FrtL ";.c WEATHER Cooler and contin ued sunny with " 62 high. Yesterday's high, 66; low, 37. ELECT The editor talks about the editor. See p. 2. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 131 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY I III II la f( r , I f I I I 1111. li II Aiifll lEsSsf irl ill i 1 tl 11 Major Election Breakdown Abs." PRESIDENT: DMI DMII dmiii dmiv dmv dw tw TMI TMII TMIII Inf. Tot Bob Gorham (UP) 105 96 50 121 89 146 90 104 234 . 110 33 1178 Wade Matthews (Ind) 31 28 18 39 17 9 2 18 5 4 9 180 Ken Penegar (SP) 135 115 103 144 88 129 19 41 48 73 25 940 Tom Sumner (Ind) 0 7 7 18 6 5 0 3 3 2 0 51 VICE-PRESIDENT Bill Brown (Ind) 114 76 52 99 53 40 7 16 21 24 32 534 Baxter Miller (SP) 96 86 - 90 114 76 150 37 84 38 69 17 857 Jack Stilwell (UP) 63 65 36 101 71 100 68 81 230 92 16 923 SEC.-TREAS. . Jerry Cook (UP) 135 136 56 158 119 156 85 110 243 109 57 1364 Gordon Forester (SP) 134 109 128 153 79 129 28 68 46 71 10 955 YACK EDITOR Lib Moore (SP) 186 162 126 176 126 202 59 86 81 88 30 1323 Rollie Tillman (UP) ... 76 83 46 129 68 83 53 94 107 89 37 865 $ SP And Number UP Of The University and Student Par- , Publications Board passed, 1,580 ties put 13 legislators each in of- 398. fice as a result of Wednesday's ; Victorious legislators were Day election, late Election Board re- ! ton Estes (SP), Tom Shores (UP), turns showed yesterday. Which nartv has the maioritv in the Legislature denends on the number of holdovers. Yesterday . party prophets were busy count ing their legislators, but no com mon solution was reached. Junior Seawell (UP) won the presidency of the Carolina Athletic Association over Bob Pace (SP), 1250-685. Dick Lackey (UP) gained . the CAA vice-presidency over Van vveduieispuuii xu--. ine ur swept up an senior cidbb , officers. The senior class winners were George McLeod, Russ Cowell, Ann Street, Gordon Battle and Claire Boone. Freshman class office winners president, Bill Sanders (UP), vice- were Charlie Yarborough (UP), president, Donna Overholt (SP), secretary, Pepper Tice (SP), treas urer and Susan Fink (SP-UP), so cial chairman. Student Council women's seats went to Mase Chapin, Lois Collins and 71inor Wrenn. Jane Berryhill, Ed Gross and Bill Ruffin won at large seats. Henry Lowet won the Men's six month seat. Men's Council winners were Bruce Crater, Art Einstein and George McLeod for senior seats. Pete Block and Osborne Lee will compete in the runoff for the junior seat. Ed McClurry won the sophomore seat. Senior seats on the Women's Council: Jo Deming, Sara Rose and Pat Smith. Mary Frances Allsbrook gained the seat at large. Jane Allen and Carolyn Johnson will be in the runoff for Women's Athletic Association president. Jane Berryhill and Alice Hicks will enter the runoff for WAA vice-president. Betty Otto Anderson. and Rollie Randolph will compete in the run off for chairman of the Women's Residence Council. Jim Fountain, head cheerleader winner, beat Louie Patseavouras, 1,504-771, Both constitutional amendments were passed. The amendment which sets up a regular elected National Student Association co ordinator passed, 1,475-525. The one which revamped terms on the Y Membership Meeting Will Be Next Tuesday Ned Harbin, YMCA president elect yesterday said the next mem- hershin meeting will be in the form of an outing at Claude Shotts farm. The date is next Tuesday and 4 tirrta ia trnm fi to 8 P.m. A nf snftball. picnic sup per and reports on program plans for next year is planned, ah vv"u are interested in attending are in vited to sign up in the Y office today. APO Seeks Help "Help us," cry the Alpha Phi Omega's, sponsors of the annual Spring Parents Day. They need people to stuff and volunteers to come to the chap address envelopes and ask any ter room in Grsham Memorial ny afternoon this week. Get Same Legislators Bob Wynne (UP), Joel Fleishman SP LonS Sp) Gilbert Rab land SP' George Whiteside (SP), Charles Wolf (SP), Gerald Parker (SP), John Ingle (SP), Manning Muntzing (SP), Pete Adams (UP), Bob'Farrell (UP), Carlos Surratt (UP), Anita Anderson (SP), Jane Bolmeir (SP), Carolyn Little (UP), Don Huntington (SP), Tommy Yorke fTTPV .Tank Harden rSPV Jack stevens r, James Crouch (Sp) Lionel Perkins Burt JVeasey (UP), Bev Webb (UP) and -Robert Mason fTTPY i Lib Moore (SP), victorious Yack-! last major production of the sea-ety-Yack editor, defeated Rollie son Aristophanes' bawdy comedy I Tillman (UP. 1323-865. Rolfe Neill, who was doubly en dorsed, ran unopposed for editor of The Daily Tar Heel. The Publications Board was com pletely doubly endorsed. Elected were . Joe Raff, Ed Slarnes, Russ Cowell and Louis Kraar. What Happened Due to mechanical difficulties, a wreck and assorted election night vicissitudes, part of yester day's Daily Tar Heels were not delivered. We're sorry. :- V .1 - X ' vsifttfe, -sm .1 1 i'i 1 a rill Mill I 1111M1111 ' in' liiliililiMill ?(, J - ' f - - t -; v - . 1 :y .x - : I - ' 7 - - cDmtf?ftR; FOR THE INTER DORMITORY Council Dance are holt, Pittsburgh, Penn., with Gerald Parker, Silver iale, dance committee chairman; Vinal Overing, ckt- with John Ingle, Siler City, treasurer; Becky Freeman, Star, with Dick Gamble, Summer- r Id IDC court chairman. Center pieture, Hope Leonard, Greensboro, with John DeWitt Gooch, Greens bOTo' secretary. Bottom row, Geraldine Snyder, Far etteville, with Walter Gurley, Goldsboro, vice-presi-d nt Sara Joyner, Rocky Mount, with Harry Pear3all, Rocky Mount, dance committee; Helen Faust, Asheboro with Bob Llewellyn, with Gerald King, Winston-aaiem, aance rommuMx. fiPSEEN Law student explaining to vis iting company representative why he is not interested in tak ing a correspondence course in plumbing. Theater caption appropriately marked for elections, "The man who was too proud too run." Play Tryouts Are Tuesday Open tryouts will be held Tues- day in the Forest Theater at 4 and 7:30 n.m. for the Plavmakers' f sex and war, "Lysistrata." In case of rain, tryouts will be moved to Memorial Hall. The play will be directed by Fos ter Fitz-Simons, assistant director ; for the Playmakers, and is sched uled for production in the Forest Theatre May 22-24, in conjunction with the dedication of the Theatre as a memorial to "Proff" Koch, founder of the Playmakers. "Lysistrata" demands an unus ually large cast 20 men and 20 women of all ages. Scripts are or reserve at the University library for those interested in reading them in advance. Concord, dance committee. IMot piciurea, Mariene baunaers, ueiasvine, Next Friday Dr.Graham To Address Students Dr. Frank Graham, former pres ident of , the Consolidated Univer sity, will address the UNC student body next Friday night at 8 o'clock in Memorial Hall. Appearing here for the dedica tion exercises of the new medical center, Dr. Graham will speak to the students on "The United Na tions and Some of Its Achieve ments." He will be introduced by Chancellor Robert B. House. The speech next Friday will mark the first time in several years that Dr. Graham has addressed the Carolina students. He will also speak at the Medical School dedi cation exercise next weekend. At present, Dr. Graham is serv ing as a United Nations represen- , ,. j t r tt nptwpPTi India anil Pakistan He also served as United States Sena tor from North Carolina. An informal banquet in honor of Dr. Graham will be held next Friday night at 6:15 in the South Room of Lenoir Hall. All delegates ! 4-r Vi C n rr i r-i n T TAJ ATrvrl r1 A ccom- bly will be invited to the banquet. v -9- X. DR. FRANK GRAHAM top row, left to right, Donna Over ? - ' .i-.'-J Ugliest Male Crowning Set; Admission Free Who's the Ugliest Man on cam pus? You'll know if you're on the midway of the University Club Carnival at 9:30 tonight when the Theta Chi's announce the win ner of their Ugly Man Contest and award prizes to him and a trophy to his sponsor. The carnival, to be held at Navy Field, will get underway at 7 o' clock and until the 11 o'clock curfew there will be .plenty to see and do. Briefly-clad coeds in the Mclver booth will subject themselves to being squirted with water pistols and the PiKA's will duck wet sponges, and the Theta Chi's old pies. There will be various games to 'test luck and skill including darts i miniature goii, aice ana cara games. There will be prizes, includ ing kisses from the SAE and Chi O booths. Other orgnaizations participating will be TEP, ATO, Pi Kappa Phi. Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Delt, Phi Gam, Zeta Psi, Lambda Chi, SPE. Sigma Nu, Beta, AD Pi, Kappa Delta, Pi Phi and Everett dorm. Admission is free. State Festival Of Dramatists In Fourth Day , The State Drama Festival goes into the fourth day of activities today with three sessions of plays scheduled. Today's schedule includes: 9:30 a.m., three plays by city high chools: "Dark Brown," by Philip High School, Charlotte and direct Johnson, presented by Myers Park ed by Erleen Markuardt; "Bessie, the Bandit's Beautiful Baby," by Leland Price, presented by Lee Ed wards High School, Asheville and directed by C B. West; and "Jacob comes Home," by William Koz- enko, presented by Greensboro Senior High School and directed by Mozelle Causey. At 2 p.m., four plays by city high schools: "The Caucasian Chalk Circle," by Bertolt Brecht, pre- Hardin Jr.; "I Shall Be Waiting," Charlotte and directed by Bristow sented by Central High School, by Florence R. Kahn, presented by Hanes High School, Winston Salem and directed by Mae Thorn ton; "Fortunata Writes a Letter," by E. T. Apstein, presented by Reynolds High School, Winston- Salem and directed by Emma Kapp; and "The Slave with Two Faces," by Mary Carolyn Davies, presented by Whiteville High School and directed by Alma El- kins. At 7:30 p.m., an original play by an individual member, "Hand Me a Silver Platter," by Elizabeth Welch, will be presented by Golds- boro High School and directed by Clifton Britton. At 8:15 p.m., the following will be presented by Little Theatres: A Little Bird of a Woman,' Ty Frank Sehon, presented by the Wilson Little Theatre and directed by Kay Swink; and "Hello, Out There," by William Saroyan, pre sented by the Shoestring Players, Wilson and directed by Cecil Wil lis. At 9:30 p.m., a tea and exhibit and a discussion will be led by Samuel Selden, director of the Carolina Playmakers. (Complete, schedule may be ob tained at Playmakers Theatre.) Tar Heels 'n Toes There will be a special meeting of Tar Heels n Toes today at 5:30 p.m. in the Women's Gym to prac tice for the Durham Centennial exhibition. Why Don't You And Death Take A Holiday - -Drive Carefully t ' v in- "To Great Eliza's G 1 o r i o u Name," the fifth in a series of Library displays arranged and sponsored by the English Club, is located at the east end of the main hall. The new display, executed under the direction of Thad Seymour and John Schnorrenberg, is presented in honor of the 10th annual meet ing of the Southeastern Renais sance Association, bein.i held in Chapel Hill today and tomorrow. Of primary interest in the exhibi tion is a manuscript letter, dated 1570, which bears the bold signa ture of "Elizabeth Regina." The Alumni Event For Library Slated Today Inaugurating what is expected -to Vornmo an annual pvpnt thp School of Library Science will hold its first Alumni Day today. The school now has 656 alumni of whom 421 are actively engaged in library work, and it is hoped that a large number will attend the program here since the School and alumni maintain unusually close relations. Even those no 'ong- er in the library profession keep in touch with the School and mem-) bers of the faculty and staff. Among special topics of discus sion during the Alumni Day ac tivities will be the inauguration of the M.S.L. degree in 1950 and the M.S. in library science in 1951. Dean Susan Grey Akers said the school staff feels that the "oppor tunity to observe the enlarged N- J? I Gre o t Eliza 's Nam program and to ask questions on;terest to undergraduates in order the spot concerning the work of to comDat the dwindling interest the School will be of interest to the many alumni who wonder about the content of new courses and what changes have taken place in the old courses they remember." Alumni Day will also .serve to introduce new faculty members to students of earlier years. Members of the class of '32 wil be interested in meeting their for mer classmate, O. V. Cook, As- sistant Librarian, in his new ca pacity as visiting professor for the current spring quarter. day evenings at 7:30. The program of Alumni Day in-1 The talks will be combined with eludes registration tours of the a brief service, and will be follow Libraxy and get togethers with ed by informal discussion groups staff members during the morning, : in the parish house, a luncheon at the Carolina Inn at brated Monday and Tuesday morn 12:30, and an address by Thomas j Holy Communion will be cele Moorman Sinkins Jr., currator of ings at 7 a.m. A discussion group Rare -Books of the Duke University ' -will meet in the parish house at . Library, in the Assembly Room the Library during the afternoon, students and townspeople are in An informal tea will conclude ' vited to participate in the mis the day's program. - ision program. ..k. i i smother items in the display illus- trate the abundant praise which courtiers, poets and playwrights lavished on England's greatest queen. . In recent months the English Club has offered a variety of dis plays on general and topical sub jects. A Dickens exhibition was presented in conjunction with the performance of Emlyn Williams, and a collection of poems about spring heralded the arrival of warm weather. On other occasions visitors to the library have had an opportunity to examine the docu ments in the Bacon-Shakespeare controvery, and moralize upon the views of Addison and Steele "On Drinking." The English Club is a compara tively newcomer among campus organizations and began its activi ties last Spring. A club made up of graduate students in English, it has provided bi-monthly programs of academic interest for its own members as well as numerous pro grams for the University commun- &Tal; ecent gueTsts havef included Prof Benjamin Boyce of Duke University, Dr. Archibald TTpnriersnn anrl the Duke Madrieal ( Singerg Popular among under. graduates are their bi-monthly programs of recordings related to English literature. Describing the aims of the Eng lish Plnh an nffirial sairl "We feeJ that our organization has a double responsibility to the Uni versity. Through our regular meet ings, our weekly departmental luncheons, and our other activities we attempt to strengthen the re lationship between student and student, as well as student and fac ulty member. "But we also feel that it is es sential to provide programs of in- in the Humanities." Mission Will Feature Orth The Rev. James B. Orth, chap lain from the University of Florida will lead a preaching mission in - ( the Chapel of the Cross Episcopal Church Sunday, Monday and Tues- of 4 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon. All

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