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Bet U10 c&?pai mil, u.c. APR 2 ') 1-n 'A WEATHER '1rar ami lair. High. 70s. HUNGARY . . . seven more bite the dust, set page 2. T1H y VOLUME LXVM, NO. ISO Complete UF Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE ;rii((ITSilf Miff? 1 sin " urn t .ir m 'i & i IFC Names Date For Rush; 2nd Semester Date Also Set 1H A. l'KINC;i.F. PIPKIN Tin- Inf'rfr;iN'rn:ty Council sit tt:;t.i!;r d.ito for fall ruMi and .ct i!; . snnrv.l.irv fonu;l rush ncriod -'f tlx- t.-:nnir! of the second M-!iiitrr. MomKiy niht at a special T1k primnry f.ill ruh period will n'n Sept. 27 an J will ho over an-iin l Oct 2 The exact date of ! rin.tl d.iy of fall rush will he lt trrnvn. 1 at the next meeting i'V.vr VC rnnnhers hac had a thanee to cii-cu.s the matter in their ( ! aptrr meet ;n 4 V 'H;e secondary form d rush peri)d is to bf eon I, u ted on the same basis as the fall ruh periol ami will last three days No .st'ident inchi 1; n; tranfTs wi!l ho ah!e to pledge a fr.(terr:ty until hr has gone through i e f.irmal rash. Th secondary nidi period is ex jetted t zwv those freshman uha ! no' pledge in th f a!l a bettor (hance to palr -,!ra ternity later than preser.My exists. Tho IPC SdiolarOup Committee. ( h. tired by I'.t n Ceer Keyes, is pro sn'!y working en rules to improve fr.-derrity sc holarship. The f.rst propcs.il from the cm mi:tee state, that "any .student p!t1i;n a fraternity who does not make a C average by the end of Uo semesters will bo disaffiliated trom his fraternity until he has made .". T average." Disaffiliation means that "the stu d( nt w ill note at his meals at the fraternity, live at tlv fraternity, pay any fraternity bills, participate in intramtirals for the fraternity, or have any active part whatsoever in the fraternity." This measure will in no way ef fect the present "bull pledges." Its enforcement will be centrally administered. given to a non-fraternity man, was awarded to freshman Shelton Peck of Durham. The scholarship is worth $."(K) per year for four years. Three other men presently hold this scholarship; $2,000 each year is given by 24 social the fraternities. The scholarship is a memorial to Andrew Bershak and was instituted in 193.1. The basis of .selection is high schol- This proposal will be discussed at , astic rank, character, qualities of the IFC meeting after the chapters ! leadership and financal need. have had a chancct o discuss it. Ad ditional rules are also expected to j be presented by the Scholarship , G-spoke briefly to the IFC Mon Committoe. I day concerning some of the prob- The Andrew Bershak Scholarship, i lems of the campus. Edwards And Brown Win Tight Races Dan Brown (SP) and Phil Edwards (IND) came out on top in the re election for the two 1-year scats of the Legislature from Dorm Men's III it was announced late last night. Brown received 105 votes and Ed wards 123. They defeated Roy Goodman (SP) (87 votes), Vince Mulier (UP) 71 votes) and Ronnie Millican (UP) (53 votes). Student Body President Charles Final Issue Of Bulletin PublishedByMedSch. The NT Sc hool of Medicine is : School of Medicine in cooperation now distributing the final issue I with the Whitehead Medical Socie of this s h o! year of the Bulletin, ity and the Medical Foundation of which is published four times an-i North Carolina. nually. This issue carries individual pho jtographs of each student who will receive an M D. degree next month. ;A brief wntoup appears with each .photograph telling where the stu ident will intern and giving other information concerning the stu dents. i The Bulletin is published by the Al umni Activity Hits Peak Af tiity among UN'C alumni groups h;t a huh peak last week w4th met tings in 10 communities in in slates. Oi.inei lUtr Witli.tm Fl. Ayrtn-k and .V-imni Secretary .1. Maryon Saun- fairs. spoke at alumni gatherings in Roanoke, V'a . on Tuesday and in Kings port, Tenn., on Thursday. Tom Bost Jr., Kdtfar Thomas, Hoy Hclstrn. arxJ Frank McOuirc wore guests at an alumni gathering on Winners in the previous race were Dan Brown and Roy Goodman. The Student Council called for the re-election after hearing of a case involving an infraction of the Elec tion Law. The turning point of Phil Edward's win came in Winston Dorm. Out of 105 possible votes in this dorm, 83 were cast in Edwards' favor. c ooper Ready To Meet To Negotiate Strike !er. attended meetings of alumni in 'Wednesday night at Danville, Va. On Tuesday night Dean Alexander lfard of the Graduate School and I'rof. Lawrence Slifkin of the Phy sics Department attended an alumni gathering at Clinton. On Sunday afternoon in Atlanta, ti e monthly met tin? of Washington, : UNC alumni there held a reception Jacksonville, St, Petersburg and T. mpa. Fl i . last Tuesday and Wed nesday evenings wi'h large attend art o at each. President Wi'.lnm Frilay was lamhcon speaker last Monday at D C . alumni ! Vice Presj 1, nt W. D. Carmichacl Jr. and Charles M. Shaffer, director l development, were at the alumni meetings in Chattanooga and Nash ville. Tenn . on Tuesday and Wed resday nighty. at the homo of Ernest H. Abernethy honoring students from that area vho will be freshmen here in Sep tember. Meetings scheduled to be held this week include the annual Alumni As sembly hero on Tuesday, and group Dr. II. nry T. Chirk dr.. adminis- meetings on Wednesday in Greens trator of the Division of Health Af-! boro and Southern Pines. In the current issue, Dr. W. Recce Berryhill discusses the Ad visory Budget Commission's recom mendations for the next biennium and the effect on the University and the UNC Medical Center. Another item of interest contain ed in the publication is that of all North Carolinians entering medi cal schools in this state last year, over one-half of them entered the UNC School of Medicine. Dr. Claude L. Yarbro. instructor in biochemistry and nutrition, has contributed an article on the im portance of maintaining a strong teaching program for the training of nOn-medical students, but teach ing that is related to the field of medicine. Another article deals with new addition in the children's sec tion of N. C. Memorial Hospital. Mrs School of Nursing an article on Dr. Thomas Beeman cf Union County. Dr. Beeman d parted from the usual treatmcn of fever in his day. 1833-1903, and urged his patients to eat. Engraved on his tombstone is "I Fed Fever." Articles concerning two of the alumni are contained in this issue. These are Dr. T. J. Taylor Roanoke Rapids and Dr. David L. Pressly of Statesville. Articles on two faculty members also are published These concern Dr. Loren G. MacKinney nad Dr. John H. Schwab. 3 J i -fV A I l Ik IIENDERSON, N. C. April 28 UR President John D. Cooper of the Harriet-Henderson Cotton Mills said Tuesday, "I don't know what we could negotiate, but I'll meet with them in an effort to find out." Cooper said this when asked for comment on a plea from Gov. Hod ges for Union and Management to resume negotiations for a settle ment of the 25-week-old strike which erupted into large scale violence last week. Hodges sent wires to Cooper and Boyd Payton, Carolinas director of the Textile Workers Union of Amer ica, after Cooper had notified the Governor he was delaying the start of a third shift. Authorities had feared start of the third shift which had been scheduled for Wednesday night would spark further violence. Officers reported, meanwhile, that p.m. shift chance. Hodges told Cooper he was asking Federal Mediator Yates Heafner to "ask parties to get together to reach agreement of issue of remain ing jobs." The Governor wired Payton he hoped "you will take every possi ble step to resolve differences before third shift begins. Meanwhile, State things were quiet on the picket lines j will use a'u efforts to stop violence and it expects the full cooperation of all parties." Payton was not im- at the mills two plants at the 7 a.m. opening Tuesday and at the 3 Sigma Chi Derby Held Tomorrow In Stadium J Louise Fletcher Aspiring Actress Is "Discovered" For the coeds entered in the se- cret event of the Sigma Chi Derby on Thursday, there won't be any live animals involved. So, no more rid ng donkeys or milking goats as in past derbies. The 15th Annual Derby sponsored by Sigma Chi fraternity will fea ture six "events" in Kenan Stad ium at 2:30 p m. Thursday, pre ceded by a parade at 2 p.m. in downtown Chapel Hill. After the Derby, another contest with coeds tossing silver dollars will be held at the rock wall across from Kemp's, who is sponsoring this event. In addition to thevar ious contests. doir prizes will be given in Kenan Stadium. No admission will be charged. The events of the Derby will in dude a Grand National relay race, a hit the Geek contest, race to the flesh, skit contest and the Miss th i mi J By RONALD CABOT The meteoric rise of former UNC Playmaker Louise Fletcher should rekindle the ambition of any pre sently aspiring college actress. . Cherry Parker of the UN'V J ....w 1 of Nursing is the author of in ? a drama major She star- red in I'laymaKer productions ine Rainmaker," "Bridgadoon" and "Showboat." In 1956, she received the Mask Award. Perhaps if she had not been spotted by director John Franken heimer, she would still be a medi cal secretary. Because, when she left Carolina in June of 1957 she had no idea that she could ever j succeed as an actress and, being a practical and thoughtful young woman, turned her ambition into it t i a more rcasoname cnannei . But the spotlight found her when Frankenheimer saw her in a bit part on a Playhouse 90 pre sentation. She had got the part through an actor friend, Lee Phil lips. Frankenheimer explained: "She caught my interest immediately. She has a certain magnetism which . v- V somehow shines out in a crowd." Now Miss Fletcher has had parts in such TV shows as "Yahcy Der ringer," "Bat Masterson," "Law man" and "Maverick." One producer described her as "the most instinctive actress I've seen in 25 years." Miss Fletcher explained this "quality" in a recent issue of TV Guide as the result of being brought up by deaf parents who taught her how much could be said without the use of words. "And I've found that if I'm think ing the right thoughts the scene usually comes out right." Miss Fletcher said that what a Derson thinks is expi-essed more sharply through facial expression than by actual words. The young TV actress is a slim, pensive and intelligent girl with large, expressive eyes and a face which can portary all degrees on the emotional scale ranging from agony to ecstasy. It wiil be interesting to follow the career of another University graduate who "made good." Modern Venus contest. Each contest, except for Miss Mod ern Venus, will be judged by Sigma Chis. The Miss Modern Venus con test will be judged by Dean Smith, basketballco ach; Joe Augcstine of Stevens-Shepherd and Claude George of the School of Business Adminis tration. . For the -winner of the Miss Modern Venus contest, a bathing suit and trophy will be presented her. The winner of Kemp's silver dollar throwing contest will get 10 free long playing record albums for her sorority, ' do-m floor or Chapel Hill Club. The dollar contest champion will also win 10 gallons of ice cream from the Dairy Bar for her date. The 15th Annual Derby here is being coordinated by Sigma Chis Jack Thompson and Kent Walker. Master of ceremonies during the Derby wiil be Fred Swearingen. Sig ma Chi president is Dennis McCoy. mediately available for comment. Cooper said he had been in con tact with Heafner since receiving the wire. He added that he would not be able to participate in negoti ations Wednesday because of a death in the family but would be available Thursday. He said he hopes to announce by Friday when he will begin the third shift which he postponed at the request of the Governor and Henderson Mayor Carroll Singleton. Hodges last week asked Cooper (See HENDERSON, Page 3) Pharmacy School Elect In the recent Pharmacy School elections, new officers for 1959-19G0 included: Whit Moose, president; Jim Hickmon, vice president, and Nancy Faison, secretary treasurer. Election results for the student branches NCPA-APha were: Char les Himes, president; Hugh Clark, vice president; Helen Dunlap, sec retary; Ben Daughtry, treasurer; Jack Horn, assistant to the presi dent, and Jim Sheets, executive i committee member. Freshman Hank Patterson Is Head Of Univeristy Party By JOSIE MORRIS J THE WEAKER SEX? That's Susi Cordn in tht center proving that she can out do Bill Monell and Wally Graham in the noble art of puihupi in Sound and Fury's 1959 production, "Oh, Hellas!", opening Friday and continuing through Saturday in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Tickets are currently on sale for 50c at Y-Court and Graham Memorial.., , Battle Of Sexes To Be Set In Sound And Fury's "Oh Hellas' Hank Patterson was elected chairman of the University Party last night by a vote of acclamation. In accepting this post Patterson announced that certain offices ile clerk chairman of the mem bership committee and four other members of the executive board are open and that anyone interest ed in these positions should con tact him at the Phi Gamma Delta House. "The time of interviews will be announced later," he said. Pope Shuford was elected vice- chairman, also by acclamation. In the race for secretary, Sharon Sul- The b.tttl; royal between M-xes hikes place Friday and Sat ii'd.iy night when Sound and Fury's podudion of "Oh, Hellas!" appears in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m., Th .script has already been writ ten by Lew Hardee and Carl Brid M rs. and the stage has been set by producer Al Salley, the warriors hue been deployed by director Joel I'h ishman, and the battle is about t start. The story follows much of the line of Aristopi banes' comic drama" Ly- ist rata." however the added music, the dancing, and modern dialogue tend to bring interest instead of tedium. According to the story, the Athen ian men seem to like war better than they like sex, and the beginning of the play announces war with Sparta over the most minor of pre texts. All the men go off to war, and the women hand together with a plot to try to get their men back. According to the plot, all the wom en are to give up all love making. The play stars Jane Newsom, Al Miller, Nancy Aubrey, Bill Monell, Susie Cordcn and Frank Beaver in the lead roles. in... Who wins the battle, Athens or Sparta? Who wins the battle, the men or the women? Do the women really give up all love making? The answers can be had by see ing "Oh Hellas!" Tickets are cur rently on sale at Graham Memorial and Y-Court. The price of admis sion for the two hour production is i 50 cents. Mclver Leads Coed Dorms In Scholastic Average Mclver led all other coed dorms and the Chapel Hill club (made up of town girls) with a scholastic average of 1.638 for the fall semester. Other averages released by Ray mond Strong of the Central Re cords office include the following: Carr Dormitory, 1.581; Kenan (based on grades of 14 undergrad uate coeds), 1.578; Chapel Hill Club, 1.514; Alderman, 1.512; Whitehead, 1.464; Smith, 1.399, and Spencer, 1.362. livan topped Virginia Vann by a 14 5 vote. Bob Sevier was elected treasur er by acclamation and Jasper Rey nolds won over Louis Starr by a 16-3 count for sergeant-at-arms. Patterson suceeds John Minter in the chairmanship post. The newly-elected chairman, a rising sophomore from Manhasset, New York, stressed that the pur pose of this great institution of the right of expression, initiative and self government." Patterson is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, past chair man of the Elections Board and was on the University Party Exe cutive Board. In other business Bob Sevier made a resolution that no cam paign expenses were paid by the party, but by tne individual can didates. Seniors! It's Next Week, INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary Tuesday included: Djrothy Pitman, Thomas Rodgers, Harry' Wells, Eddie Roberts, Wil liam Davis, Charles Hines, Hugh Causey, Hilary Daugherty, Janie Wright, Lewis Hawley, Dewey Shef field, William Smith, Franklin Jones, Rufus Russell and Wesley Smith-man, ji'! - : i sji, ? - . J k Hi: r ; ' 4 . - It'K hi t ? i : H - i - vs- I 1 ... -! ' ii... ' w - : !;;!! " - - -? - - I . .. I 'ri-.JJiiii.ini'ii mi .n i riiirin-i-THinKiir'i.i.niiKNii ,r i, ( i iniTitilt,?i"iii."" ' mrm -r-i'r-fintimi i ' DON'T ARGUE! Lloyd Borstlemann and Fred Sutton stem to be arguing with an imaginary character, but they are only enacting a scene from the forthcoming Playmakers presentation of "Inherit the Wind," scheduled to appear in the Forest Theater (May 7-9th) to close their forty-first season here at Carolina. Playmakers With Forest The Carolina Playmakers will close their forty-first season with an outdoor production of the recent Broadway success "Inherit the Wind." The show is scheduled for May 7-9 at 8:30 p.m. in The Forest Theatre. "Inherit the Wind" has its genesis in the events of the famous Scopes trial of 1925, with Clarence Darrow for the defense and William Jen nings Bryan for the prosecution. In the leading roies of Henry Drummond (Darrow) and Matthew Harrison Brady (Bryan) are Lloyd Borstlemann and Fred Sitton. Borstlemann, assistant professor of psychology at Duke University, is a veteran playmaker, having ap peared with the Durham Theatre To Close 41st Season Theater Production Guild; the Des Moines, Iowa, Com-1 munity Playhouse; and college theatres at the University of Cali fornia, U.C.L.A. and UNC. His roles for the Playmakers have included Stephano in "The Tempest." Wang in "The Good Woman of Setzuan" and Sam Leeson in "Monkey in the Moon." Sitton, a licentiate student in dramatic art, Is rormer director of the Myers Park High School Lime lighters of Charlotte. His last as signment with the Playmakers was the direction of the fourth major production, "Mrs. McThing." Sitton served as technical direc tor for the Playmakers last summer, designing sets ana costumes for "Sa- "Oklahoma!" as Cord Elam. Tickets for "Inherit the Wind" will be available at the Forest Theatre bcx office on performance evenings only. All seats are $1.50. G. M. SLATE 7-9 pm., Grail; Bridge Lessons, brina Fair." He appeared last in" p.m., Rendezvous. Activities in Graham Memorial to day include: Senior Day Publicity Committee. 2 3 p-m., Woodhouse; Publications Bd., 2-5 p.m.. Grail; Senior Class Nom. Committee, 3-6 p.m.. Wood house; Executive Bd., 4-6 p.m., Roland Parker 1; Pan Hell. 5-6 p.m.. Grail; Stray Greeks, 7-8 p.m.. Wood house; Carolina Women's Council. 9
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 29, 1959, edition 1
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