i cow R. W. C. saddles up and rides again. See p. 2. WEATHER Continued hot with high. Yesterday's hij 91; low, 71. VOLUME 16 NUMBER 9 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, JULY 10 1953 FOUR PAGES TODA let The Good Times Roll' Motif For Barefoot Ball Today & Night The theme is "Let the Good Times Roll" and the date is to day. This afternoon at 3'oclock the Chapel Hill Cotillion Club will give its "Barefoot Ball" at Ho-gan's-by-the-lake. All are invit ed and admission is by pro gram. Programs may be bought at the gate or from any of the marshals for 75 cents. Beating out some crazy tunes will be Harold Nail and His Wild Men. ormal attire will be walking shorts and bare feet. Grand Marshal for the occa sion is Steve Trimble of Phi Delta Theta. The day's grand prize will go to the individual who can solve the riddle of BYOL. Municipal Executives' Meeting Opens Here Today For 2 Days The fifth annual Municipal Executives Conference opened here to day at 3 o'clock. It will be a two-day meeting. Hubert Henderson, recreation director at Thomasville, president of the Municipal Division of the North Carolina Recreation Society, is program chairman. The Univer sity Extension Division's Bureau of Recreation, headed by Dr. Harold D. Meyer, will be host to the group. The conference will be featured by panel discussions. At the open ing session this afternoon "Plann ing and Evaluation" will be the topic with William T. Robertson, Morganton, as chairman. Other "participants will be Warren. Car roll, Greenville, Walter Parker, Hickory, and John Tate, Newton. "Directors Problems" will be discussed tonight with Glenn Ban nerman, Whiteville, serving as chairman and Augusta Barnett, Asheville, participating. Selwyn Orcutt, Fayetteville, will serve as chairman of a discussion of "Certification" tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. Bill Faxy, Kinston, and Robert Hartley, Shel by, will assist him. General topics will be discussed by chairman J. Willis Nealy, Gastonia, Betty Ga briel, Lincolnton, and Joe David son, Burlington. At 10 o' clock tomorrow morn ing meeting of the directors of the State Recreation Society will be held. All sessions will be in the Naval Armory. Nursing, Public Health Students To Be Honored Students in ttie Nursing School and School of Public Health will be guests of the Planetarium Mon day night for its new show, "Trip to the Moon." After the movie they will be feted at a reception in Graham Memorial's Rendezvous Room. The Planetarium regularly in vites different campus groups to showings of each new presenta tion. Manager Anthony Jenzano will conduct the group on a tour of the facilities. Other officials in the mena gerie are assistant marshalls Wood Smethurst of Alpha Tau Omega and Bill Hill of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Marshals in absentia are Roger Kingsbury, Sonny Hood, Biff Roberts, Slick McCIegna ham, Brooke Lawson and Don Charmichael. Marshals are John Baldridge, Tom Ruffin, Jim Peerson, Wal ton Joyner, Fred Mewhinney, Joe O'Brien, E. C. Smith, Mort Cooper, Put Davis, Bob Page, Footsie Wallace and John Fraz ier. Honorary sergeants with arms will be Jack Marcus and Nose Jones. Opens Monday Conference On Insurance Set For University A two-week Institute For Ad vanced Life Underwriting will open at the University Monday continuing through July 24. This is the second annual institute of this type. . It is sponsored by the North Carolina Association of Life Un derwriters and the University. The first week, July 13-17, will be devoted to discussions of for mula programming and timely sales ideas and the second week, 20-24, will be devoted to busi ness insurance, taxes and estate planning. A. R. (Bert) Jaqua, director, Institute of Insurance Marketing, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, will serve as direc tor of the institute. Other fac ulty members will be Clarence R. Darling and Sam G. Shackelford, both of Southern Methodist Uni versity. They will be assisted by guest lecturers including attorney's trust officers and selected Life Un derwriters. Attendance is . limited to full time representatives of legal re serve life insurance companies. Those attending the first week of the institute must have had at least one year of successful ex prienco and those attending the second week must have had at least two years of successful experience. W SEEN Can Dorm coed explaining her lateness with: "He told me it was o. k. to stay out past the curfew if I was with someone." It really happened. Male trio practicing golf driv ing in late afternoon on lawn in front of geography building. Economics instructor and wife wistfully comparing gov ernment teaching salaries list ed in Post Office with that he brings home from the Universi ty. Dance Planned For Graduates Tomorrow At 8 , Graduate students and their friends are invited to the Rendez- ous Room of Graham Memorial tomorrow night for the first gra duate dance of the Summer Session Dancing will began at 8 o'clock and last until 11:30 p.m. The Summer Activities Coun cil is sponsoring and financing the dance. Chairman Annie Tom So well of Carr Dormitory said that the dance is informal and every one is welcome, with or without a date. This is the first social gather ing of graduate students this ses sion and all of graduate age are invited whether enrolled in the Graduate School or not. Margie Ballard, Duncan Brackin, and Sam Duncan are in charge of publicity. .. Phi Delta Kappa Education Frat At UNC Initiates Twenty-Four Twenty - four educators have been initiated into Beta Theta chap ter of Phi Delta Kappa, national educational fraternity here. The initiation ceremonies were followed by a banquet at Lenoir Hall in honor of the new members at rw--1 -ft"-iTT MM iaiiii.i.iia.wtttvWUiiiiri.Avoyi JIMMY WALLACE, who last week assumed the duties of di rector of Graham Memorial. Wallace will have his first meet ing since taking over with the CM board of directors, Tuesday at 3 p.m. in the Grail Room. ,--.-- 4 LANIER DAVIS Swim, Dance Are Tonight The' campus' last swimming party for this session will be held tonight in Kessing outdoor pool at the gym. The aquatic end of it will last from 7:30 to & and square danc ing will beheld afterward in the Y Court until about 1J o'clock. Max Ballinger will do the calling. Refreshments, presided over by Watermelon Queen Mase Chapin, will be served. It's all free and all sponored by the Summer Activities Council. Music will come from folk tuner Bob Cole and his aggregation, namely E. J. Padgett, Ed Nor wood and Pete Yarnell. which Dean Thomas H. Carroll of the School of Business Adminis tration was guest speaker. Those initiated were William L. Anderson Jr., assistant principal, Charlotte Technical High School; Lawrence H. Arney, teacher, Hud son Schools; Harold A. Bentley Jr.,graduate student, UNC; Ralph A. Bostian, teacher, Granite Quarry; Moses Bridges Jr., assi H. Carriker, teacher, Chapel Hill stant principal, Lewisville; Heath Schools; Charles N. Clark, princi pal, Shepherds School, Mooresville: Johnnie T. Colones, teacher and coach, Eli Whitney School, Ala mance County. A. C. Dawson Jr., superinten dent of schools, Southern Pines; R. B. Gordon, district principal, Nash County; Harold M. Guyot, principal, William R. Davie School, (See INITIATES, page 2) Community Sing Sunday Nighi Will Be Led By Lanier Davis Tom Carroll Emcees Program; To Ba Held At 8 In Front Of 6M Another Community. Sing i planned for Sunday night at 1 o'clock in front of Graham Me morial. . " . ' ' . Song leader and soloist will be Lanier Davis, a Carolina gradu ate of 1950 and presently working with the Admissions Office. While here Davis a member of the Glee Club, in the Playmakers, a cheer leader, a member of th "Harmon eers" and the "Belltones." - In December, 1951 he joined the road show of "South Pacific" as a member of the cast. He will leave the employment of the Univer sity this month to return to New York and the theatre. Ann Beebe Davis will be her husband's accompanist at the pi ano. She is the sister of pianist Hank Beebe who was in the "Bell tones" with Davis. She and Davis preformed at the recent Water melon Festival. , Master of ceremonies for Sun day's sing will be Tom Carroll. Carroll is another UNC graduate. He majored in radio here and is working for WCHL as an an nouncer. The Community Sing is spon sored by the Summer Activities Council. It will be canceled if it rains. UNC Publicist Is Honored By Associates Robert W. Madry, director of the University News Bureau, re cently was praised by his fellow publicitists at the annual meeting of the American College Public Relations Association in Salt City, Utah. The association presented Madry (See MADRY, page 4) R. W. MADRY