u r; c hi-r n ; T " i t C" r - - r ' I 'i . WEATHER', Warmer today, with an expected high of 75. . DRAFT One rule for all, says a Raleigh newspaper about the draft. See p. 2. I I H i III I i ml ". VOLUME LXII NUMBER 172 Complete JP Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL KILL, N. C. SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 1954 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY Betryi Selig 1 (: it) t M&w Th Alcan Rooms -Planned 1$ if- Six Dorms Next Year. 1- Three to a room, instead of two, will be the rule in six men's dorm itories next fall, the Housing Of fice announced yesterday. Because of an anticipated in crease in enrollment, Alexander, Steele. Grimes, Whitehead, and the south and middle sections of Old East and Old West will be changed to accomodate three students in a room. . "The University regrets the ne cessity for making this change," explained J. D. Wadsworth, Hous ing Director. "However, enrollment for next year is going to be high er, and we won't have as much space in the basement of Cobb." Some 150 students, mostly fresh men, were living in Cobb's base ment last fall, due to room limi tations on campus. This summer, half of this space will be converted into a game room. "We'll still be using part of Cobb basement for 75 or 80 students," Wadsworth added. In effect, the University is re verting to a policy three in a room which it discarded only a few years ago. "At that time," Wadsworth smiled, "there was a big yell when we made the switch Monogram Club To Hold Orphanage Picnic Today Monogram Club members will play host to youngsters from the Methodist Orphanage in Raleigh this afternoon at the club's annual Easter party. In cooperation with members of Pi Beta Phi Sorority, Monogram mers will treat the children to an egg-hunt with prizes, refreshments, and other festivities. Between 25 and 30 youngsters in the 6r8 age group will make the trip to Chapel Hill in a bus char tered by the club, according to Wilbur Jones, secretary. The party, a yearly project of the Monogram Club, is paid for from the proceeds of the Blue White football game. Jones said that all club members are asked to meet in front of the club building at 3 p.m. Sunday, wearing letter sweaters and ties, to take part in the event. Dental Darr.es . The Dental Dames will meet Tuesday, April 13, at 8 p.m. in the Victory Village Day Care Center. Bloody Noses, Inc. Horse Has New Idea For Grudge-Holders THE HORSE was hurrying across the camp us when I saw him, and it was hard stopping him. "Skip Coffin says it's harder yet to start me," The Horse shrugged. "Whatchu want? I'm headed for HQ of BA to see DD." I hoped The Horse would unscramble this alphabetic oleo? - "Sure," The Horse shurred. "I'm going to Carroll Hall; of the Business Administration School, to see Doc D. D. Carroll. I wish his most erudite consideration of an idea for a new business. Boy, it is a knockout. There's hundreds ct millions in it!" Did The Horse mean he had turned Repub lican and that Washington would take care of him? "Washington is dead, you dope," The Horse snorted. "Besides, it is not of record he took financial care of anyone but himself." I meant Washington, D. C, not Washing ton, G. "Naw, I'm too late for any good outa this Administration," The Horse said ruefully. "They've given it all away, up there. This idea I have is a dilly, though. Did you read about the U. S. general who offered a hundred bucks to any non-com who would punch G. David Schlne, of McCarthy's comedy act, Conn & Schine, on the schnozzola?" But of course. "Well, now a former master-sergeant has offered ' tivo .hundred to anybody who will punch that general on the beak!" And The Horse thought he could interest Doctor Dudley Dewitt Carroll, of the School of Business Administration, in going about punching people on the beak? "Leaping at conclusions appears to be your favorite form of exercise, Roger," The Horse sighed "I do not envision coaxing the estim able Doctor Carroll in this form of punitive doings, especially since he has his own way of making people C-stars." Now Housing Policy To Affect Abxander, Steels, Grimes, WhKehead, Old Essf & West from three to two in a room. So many men had formed friendships, they didn't want to be moved out." "Now I suppose there'll be just as loud a squawk, and we're sorry it has to be this way." Men living in the dorms affected will be able to pick their third roommate, or in the case of single students, will be able to either I move in with two friends, or pos 'sibly move to another dorm. Students are asked to come by State Draft Chief Says Boards Can't Postpone Col. Thomas H. Upton, state director of Selective Service, a year ago notified local draft boards they could not postpone induction of individuals with cases similar to the one which this week caused the mass resignation of the Mecklenburg County board. "It has always been our firm conviction," Col. Upton" said in a letter April 24, 1953, to local boards, 'that in administering Selective Service we should treat all regis- CHARLOTTE -(P)- State Se lective Service officials reported yesterday it would be two weeks before thiy could fill the places of five Mecklenburg County board members who resigned after J. L. (Jippy) Carter was given a 60 -day draft deferment. trants with both fairness and im partiality. To do this we cannot afford to make exceptions for the student who failed to qualify for deferment even though he needs I only . a very brief period of time to complete the current school term . . . ." The letter was obtained by The Daily Tar Heel. A student here, James Lewis (Jippy) Carter Jr. of Charlotte, was ordered inducted by the Mecklenburg board and was given a postponement by Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, national direc tor of Selective Service. Hershey took full responsibility for the de lay from March 1 to June 1 but would not give his reasons for the decisions. The resigning board charged "political influence or po litical pressure in Washington" had led to the reversal. Ouch! Couldn't we have this without puns? "Okay," The Horse agreed, pausing to crop up the newly-planted azaleas encircling The Old Well. "The idea I got is to form an out fit like Murder, Incorporated, which did so well in Noo Yawk for a time. Only, of course; we stop short of murder. We'll call my outfit, Bloody Noses, Incorporated. We.will act as a Horse would stand to gross thirty-eight dol lars. . "So you're the guy who got the other two dollars!" The Hcrse snorted, his eight-balls of eyes crossed accusingly. "That is just what I was on my way to see Doc Carroll about. Be fore I have even begun operations, I've lost two dollars. I should have forty, and here it is I've got only thirty-eight!" Now, waaaaaaaaaadaminnit, waaaaaaada minnit! If The Horse took a twenty dollar cut out of two hundred, that left only one hun dred eighty dollars to pay the puncher, yes? and ten per cent of that was eighteen dollars . . .so The Horse grossed only thirty-eight. . . "Gee, thanks," The Horse breather moistly into my face. "Now I don't have to let Doc Carroll in on this, unless he would be inter ested in coming in as a puncher. Well, I got to get up my price list so I can go into busi ness." Price list? What price list? "Why, for nose punching," The Horse ex claimed. "Take right around here, to get an the Housing Office as soon as pos sible to make the changes for next fall. Wadsworth also announced the following dorms will be open for summer school: Grimes, Manley, Ruffin, and Winston. Joyner will be used for grad students only, and Stacy for married couples. Steele and Lewis may be open only for the first session of summer school, in order to make improvements be fore fall semester opens. Want A Job? Literary Mag Needs Editor The Advisory Board of the Car olina Quarterly is now receiving applications for the pest of editor of the Quarterly for next year. Any person interested in hold ing the position is required to write a letter of application, and deliver it to Chairman of the Board Harry RussellJ in te Eng lish Office in Bingham Hall on or before Monday, April 12. The letter should state the ap plicant's qualifications for the Office and his editorial plans and policies. On Wednesday, April 14, the Advisory Board will meet in 106 Bingham Hall at 2 p.m. to inter view the applicants and make its final choice. Other members of the Board are Phillips Russell, Walter Spear man, Hugh Holman and Jessie Rehder. Present editor Charlotte Davis will attend the meeting as an ex-officio, non-voting member. clearing house for offend ers and takers, charging each a commission, see? A guy wants some other guy's beak pummelled, he gets in touch with us. We clip him ten per cent of his offer, and we find a beak punch er, and we clip him ten per cent, too." Not bad! On this Retir ed Seargeant deal, The alls in Mrs. It looked "Wump!" Are son Grants Winner? To Af lond Princeton, Kcrcrd Ur.dcr Schobrships Two Carolina seniors are among the 144 men and woman in the United States and Canada who have been awarded National Wood row Wilson Fellowships for 1951 55. The students are Marvin B. Bcr ly, W. Asheville, and Robert L. Selig, New York, N. Y. Berry has selected ' Princeton University for graduate study in classics and Selig will study cre ative writing at Harvard. Two other Wilson Fellowship winners, Jo June DeWeese, Hugo, Okla., and Thomas J. Lippert, Cin cinnati, Ohio, have selected the UNC Graduate School and are ex pected to begin study next fall. Both Miss DeWeese and Lippert will work in , the University Eng lish Department. All winners of Woodrow Wilson awards are nominated by "estab lished members of the academic profession" in this country and in Canada. Purpose of ; the one-year awards is to enable teachers who know their work to encourage under graduates showing "marked prom ise for the teaching profession and possessing the highest qualities of intellect, character and personal ity," said Dr. Robert F. Gosheen, national director of the Wilson program. The. Wilson Fellowship Program is sponsored by the Association of Graduate Schools within the 37- member American Association of Universities, ' and jointly under written by the Associa$onand the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the General Education Board. Limited Coed Visiting Granted Frats In Temporary Agreement Coeds will visit in four fraterni ties this weekend as a result of a temporary visiting agreement reached yesterday between admin istrative and student leaders. Under the agreement, which a student spokesman emphasized was "strictly temporary," fraternities may have coeds visit if special per- idea of the possibilities. Let's say, for examp le, Tommy Peacock wants Charlie Kuralt to get his beak boffed Okay, we charge fifteen dollars for that. But if Peacock wanted to get Rolfe Neill's olfactory organ assailed, it would cost twenty-five, Rolfe looking in better shape right now." I didn't think a cat which had swallowed a passel of canaries was especially in good shape, he was only more shapely. "Well, Neill looks tougher, being a long hair with a crew-cut," The Horse argued. "O kay but say a student who got an F wanted some prof punched?" Gee! Fifty dollars for that? "Heck, no," "The Horse snapped. "Carload prices prevail in this case! Five bucks would be right for that." How about department Ph. D.'s who wanted the noses of their department heads punched? "That will be fifty bucks," The Horse de cided, beaming. "I grant this also comes in the carload lot range, but the Ph. D.'s can af ford to pay more, and it is a greater pleasure to them. And for department heads who want South Building schnozzolas thlocked, we'll charge a flat hundred!" We hoped The Horse wasn't going to pass up the big money: the South Building lesser brass which wanted some snout socking done on brighter brass! Two-fifty a sock, that should brin! "You're not sharp, Roger me bhoy," The Horse sighed. "The big money is when the brighter brass in South Building wants the noses of the Trustees punched. And the Trus tees who want noses in State Legislature punched! Say, this is the greatest thing that has happened since someone threw the over Murphy's chowder!" promising, it looked promising! Mr. Wump whumped. !iil ozen kpfoups Well Compete For Trophies Three Dormitories, Six Sorcniles, Tvo . Fraternities, Nurses The annual Valkyrie Sing will be tomorrow night in Memorial Hall after the Golden Fleece tapping ceremony at 7:30. A dozen campus organizations will compete in the Valkyrie Sing after the Fleece tapping. Among those groups offering song and dance routines are Mclver Dormi tory, the nurses' residence, fTheta Chi- and Sigma Chi fraternities, ail six campus sororities, Mangum and Aycock Dormitories. Judges for the singing compe tition . include Kermit Hunter, chairman, Dr. Wilton Mason, Mrs. Lester Milbrath, Mrs. JKay Kyser, and Dr. Hugh Holman. Prizes will be offered in four divisions, in cluding men's and women's dorms, fraternities, and sororities. The singing groups will offer ballads, parodies of musical come dies and patriotic songs, according to Alice Chapman, campus chair man of the Valkyrie Sing. The order taps on hte basis of contribution to the campus and the University, character, and service. Last year the Valkyrie Sing com petition was won by Chi Psi fra ternity, Tri Delt sorority, and Mc lver Dormitory. (mission is obtained from the Ad ministration and chaperones are I nrocpnt Thu rhanprnnps nrrnrdinS i 1- to the spokesman who asked to be unnamed, must be .approved by the Dean of Women's Office. Coeds, however, may not drink under the temporary agreement. .The question of coeds drinking in fraternity houses is the main prob lem involved in the student-Administration negotiations. The four fraternities with visit ing permission for this weekend are St. Anthony Hall, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Kappa Alpha, and Tau Epsilon Phi. This will be the first time since last Saturday, when the visiting agreement was cancelled, that coeds may legally visit fra ternities. The agreement was suspended by Dean of Students Fred H. Weaver two days after student gov ernment on its own intiiative and without consent of the Adminis tration said coeds could partici pate in mixed drinking. Previous ly, under terms of the visiting pact, they had been barred from this. Yesterday's temporary agree ment was reached in order that several fraternities which had planned big social events might have them, a student spokesman explained. Each fraternity , has to get separate permission for each given social affair. Mother Of UNC Student Killed In Plane Crash FRANKLIN, Tenn. -IP)- A light airplane, flying on instruments, crashed into a hillside during a violent rainstorm yesterday, killing the pilot and Mrs. Ben D. Mc Cubbis, mother of Paul S. McCub bis, junior at Carolina. Mrs. McCubbuis was the widow of a former clerk of the Rowan County, N. C, Superior Court and the sister of Paul A. Swicegood, the present clerk. She has one other son, Ben D. McCubbuis Jr., a senior at the U. S. Naval Acad emy at Annapolis, Md. is Love at high noon: Carolina male and girl friend making mad passionate love in street in front of Joyner Dormitory. Boys lowering flag marching smartly back toward South Biulding and then changing to double time as rain breaks. Social science professor, in the midst of explaining Karl Marx, suddenly shouting, "Don't get me wrong! I'm not a Marx ist, and I'm not a Communist as a matter of fact, I'm a Dem ocrat!" Carter Gives Casts Of Plays By Glee Club The cast for the Combined Uni versity Glee Club production of Gilbert and Sullivan's "Trial By Jury" and Menotti's "The Tele phone" has been announced by mu sic director Joel Carter. The two comic operas are slated for two evening performances at Hill Hall, April 30 and May 1. Don ald Deagon, Chapel Hill, is direc tor for the performances.- . - -- Jan Saxon, Charlotte, and Joel Carter, Chapel Hill, will be heard in "The Telephone", Menotti's comedy of two lovers and a tele phone. Included in the cast of "Trial By Jury" are William Trotman, Wins-ton-Salem, as the Judge, who hears the case of Nora Jane Rumph, Sumter, S. C, plaintiff, and .Wil liam Whitesides, York, S. C, de fendant. Harvey Whetstone, Des Plaines, 111., will be council for the paintiff, and John Lulwig, New Orleans, La., is assistant counciL Barbara Spencer, Salisbury, adds interest as the defendant's girl friend, and David Phipps, Durham, is the usher. Outdoor Auditions Set For 'Dark Of The Moon' Open auditions will be held to morrow evening at 4 o'clock and 7:30 p.m. in the Forest Theatre for the Carolina Playmakers' outdoor production, "Dark of the Moon." This folk fantasy by Howard Richardson, a former Playmaker, and Richard Berney, will be di rected by William I. Long, Play makers staff member, and will be presented in the Forest Theatre May 14 through 16.. In case of rain the auditions will be held in the Playmakers Theatre. Band To Present First Spring Concert Today The University Concert Band opens its annual spring concert season this afternoon at 4 o'clock in Hill Music Hall under the dir ection of Earl Slocum, conductor of the University Symphony, and Herbert Fred, assistant conductor and musicology student. Director Slocum, beginning his 21st season with the 55-member student band, is recognized throughout the nation for his gen ius in interpreting concert music, and as a conductor. He is a mem ber of the American Bandmaster's Association, whose membership is limited to 100 members. , Featured soloists, will be James Headlee, Asheville, who will play Weber's "Concertino' for clarinet and band, and Horace Golightly, Secret Order Will Choos Nov Meinkers Will Also Announce, First lima Publicly, This Year's Officers The Order of the Golden Fleece, top men's honorary organization on the campus, will hold its an nual tapping ceremony tomorrow night in Memorial Hall. All doors will be locked prompt ly at 7:30. Following the Fleece tapping the Valkyrie Sing will be presented. In the traditional atmosphere of darkness and Wagnerian music, hooded giants will search through the audience for students to be tapped for the organization. This will be the first public rev elation of the names to anyone outside the active Order. At this time the officers for the past year, Jason, Hyparchos, Grammateus and Chrystopher, will be announc ed for the first time. The Order of the Golden Fleece is the highest honorary organiza tion on the campus and is the old est group of its type in the coun try still to engage in public tap ping ceremonies. The Fleece was founded in 1903 at the suggestion of Dr. Eben Alexander, a faculty member who had himself been tapped by Skull j and Bones while he was a student at Yale. It was Dr. Alexander, a profes sor of Greek, who suggested that the group adopt the legend of Ja son and his quest for the Golden Fleece as the basis for its symbol ism. "The tradition of Jason's search has been preserved and will play an important part in the ceremony tomorrow night. When the Order was founded by Dr. Alexander and two out standing members, Dr. Edward Kidder Graham and Dr. Horace Williams, 11 members were select ed for membership. Since that time there has been no limit on the number of new members tap ped annually. An official of the Fleece stated that a "fairly large and represen tative number of students" had been selected for recognition this year. The Order taps students on the basis of their contribution, character, and service to the Uni versity. In the fifty-one years since the first tapping ceremony over 500 students and faculty members have received this outstanding honor. To commemorate its 50th anniversary last year the full membership of the Fleece elected Frank Porter Graham by secret ballot at the "Argonaut of the Half Century." Charlotte, who will be heard in Charrosin's xylophone solo, "Rus ticatin' Rufcs." Assistant director Fred will con duct a part of the program, includ ing two of his own numbers, "Fan tosy on an American Air" and his arrangement of Charpenter's "Bal let du Plaisir." Other numbers on the prograht are "March of the Free Peoples," Darcy; Overture "II Guarany," Gomez; "Elsa's Procession from the Cathedral," from Lohengin, Wagner; "Gallito," Lope;;" "Pre lude in E flat Minor," Schostako vitch;" Schostakovitch; "Perpetu um Mobile," Strauss; "Cowboy Rhapsody," Gould; "March of the Steel Men," Belstealnig; and "Hark The Sound." (I