cajpec -hill. n. c J t EDITORIALS WEATHER I Impressive Start Girls and Politics SDA. Civil Rights Continued cool with rain. V y VOLUME LVII CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1949 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 149 ss 'J f I? f-A IPIP - J. I wfSSt'frl ? t.r. - .. T 1 - - " v- a 7 y '-'vV - - WITHOUT FANFARE. THE 15-TON BOTTOM SHELL (arrow) of the nation V first atomic feir craft carrier U lowered onto keel blocks in a 1.000-foot building dock at Newport News. Va. The 65.000 ton ship, to be christened the "United States," will cost $188,000,000. Construction of the carrier had been opposed by the Air Force on the grounds that it was an invasion of its field of long-range siategic bombing. Air Force Cadet Team Interviewing Students An Air Force Cadet team, Jieaded by Maj. James R. Wilson, is now on campus interviewing qualified students for training with the 14th Air Force, Col. Bryon R. Switzer announced yesterday. : 1 A "goodly . number" of students Members of BSU Schedule Opening Of New House ' After weeks of painting and decorating, members of the Chapel Hill Baptist Student Un ion will hold the grand opening of their new student house on Sunday afternoon from 3:30 un til 5 o'clock. The student house, or apart ment, composed of three large rooms and a kitchen, is located in the wooden frame house across the street from the Baptist Church. The grand opening will take place in time to welcome back the Chapel Hill delegates to the North Carolina B. S. U. Spring Conference, which is taking place in Durham this week-end. Rep resenting. the University of North Carolina are the newly elected officers of the. B. S. U., who will leave for the conference Friday afternoon. Officers attending the retreat will meet Saturday morning for commissions held for the presi dents, vice-presidents, secretaries, and treasurers, respectively, of the B. S. U. organizations of the colleges and universities in the state. Representatives will make reports of the work done at their colleges during the preceeding year and will elect the state B. S. U. officers. Welcoming back their represen tatives to the conference, mem bers of the University's B. S. U. will open the student house and begin the many activities which will ' take place in the student house instead of rooms in the Baptist Church. Their weekly Sunday night Supper Forum will be held in the new location at 6 o'clock Sunday night, under the direction of the newly elected forum chairman, Don Shropshire. .Royall Out WASHINGTON, April 21. (UP) President Truman today announced the long-rumored resignation of Army Secretary Kenneth C. Royall but did not disclose his successor., The President told his news conference that the lanky North Carolinian, who more than once has been at odds ith administration policy, wiu w were processed yesterday and it is hoped that many more will come down today, Capt. Francis S. Holmes, public information of ficer for the unit, reported last night. The results of the exami nations have been "highly grati fying" so far, Maj. Wilson, who is in charge of the program, said. Male students between the ages of 20 and 26 and one-half years who have two or more years of college, or who have the ability to pass an examination design ed to measure the equivalent, will have an opportunity to pro visionally qualify for flight train ing with the 14th Air Force. The Cadet team is equipped to give all preliminary examinations and students who qualify will only have to complete an inter view and pass a physical exami nation before being accepted for flight training, Col Switzer said. Students who are accepted will receive their basic flight train ing in Texas. Those who suc- i cessfuny complete the course will be given their wings and com missioned 2nd lieutenants in the Air Force Reserve after only 12 months of training. They will go on active duty upon graduation and can earn pay and allowances in excess of $4,000 annually, Col. Switzer reported. Students interested in applying for training should report to the Air ROTC building behind the law school before 4 o'clock this afternoon. 'It Is Our Fault' Leonard Tells New Legislature Apathy Not Fault of Students By Charles McCorkle Ted Leonard, newly-inaugurated vice-president of the stu dent body and speaker of the Student Legislature, told that as sembly last night "it is our fault" that students are "just not interested in student govern ment." Leonard" addressed a special session of the body which held the first meeting of the Seventh Student Legislature in the hall of the Dialectic Senate. "All of you have, undoubtedly run into the same type of thing I have," Leonard' told the group. "Students just aren't interested in student government. I - be lieve that is not the fault of the students, but is our fault. "Our job is not just to meet here on Thursday nights," the new speaker .continued. , "We. must find out what the students want and then carry out their Sanborn Elected Bruce Sanborn, holdover member to the Men's Honor Council, was elected chairman of the council at a meeting last night. Sanborn is from Gas tonia. Pete Gerns, graduate mem ber from Canton, Ohio, was elected clerk of the council. Committee Says Dances, Concerts Under Its Rules Both May Frolics dances and the ..Saturday afternoon concert wil be governed by Dance Com mittee rules, it was announced yesterday. Rules for the weekend events include: 1. Any girl desiring to leave the dance hall during the evening- dance with the intention of returning must be accompanied by a chaperon. 2. All persons showing signs of drunkeness or bringing liquor to the dance will be dealt with at the discretion of the Dance Committee. 3. No smoking or serving of refreshments are allowed on the floor of Woollen Gymnasium. The committee emphasized that the rules apply in both Memor ial Hall and Woollen gym. Tickets should be ready at the door, so as to facilitate the work of the doormen. The committee announced that a booklet, "So You're Going to A Carolina Dance," is now avail-" able for imports and may be obtained from members of the committee. It also announced that the flower custom will be in ef fect at the two dances. wishes." Leonard said students seem to "ascend to a higher plane" when they are elected to office. "If anything," he said, "they should descend to a lower plane. They are servants of the student body and should serve humbly." Bill Miller, retiring chairman of the Orientation Committee and a former member of the Legislature, spoke to the group at the request of Leonard and retiring President Jess Dedmond. Miller told them that contrary to rumor, student government was not "on the rocks. It is alive and functioning daily." Legislator Al Lowenstein, ad dressing the final session of the old Legislature, moved that a gavel be presented to retiring Speaker Pro Tempore Joe Leary for his service to the assembly. The motion passed unanimously. Back to Class Students7 Strike Ends At New York College NEW YORK, April 21 (UP) The five-day-bid strike of students at City College of the few pickets still parading in their classes today. 7 Archeology Is Subject of Tak By Di Bennett Educator Speaks At Gerrard Meet The importance and value of interpreting archeological' re mains in Peru, Columbia, Equa- dor and various other South American countries was stressed by Dr. Wendell C. Bermett of Yale University in an address given here last night in Gerrard Hall at the University of North Carolina. ' The address was sponsored as part of the annual Pan-American Week festivities of the cam pus by the Institute for Latin American Studies and the North Carolina chapter of the Arche ological Institute of America. This was Dr. Bennett's first visit to the University in Chapel Hill. He" was introduced by Dr. John Gillin, professor in the Depart ment of Sociology and Anthropol ogy at the University. Dr. Bennett was scheduled to meet informally with several student groups Friday morning, these sessions being arranged by Dr. S. E. Leavitt, Director of the Institute of Latin - American Studies. v Using 70 slides, maps and vari ous illustrations, many of which were in color, the well-known anthropologist gave several ex amples as to what can be dis covered by studying pottery re mains in one particular area. Trailers, Spaces Under Rent Control All trailers and trailer spaces except those used exclusively for transient occupancy are again under rent control according to Forrest A. Pollard, Director-Attorney for the Chapel Hill area. This announcement was made as a result of the Rent Control Act that came into effect on April 1, 1949, and means that all trailers must be registered at once at the local rent control office. 'Repple People" Hirsch Production Will Include Plenty of Authenticity, Realism By Ed Moss In all their stage productions the Carolina Playmakers strive to obtain a high degree of au thenticity, A new high in real ism has been reached in Sam Hirsch's full length original play "Repple Depple" which will be presented in the Playmaker Theater April 28 and 29 at 7:30. This hilarious comedy about life in an army replacement depot in France should find particular favor among the veterans on the campus. IJrom the opening scene to the final curtain it is obvious that the author is well acquaint-1 Lois Latham, a graduate stu ed with his subject matter and! (See PLAY, page 4) Ballot for Coed - Coed All-Stars c lb 2b ss 3b If cf rf P (All ballots should be dropped into box in Y building. Deadline for casting ballots is 1 o'clock next Tuesday afternoon.) New York was called off and around the campus were back Voted by the student council to protest the alleged race bias of two instructors, the student participation in the strike had fallen off sharply after it was in terrupted by the Easter recess. Classes were about 90 per cent full when the strike ended. " On its first day, the protest was marked by a near riot be tween both male and coed stu dents and a large detail of police assigned ' to the campus. College President Harry Wright had expressed sympathy with the ideas of fighting race discrimina tion but he held firm, to the po sition, that Prof. William Knick erbocker had been cleared of anti-semitism and that Instructor William C. Davis had been punish ed for segregating Negroes and whites in a dormitory. He re fused to dismiss either teacher as demanded. A statement by the Student Council Strike Committee said it was felt the demonstration had been "effective in making the Knickerbocker case and the Davis case subjects of public interest." "We will continue our fight on the basis of further mobiliza tion of public and student opin ion," it sadi. "We will not cease until our school is rid of bigotry.'' City College has some 5,000 day and 2,000 night students. Knicker bocker and Davis continued their classes as usual during the strike, the former teaching Spanish and the latter economics. UVA to Feature Terrace Tables Tables on the terrace will be featured by the University Vet erans Association tonight at their Friday night party, Gene New ton, UVA president, announced yesterday. In addition, the entertainment committee headed by Grey Adams has made plans to present another entertainment program composed of student talent. Tentative plans call for the KA Kadoodlers to play on the en tertainment bill with Pete Strader and Grey Adams putting on short skits. Veterans who plan to attend tonight's show are urged to come early in order to get good tables. has spent some time in a re placement depot. Added to this is the fact that many of the vet erans in the cast know all too well the feeling of fustration, despair and cynicism which go hand in hand with life in a rep? ple-depple. Remarkable finesse has apparently been used to se lect a cast which fulfills the delineations of character made by the author in the script. A fine example of good cast ing is' the character of "Mama," a French madame of the type familiar to so many G.I.'s who were in France during the war. Faculty All-Stars Faculty All-Stars c lb 2b ss 3b If cf rf P Candidate Ed Lanier Lashes Af Incumbent Mayor Madry By Margaret Gaston Edwin S. Lanier, candidate for mayor in the Chapel Hill munici pal election May 3, yesterday blasted the incumbent, R. W. Madry, in a statement in which he accused the present mayor of becoming his self-appointed campaign manager. Declaring that he was dropping Coed, Faculty All-Stars To Play Ball Next Week The Coed All-Stars will meet the Faculty All-Stars in a softball game to be sponsored by the University Club as part of Blue-White Week. ' The two opposing lineups will be composed of coeds and faculty members to be selected in a cam-. pus election beginning today. Bal loting will take place in the Y, and all ballots should be in by 1 o'clock Tuesday. The star-studded contest will be held in Kenan Stadium on Wednesday at 3 o'clock. There will be no admission charge. The committee in charge of the game is composed of Charlie Foley, chairman, Jane Pruitt, Gene Carpenter, and Paul Stevens. One entry may be made for each position in the two lineups. The 10 coeds and the nine faculty members receiving the highest number of votes will fill the start ing lineups. When casualties oc cur during the game, runners-up will be substituted. Students wishing to enter names in the balloting competition should be warned about certain rigid eligibility requirements. Athletic cuties elected must have at least a D physical rating on their Infirmary cards. Faculty curve-ball artists must be be tween the ages of 18 and 60 to qualify. S&F Music Set For Rendezvous Regular Friday night visitors to the Rendezvous Room in Gra ham Memorial will be treated to a preview of the new Sound and Fury musical tonight. Several selections from the show, "Mer rily We Love," to be presented May 6 and 7, will make up the evening's entertainment. Performers on tonight's show are: Pat Baily, in a South Ameri can number; Jean Hillman, opera aspirant turned chorus girl; Forest Covington, suave matador; Jimmy Fpust; southern belle, and Estelle Richie, comedy lead of the show. The Town Talk Trio, a combo,, will also be on the pro gram . ...The songs on the Rendezvous show will be taken from the 26 selections, composed for the Sound and Fury musical by Frank Matthews, and the show will go on the air at 9:30. Only Public Ceremony Fleece Tapping Is 46th in University History By Charlie Gibson For the forty-sixth time in Uni versity history, Memorial Hall will be the scene of a Golden Fleece tapping next Monday even ing at 7:45. This will be campus's one opportunity to see a public ceremony of its leading honor ary organization. Formed in 1903, the Order of the Golden Fleece was first con ceived in its mythological entir ety by Dr. Eben Alexander, then Dean of the University and past envoy to Greece where he helped reestablish the quadrenial Olym pic Games. Dr. Alexander wras a member of the Skull and Bones at Yale, the first honorary society on an American college campus. He wished to see the University become second in the nation to honor its outstanding campus men, and thus the Fleece was founded. The Order was established soundly largely through the in Alderman Charges Official With Being 'My Self-Appointed Campaign Manager' this "triple-threat opponent" from his campaign staff, Lanier said he did not see "eye to eye" with candidate Madry. He pointed out that Madry had asserted that there were no issues, but that he would not be running for Mackie to Set SDA Keynote At Conference Two-Day Meeting Starts Tomorrow Bill Mackie, president of the student body, will deliver the keynote address at 2 o'clock to morrow afternoon in Bingham Hall, opening the two-day Civil Rights conference sponsored by the Students for Democratic Ac tion. The theme of the conference., as Mackie will point out, is di rected toward the working out of a reasonable Southern ap proach to Civil Rights which realizes the need for some change and the national trend toward this change. The conference will emphasize the participation of Southern liberals in facing the various racial issues squarely and in the finding of solutions through a rational rather than an emotional approach. Three student seminars in cluding representatives from many North Carolina colleges will meet simultaneously in two sessions. These will be held at 3 and 8 o'clock Saturday in the Roland Parker lounge of Graham Memorial. The seminar subjects will cover the three main fields of the Civi? Rights program. Women's Council Asks Cooperation The Women's Honor Council yesterday released the text of a letter which they sent to the Spring Frolics Committee, spon sors of the Skitch Henderson dances and concert this weekend, in which they re-emphasized "the fact that it is the responsibility of each individual student to up hold' our Campus Code." The letter pointed out that in the past there have been infringe ments of the Campus Code at the spring dances. Monday Night terest and encouragement of Dr Henry Horace Williams, noted faculty philosopher and close friend of many students. Dr. Ed ward Kidder Graham added his influence and help to launch the organization on its way in search of worthy Carolina men over the years. As Dr. Williams pointed out in a Daily Tar Heel article of May 8, 1933, there were diverse cliq ues of students on campus in 1903. The abiding purpose of the Fleece was to cut across sectional bound aries of student interest and to honor the outstanding men in all fields of campus endeavor as they should arise. There could be no harmony or University spirit un til all these men of diverse in terests, "the finest athlete and the greatest scholar," should "sit side by side at the same table." In the twenties, speculation ran rampant in the Tar Heel as to (See FLEECE, page 4) . mayor if that were true. The race for mayor, just two weeks off, between Madry, and Lanier, a member of the Board of Alderman since 1945, is gain ing momentum, as Lanier promis es to have more to say in a meet ing of the League of Women voters next Tuesday night. "The League of Women voters have scheduled a forum meeting for candidates to be held in the Town Hall next Tuesday night, April 26. I hope to be present. Candidate Madry has been playing one tune since March 29 name ly. 'My opponent seems to see things eye to eye with me and apparently there are no issues.' "Candidate , Madry, therefore, will probably try to sit on the same chair with me at the League's forum meeting," Lanier said. "He and I do not see things eye to eye. If I were in agree ment with him on all things, I would not be running.' Nor do I agree with him that there are no issues. But about that con clusion of his I will have more to say next Tuesday night." Continuing his attack, Lanier said, "Beginning Monday after noon, March 28, soon after 3:30 o'clock, the day and hour I filed with the Town Clerk notice of my candidacy for mayor of Chapel Hill, Mayor Madry, for the first time in four years, abandoned his slow-motion and ears-to-the-ground techniques and went in to a frenzy of activity." Lanier pointed out that "by 5:30 that day, Madry had filed notice of his intention to run for re-election, added himself to my campaign staff, started pre paring news releases on a side walk program and a proposed new zoning ordinances 'to be adopted in April.' " Lanier then said "If whistle team of that kind by candidate Madry had been for the past four years, used by Mayor Madry to help the aldermen turn wheels, I think we would be further along with many items of considerable mportance to this town." May Frolics Set Begins Tonight The May Frolics weekend of ficially begins at 9 o'clock this evening with a dance by Skitch lenderson and his orchestra. The May Frolics Committee will sponsor a concert by Henderson n Memorial Hall tomorrow af ternoon at 4 o'clock, and another dance tomorrow night from 8 until 12 o'clock. , This is the next to last big dance weekend this spring. Wind ing up the name-band social ac tivities for the year will be the Spring Germans, scheduled for late in May. Incidentally, Frolics Committee officials say that it is quite all right for the May Frolics to be held in April. They do it all the time. Alumni Assembly Gets Underway The annual assembly of Uni versity alumni got under way here last night with a dinner ut 6:30 at the Carolina Inn. Judge Henry L. Stevens of Warsaw, University Alumni As sociation president, presided and talks were given by Chancellor Robert B. House and Controller W. D. Carmichael, Jr. FPG in Hillsboro HILLSBORO, April 21 (UP) Sen. Frank P. Graham. (D. N.C.), arrived here with Mrs. Graham ' yesterday to rest for "an indefinite lime" before re turning to his duties in Wash ington. Graham was released from a Washington hospital yesterday, after a three-week siege with penumonia. An aide said his physician had ordered "complete rest." cy i's he ee he )X, he oy. on at nk ir- ir ch an jp' id he. ar at of c.- ce e- in of, .-'' 4 4 U .::,. vv. A . i step down April 27.