiction award won t0 j So staled Dr. John C. Hrauer. ' Ja'n(s AKec's Novel, "A Death in, .,;, of tin- Cniversity Dental tho Family." It deals with a south- ; ern family s reaction to the dcatni of a beloved father. It was complet-1 ed by Agee before his death in 19S5. i The annual drama award went to '"Look Homeward. Angel." Ketti Fr.ngs' adaption of the late Thomas I Wolfe's autobiographical novel of i the same name. It has been a Broa-. dway hit since its opening last Nov. i 28 i It was the 41st annual award of! prizes established by the late pub- j ILsher Joseph Pulitzer. They ar , made annually by the trustees of Ima Dental Society convention. i Hrauer said that 25 additional 1 dental students mut be admitted ! to the freshman class yearly and ! the dental hygiene program should be expanded by 60 students per (lass. Should tlu General Assembly ap propriate expansion funds in 1939. it still would bo 12 before the f.rst increase in enrollment could bo accomplished, said Hrauer. It would bo VM'fi. he said, before any (.1 the now students would graduate. if the dentist-population ratio were to be based on need for ( tal service the state would require eiiiht times more dentists than now , practicing." said Brauer. ! The picture is not so critical : when based on "effective de-J inands". revert bless a real short age of dentists exists within the state." he added. Thf siafo's l.i)!fl practicing den- ' tists in mid-l'J.Vl constituted a ra-' tio of one dentist to every 3,932 poisons. The national ratio was i.ne for every 1.900. 'f!"'V' . .V "- '.-.-if- 4,.-...., f ' . ' ;: j v. " . " - : ' , i r? - - K X y H Aldermen To Discuss Meters At Regular May 1 2 Meeting BEFORE IT RAINED Barbecue under Davie Poplar Sudden Squall Wets Y -Niters By CHARLIE SLOAN A Sudden rain squall scattered Y-Niters yesterday just as Dr. Ros- ! Columbia University on recommda-., sell Robbins turned into the home iticn of the advisory board on the stretch of his comments on witch Pulitzer Prizes. 1 craft. The mischievous elements abated , own "Hall of shame.' I Legal Group Finishes Up Activities Battle Senate of Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity completed its business and social calendar last week. On Thursday. April 24, the frat ernity initiated C. K. Brown, Bruce Johnson. Harold Waters, Bob Hjycs. Ed Murray and Billy Tuck er. The new members were then honored at a barbecue supper. To complete the week, the Sen ate celebrated ts 34th birthday at it annual Founders Day banquet at the Saddle Club in Durham. Nw officers for the coming year were installed. 3 1 A variety show, Ugly Man Con ttst and selection of Mr. Alumnus and Miss Alumna will be featured tomorrow when UNC seniors cele brate Senior Day. Senior Day activities will begin today when seniors arc given free admission to the Carolina Theatre fiom fV-ll P.m. when "Majorie Morningstar'' will be playing. Th only late permission coeds will get for Senior Day this year is midnight tomorrow. Originally the Dean of Women' UNC Receives Grant For Chemical Research The National Science Foundation compounds, with attention focused has announced the awarding of a on rhenium and osmium compo $17,200 research grant to UNC for unds. "Magnetichemical and Cryst a three-year study to be headed by ; allographic Studies of Transition Dr. J. Charles Morrow III. associ-1 Mental Compounds" is the projects ate professor of chemistry. ! formal title. The study aims at discovering Dr. Morrow explained that little more about the structure of metal is known about the rhenium com pound structure so tne study is I exploratory in nature. It has no i i : & : i . i : i : uireci practical application, ne said, and is in the category . of 'pure" research. j The three-year study will be an elaboration of earlier research car ried out by Dr. Morrow during the past two years, made possible by grants from the UNC Research Council. Magnetochemistry is one of Dr. Morrow's main research fields, which also include x-ray crystal lography and cryogenics, which is low temperature investigation. His studies have been supported also by a Research Corporation Grant. A native of Hendersonville, he attended Mars Hill CoM-ege and received his B.S. degree in chemis try at UNC. He completed his Ph. D. degree at Massachusetts Instit ute of Technology in 1949, and has been on the faculty at Chapel Hill since that time. Dr. Morrow is a member of the American Chemical Society, Amer ican Physical Society, Elisha Mitc hell Scientific Society, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. His publica tions include those in Physical Re view, Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of the American Chemical Society and Journal of Physical Chemistry. as suddenly as they desceneded, and Dr. Robbins lost only a few listeners for his concludsion. Starting slightly before 5:30 in spite of threatening skies, students taking part in the annual picnic queued up in two long lines for a barbecue dinner. Then they jock eyed for position on the benches with the swinging strains of Les Sutorius' brand of jazz for back ground music. Daryl Farrington told the group, which grew in numbers to more than 700, that the He was just wrapping up the case of a nymphomaniac nun when the showier struck. And when the rains came the re porters went. Wonder what they did with that nun. By PRINGLE PIPKIN The question of parking meters for Chapel Hill will come before the Board of Aldermen at their regular meeting in the Town Hall at 7:30 p.m., May 12. This meeting will be open, and it is probable that some action on the situation may be taken after some discussion. One open hearing has already been held April 30. The Board will also discuss the re-arrangement of the; parking spaces on Columbia Street The pro posed change calls for parallel parking and would result in some 80 fewer parking spaces. Speaking on the proposed altera tions in the parking situation, Stu dent Body President Don Furtado said, "On May twelfth the town Aldermen will reach a final deci sion on this proposal to eliminate angular parking along Columbia Street and initiate parking meters along Columbia and Franklin Streets." 'It is rather shocking for us to realize that this planning which in fluences students so directly was done without consulting a single student concerned with the prob lem." He said that the charge had been made that the students should have been at two recent open hearings; however, these meetings were an nounced only in the Chapel ifill Weekly and the News Leader. Furtado explained, "Someone has forgotten that very few students have access to either of these pa pers, and it is very strange that The' Daily Tar Heel, the largest newspaper in Chapel Hill, was not also notified. "However, the problem is now upon us and the questions arises as to what can be done. (See METERS, Page 3) Library Science School Adopts Honor Society Soviet Student Editors Plan June Visit In Area Six Soviet student editors will be program ' in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill would be- moved to -Memorial Halt area from epproximaely June 3-6- DR. MORROW . . to head study if and when the rains came. When Dr. Robbins. a Siamese cat with a blue ribbon around its neck curled in his arm, got up to speak he commented that the weather was proof of the fiction of witchcarft said he'd been working a long time for a nice day. But the rains did come, or at least a capricious little squall that could be seen advancing across the campus toward the bermuda and sportshirt clad crowd. Iefore the heavens dropped in on the affair Dr. Robbins was out lining the development of belief in witches from a long-ago Papal Bull setting up the standards for broom riders of all time. Apologizing for bringing up such things in an after dinner speech, he described the treatment of witches in the middle ages in several unhappy instances, naming three educated men from different periods and places whose persecu tion of witches place them in his Their stay here will be part of a visit to the United States from May 15 to June 14. It will be sponsored by the United States National Stu dent Association. Negotiations late in 1957 between the United States and Russia led to an agreement to exchange de legations of student editors from the two countries. The USNSA group visited Russh and completed negotiations with the Committee of Youth Oraniza tions there regarding the Soviet editors who will visit the United. States. The program for the editors is designed to stress contacts with the student side of American cul ture, with visits to" clases, lectures, receptions, and press and radio tours included. National "studuent Association officials also urged local NSA groups to introduce the Russian ed itors to more general aspects of United States life. These would in clude local government, local in dustry, picnics, theatres and other local points of . interest. Nbt only will the Soviets be able to observe the workings of the local press, radio and TV, but arangements will probably be made for them to ex press their views through these facilities. University Party To Elect Officers The University Party will meet tonight at 7:15 in Roland Parker Lounges I and II. Election of officers and a dis cussion of the Chapel Hill traffic problem are slated for the meeting. Syd Shuford, UP chairman, has urged all UP members to attend the meeting. The UNC School of Library Sci ence adopted the international lib rary science honor society. Beta Phi Mu, Saturday. ""Forty-five members were initiat ed into the Epsilon Chapter. These included 14 students and 31 alumni. A group of leading librarians and library educators founded the Beta Phi Mu at the University of Illinois in 1943. The Carolina Chapter is the fra ternity's fifth. Others are at the University of Illinois, UCLA, Florida State University, and the College of Science and Technology in Manchester, England. The two-fold purpose of the fra ternity is to recognize the academic achievement in library science and to sponsor the professional and scholarly projects which encourage high scholastic attainment,' the im provement of teaching, and the development of better educational institutions for professional train ing. - l New members who are currently working for a master's degree in library science are Kathleen H. Cheape, Greensboro, Ala.; Aylene E. Cooke, Durham; Mildred H. Far row, Guilford College; Walter Gray, Wilson; Jeanne P. Helstrom, Salem, Va.; Evelyn M. Kocher, Radford. Va.; Elaine Landsdell, Elberon, N.J. Mary Frances Morris, Durham; Adriana P. Orr, Chapel Hill; Dew ey F. Pruett, Jr., Birmingham, Ala.; Bobbie Newman Redding. Greensboro; Philip D. Shore, Pilot Mountain; Frances V. Thackston. Durham and Audrey B. Zablocki, Chapel Hill. New alumni members are Mar garet Allman, Chapel Hill; Edith E. Averitt. Chapel Hill; Anne E. Andrews, Burlington; Jane C. Bahnsen, Chapel Hill; Hazel Baity, Raleigh: Olin V. Cook, Chapel Hill; Audrey J. Cushman, Durham; Mary E. Darst, Durham. Grace B. Farrior, Greensboro; Josephine B. Floyd, Chapel Hill; Jean Freeman, Chapel Hill; Elea nor S. Godfrey, Chapel Hill; Mil dred C. Herring, Greensboro; Char les C. Hopkins. Chapel Hill; Wil liam H. Johnson, Chapel Hill Mar jc.rie W. Lindsay. Raleigh, R. McGalliard. Raleigh; Pattie B. Mclntrye.Chapel Hill;Robert A. Miller. Chapel Hill; Gay B. Moore. Chapel Hill; Katherine B. Mouzon, Chapel Hill; Davora E. Neilsen, Raleigh; Emma W. Phol. Raleigh; Gay H. Spivey, Guilford College. Margaret S. Tillett, Durham; Vir. ginia Y. Wells, Chapel Hill; Tera B. White, Chapel Hill; Lena Mae Williams, Chapel Hill and Mary Jane Wing, Atlanta, Ga. Pogo Creator To Be Presented This Thursday Walt Kelly, creator of the Pogo comic strip, will speak at the Caro lina Forum Thursday at 8 p.m. in ! Hill Hall. Kelly will base his talk on a recent 90-day, round-the-world trip in which he visited some of the world's troubled spots, addressed cultural groups,' talked with the man-in-the street and gathered ma terial for a new book. Theme of his lecture will be an exploration of the title of his forthcoming book, "Not So Square a World" a phrase that occurred to him as the result of his findings during Pogo's G. S. Fizzickle Year. , An alternate theme of his speech is "80 Days Around the Corner." Kelly's world-girdling trip, his second in two years, included visits to England, France, Germany, Au stria, Italy, Lebanon, Iran, India, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Aust-. ralia, Tasmania, New Zealand and the Fiji and Hawaiian IsUnds. In previous trips he had visited Ire land, Scotland and Syria. Kelly has made over 200 speech es on college campuses. He ' is a former two-term president of the National Cartoonists Society and a winner of the coveted "Car toonist of the Year" award. Playmakers Pondering: And If There Be Rain? Tomorrow Is Big Day For Entire Senior Class GM SLATE Th following aetlvitit havo bten schtdultd for today at Graham Memorial: I Honor Council, 9-11 p.m., Grail Room; Orltntation Coun cil, 4:30-4 p.m., Crall Room; Fi nance Committtt, 4-4 p.m., Ro Und Parlctr Loungt I; IDC Hon or Soclaty, 4-S p m., Woodhou$a Conftrtnca Room; Unlveraity Party, 7-10 p.m., Roland Parktr Lounga I and II; Woman'f Orien tation Council, 7-11 p.m., Coun cil Room; Women's Residence Council, 6:45 9 p.m.. Wood houe Conference Reom; A.P.O., 7-9 p.m.. Rendezvous Room. office and the Senior Day commit tee had arranged for two late nights, but when the late free flick fell through, so did the extra hours of freedom. Seniors will be excused from all classes tomorrow. The day's activi ties will begin with a senior class meeting at 10 a.m. in Memorial Hall. . Candidates for Mr. Alumnus and Miss Alumna, to be chosen at this meeting, are Sonny Evans, George Ragsdale, Jerry Oppenheimer, Bill Redding and John Kerr, and Kit Whitehurst, Mary Jane Fisher. Julia Ann Crater and Dot Pressley. .These two awards are given each year to the senior man and women most representative of the class. The winners will be presented their awards at the picnic later that af ternoon. , From 3:30-12 p. m. the seniors will have a picnic at the Patio. In case of rain the picnic will be held Thursday. Activities will include a Softball game, a casino run by Gordon Darnell and Faye Smith, a chipping contest, entertainment by Nick Kearn's Combo and a variety show. Entrants in the variety show in (See SENIORS, Page 3) String Concert Tonight Opens 57-58 Season The University Siring Quartet jit is shorter and lighter than the Canterhurians Select Easley Leader Pro Tern The steering committee of the Episcopal Student Congregation el ected Robert Easley to preside over Canterbury Club in pace of William Aener who resigned as president. Easley, from Murphy, is a mem ber of Alpha Phi Omega, the U.N.C Cardboard, pledge of Delta Upsi lon fraternity, and current head of the Student Acolytes' Guild of the Episcopal Student Congregation. He also an official Lay Reader and head of St. Dunstons Guild at the Chapel of the Cross. The steering committee is rest ructuring Canterbury. Club for more effective resudlts for the stu dents in the fall. In November new Canterbury Club of f iciers will be elected and the steering com- i miftee will then be abolished. wil present its first program -A the 1957-58 season in Hill Music Hall on tonight at 8 o'clock, play ing works of Beethdven, Barber, Schubert and Haydn. The quartet members, violinists Edgar Alden and Jean Heard, viol ist Dorothy Alden, and 'cellist Mary Gray Clarke, have played together since 1950. Dr. Alden is a member of the faculty in the Department of Music at the University where he teaches violin, harmony and graduate courses in musicology, and is also associate conductor of the' Univer sity Symphony Orchestra. Both he and Mrs. Alden have held urst chair positions in the North Caro lina Symphony and have performed throughout North Carolina' assolo ists and in various chamber groups. Mrs. Heard is a graduate of the Julliard School of Music and has studied with Mischa Mischakoff. Miss Clarke, first 'cellist with the University Symphony, is a gra duate assistant in the Music Depa rtment and holds a master's de gree from the Manhatten School of Music. The Tuesday evening recital will begin with Beethoven's quartets. great quartets just preceding it. The second work of the evening wil be the "String Quartet," Op. 11, of Samuel Barber. The comp oser, whose opera "Vanessa" was premiered at the Metropolitan Opera House in Jamiary of this year, wrote the quartet in 1936. The middle movement, in an orchestr al arrangement labelad "Adagio for Strings," has been played by many symphony orchestras throu ghout the world.. Following intermission the quar tet will perform the single com plete movement of an unfinished Schubert quartet in C Minor. It is not known why the work was not completed, for it is neither the last quartet composition of Schubert nor is it inferior to the three quar tets which came after it. The pro gram wil be concluded with the playing of Haydn's "Quartet in G Major," Op. 54, No. 1. This work is typical of the composer's quar tets, being a charming and humor ous work with many surprises for the listener. The concert is Number 18 of the current Tuesday Evening Series sponsored by the UNC Department of Music, and is open to the public at no admission charge. "Rain, rain, go away . . . " is the constant chant of The Caro lina Playmakers at this season of the year as they prepare for their final production. Each year The Playmakers move out-of-doors for a show in their Forest Theatre. Turning to the clas sics, this year's outdoor, production is Shakespeare's "The Comedy of Errors." scheduled for May 9-11 at 8:30 p. m. Interpreting the show as a tale to be told by a band of strolling players, the actors take their cues from the Harlequinade of the 16th Century. Clad in raincoats and sporting umbrellas for rainy re hearsal periods, the players will don modifications of early Harle quin costumes during the run of the show. Richard Newdick. graduate as sistant in costuming with The Play makers, has done extensive re search into the period in order to costume the production. The execu tion of his designs will form a part of his Master's Thesis in dramatic art. Settings for the play are also be ing done by a graduate student, Albert C. Gordon, of Greensboro. Lighting for Gordon's unit set is being designed by Ed Madden. Outdoor drama is a familiar med ium for most of the Playmakers cast. John Whitty, who plays Anti pholus of Syracuse; Taylor Wil liams, Antipholus of Ephesus; Amanda .Meiggs, Adriana; Doris Berry, Aemilia; Jack Jackson, Soli nus and Harvey Knox, the mer chant, have all been seen in the summer show, "Unto These Hills," at Cherokee. John Sneden, who plays Dromio of Ephesus, and Chuck Tomlinson, Balthazar, are former members of the cast of "The Lost Colony" at Manteo. f Darwin Solomon, cast as Dromio of Syracuse, has appeared in "Horn In The West" in Boone. There will be no reserved seats for this production. Tickets, at $1.50, will be on sale at The Forest Theatre on performance evenings only. This is a season ticket attraction. Summer Positions Open In Student Government Student Body President Don Fur tado announced Monday that 23 openings are available for summer school student government officials. The list includes acting president, acting secretary-treasurer, seven members to the summer school government board, seven women to the Women's Council and seven men to the Men's Council. Alumni Drive Co-Chairmen Are Announced Frank BJack and Jerry Oppen heimer have been appointed chair men of the Alumni Drive. George Ragsdale, senior class president made the announcement Monday. Ragsdale said, "It is with plea sure that I am able to announce the appointment df Frank Black and Jerry Oppenheimer as chair men of the Alumni Drive. They are both exremely capable persons and were are fortunate to have them give their efforts to this most im portant work." Assisting the co-chairmen are Sandy, Sanders Ann Morgan, Punk in Coe and-Tom Walters who will work in the dorms, sororities and fraterities. The purpose of the drive is to enroll every senior as a member of the Alumni Association. The University depends upon its alumni and grows largely through alumni efforts. Ragsdale concluded with "I urge all senior men and women to join the Alumni , Association and to thereby retain his connection with Chapel Hill and with the Univer sity." The drive will begin tomorrcw and-last one week. Grail Ring Sale The Order of the Grail will spon sor a class ring sale Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Y-Court, Lee Blackwell, Balfour Company representatives, will be there to take orders for rings. IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Misses Mary Dance, Jenny Graham and Joyce Woodard ard Ralph Brown, Theodore Edlick, Joseph Jeanette.