4 A ' . WEATHER HIT Violent Joe on the but ton, says the editor. See P- 2. Fair to partly cloudy and -continued warm today, with widely scattered thunder--showers in western portion Expected high, 80; low, 'Ho. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 178 Make-Up Tests Offered So Students May Vote; House Offers Comments By STAN SMITH Chancellor Robert B. Housein a scheduled press conference Thurs day afternoon, affirmed the suggestion that students bfe excused front examinations to vote in the May 29th Democratic primary. The possibility of an excuse came up in a previous press conference Jake Is Right People Want To Do It And It Gets Done (The following was written by a Chapel .Hillian. connected with the Community Drama Group of the Chapel Hill Com munity Church. The group will meet at 8 o'clock tomorrow night in the Assembly - Exhi bition Room of the Library for a reading of Thornton WUder's play, "Our Town." Everyone is invited to attend the meeting'- Editor.) By MAE GRAVES Unquestoinably Jake Wade is right Chapel Hill is a mad ro mantic town. But those are just two facets of its personality. There is a rare kind of vitality the kind of quality one usually associ ates with people, not with plac es that seems to be in the very air of the place. An idea crops into someone's mind, he shares it with one or two people who are interested, they share it with one or two more, and the little, group, in easy commerce with each other, work on it, getting fresh perspectives, new angles. And all of a sudden some thing dynamic is started. It doesn't die-a-borning. It gets off to a good healthy start in a srr.Il nuclear group, because people here don't have time to be bored or tired or too-busy to try something new along with other well - established in terests. The Community Drama Group which has been started by the Community Church (but in no way limited to the church mem bership) is a good current ex ample of that sort of thing. The small group of Sunday School teachers of the church wanted to see what might be done with the use of drama with the child- ren, augmenting through that medium the kind of teaching that would catch and hold the interest of their pupils. They asked for some practical, pro fessional advice from someone with the know-how and the ex perience Kai Jurgensen, a playmaker director. And, in the course of that first afternoon's discussion, a month or so ago, the spark of the initial idea kindled a genuine enthusiasm among the adults. It's grand for the children but why can't we" do something of the kind for the grown-ups, too? Well why can't we? No reason why we can't We can. let's do it" It was just about that simple and direct and it's real. Everyone agreed that nothing elaborate should be tackled, that there should be no "mem bership" requirement other than genuine interest in getting to gether with people who had similar interests and who enjoy creating something together. Experience? None necessary. Histrionic ability? None neces sary. Age? wno cares? Church -affiliation? Doesn't have a thing to do with it. One could elaborate (or, more truly, simplify) end lessly. The point is that people want to do it and it's being done. Already it is fun for those who have started working in the group, and as the group in creases so will the spread of enjoyment Complete JP Photo and Wire Service -some weeks ago. "I took it right straight to the Faculty Schedule Committee," explained the chan cellor . "Two things have been done," he continued. "While it is impossible to avoid all examina tions on that date, the committee has scheduled as few as possible then. , : "Secondly, the committee will cooperate with any person who wants to get home to vote." He explained it would be possible, to secure an excuse merely by seeing the instructor giving the exam. Also discussed at the conference was the question of putting three men in rooms of certain dorms, instead of two. Could this policy be carried to dorms other than the six already noted? "If the need arises, it might be necessary to do so," said House. "We belong to the people of North Carolina, and we must accommo date all of them." He added that the policy was not new to the Uni versity, that Old East at one time had as many as four men to a room. "We will try to pick the best dorms suited for the change, how ever, if it becomes necessary." In reply to a question of fear of communism on the campus, House talked for a few minutes on com munism itself. "It is definitely a conspiracy to get control of the world. As for being afraid of it, here or any where yes, I am afraid of it like I'm afraid of walking through a patch of grass after somebody tells me there is a snake in it. : "Call that prudence or fear, what ever you wish," he smiled. Later, he was asked if the liber al atmosphere in Chapel Hill seemed today the same as it had been before the McCarthy investi gations. Were college men more apprehensive of what they joined? TThe whole world not just Chapel Hill is stirred up by this question," House replied. "I don't believe it comes so much from a fear of McCarthy as the fear of inaccuracy as to past associations, and of the fear of getting out of one's own field of responsibility. "However," he added, "I have no sense U ail lUdi yeuyic tic icaj.- fuL Certainly nobody here on cam pus seems afraid of anything. 'There's no hesitation on the part of the students to talk to me, or about me or anything in the Uni versity. "In these times, of course, we have to be more responsible citi- zens. Years ago, what a man said didn't echo around the world like it does now. 'Today, America is living under j gram have been Tom Curtiss, a sort of glass bowL Not that this f dance, Don Kepley, decorations; is bad it gives us all a wholesome ! Jim Patton, picnic, and Harry Pat sense of responsibility." ton, invitations. Weaver Gets A Revelation Switch In Student Drinking Tactics? By LOUIS KRAAR Student leaders, although they say it isn't so, apparently have switched their tactics and possi bly their position on student drinking. This seems apparent from dis cussions at Thursday's meeting be tween student, faculty and Ad ministrative representatives. Phfn Horton, speaking on the student side, told the group that the stu dent declaration which allowed coed drinking was just a wedge to get the talks going. "We didn't expect it to stand," Horton said. But on March 31, when the. stu dents made their pointed decree thaL in effect, gave coeds drinking privileges in fraternity houses, it was a different story, une stuaems then that they were holding out for nothing less than coed drinking. Apparently there have been some student changes made. Program Listed In Leadership School Plans Nancy Home, chairman of this year's ; Leadership-Fellowship Pro gram, announced yesterday the plans for the training to be held Monday through Wednesday. Monday's meeting, to be held in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memorial, will include a kickoff speech by Dean of Women Kath erine Carmichael, a movie, refresh ments and "buzz groups" on over all phases of campus life. On Tuesday the group will meet in the main lounge of Graham Me morial and later break up for buzz sessions in main divisions: dormi tory, sorority, organizations, and committees,, advisers, and others not covered in the first two. . This leadership training program has been conducted on the campus by coeds since. 1948. finis year it is unique in that the. coeds partici pating are expressing, their own ideas on such questions as campus organizations and academic life, Miss Home said. The method used will be "buzz groups" which will be led by students. ,The leadership-fellowship pro gram is for seniors, juniors, soph omores and freshmen. . . . Pageant Needs Specialty Acts Specialty acts such as singing or dancing are needed for the Miss Chapel Hill pageant to be presented next Friday night at 8 o'clock in the high school auditor ium. Anyone interested is asked to contact Pokey Alexander, after 6 p.m. at 8-0177. Coeds and Chapel Hill girls may enter the pageant,; fraternities, sororities, and other campus or ganizations are invited to sponsor a coed. Tickets to the pageant are now on tsale through the Jaycees and in the downtown stores for $1. Anyone desiring to enter or sponsor an entry can do so by call ing The Daily Tar HeeL 9-3361, or Roland Giduz at The Chapel Hill Weekly, 9-1271. Dorothy Figel Elected President Of YWCA New officers of Carolina's YWCA 'were installed this week in an in- stallation service conducted at the ; old chapel of the Episcopal Chapel of the Cross. New president is Dorothy Figel of Indianapolis, Ind. t The installation service followed a program which featured an ad dress by Dr. S. T. Habel, pastor of the Chapel Hill Baptist Church, and music by Marian Southerland and Mamie Polk. Serving as chairmen of special committees for the weekend pro- Dean of Students Fred H. Weav er told Horton Thursday after Hor ton's explanation of the March 31 independent student action, "I had not realized it until this past Thursday that students had not expected it to stand." The Administration, acting after students declared there would be drinking, said the old agreement which allowed coeds to visit but not drink in fraternity houses was a two-sided agreement between the Administration and students. The student declaration was a one sided agreement between stu dents. Thus, concluded the Ad ministration on April 3, there is no coed visiting agreement and therefore can be no coed visiting. So, for about 20 days now, wom en students haven't been in the fraternity houses, except on spec ial occasions and with special per mission. (This includes "all women students," the dean of students CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SATURDAY, .1 2 . ''High school studenVs'com- : menilin .; guest book after visit to Moirehead Planetarium "Pretty good.? Marriage . profs double en tendre nearly breaking up class as he gives student example of a "more": "People wear clothes so they won't get pinched." . Two six-year-olds, who live next door to TEP house, watch ing Hopalong Cassidy on fra ternity's television set. Blood Drive To Begin Here Tuesday The Red Cross bloodmobile will be at Graham Memorial student union on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week to collect blood. The campus drive is being spon sored this year by Pi Nu Fratern ity, .assisted by Delta Delta Delta Sorority. This is the first time, according to a Pi Nu officer, that a single - organization has , spon sored the drive. . , - The campus director for the Red Cross is W. B. Aycock of the Law SchooL Campus chairman of the drive is Ken Pruitt, with co-cha.T-men Carol DuPler and Frank Plott Two trophies will be awarded to individual organizations having the largest percentage of partici pation. There will be one trophy for organizations of more than 100 members and other award for un der 100.memherss Last fall. the awards were won by the NF.GTC unit and Theta Chi Fraternity, respectively. To date, according to Pruitt, over 90 midshipmen from the NROTC have signed up to partici pate and about 50 cadets from the AFROTC. Last fall more than one-third of the blood collected was donated by the Air Force, Pruitt said. Off Limits To All "Women students" from schools are prohibited from iting in fraternity houses, dean of students' office all vis- ex- plained yesterday. Previously, there had been some question about whether the current lack of a visiting agreement meant that all women students couldn't visit or just coeds from UNC. Parents can visit in the houses, however. Also, under special con ditions and with special per mission, social events which had been planned may be held in fraternities. office has declared.) Fraternities are showing impa tience. Nevertheless, most of the student eaders feel that to go back me viV-i. c5 mui v J uiu kj- u I bad policy. And the Administration 1 r r: 1 1 ' ana iacuiiy iiruuy agree wuu uiem on this point. The question mark in the fra ternity mind is whether they will have to wait for a new agreement before the coeds can visit fratern ity houses again. This is where the student position may change. Al ready, several student leaders! have suggested that the old agree ment might be reinstituted temp orarily. Discouragment is the word for the attitude of most student lead ers right now. This discouragement may weaken them to accept the old agreement if they can even set this from the Administration and forget about the original planj of coed drinking in fraternity j houses. APRIL 24, 1954 egislofure Approves udgt or C campus . Wonderful Opportunity Drama Festival Turns UNC Into Town Of Make-Up, Color By JENNIE LYNN 'An outdoor set of cardboard street lamps, bird cage, and pink flowers waited beside tie Playmakers Theatre back door yesterday, as students from all over the state staged the third day of the North Carolina Dramatic Festival. Backstage, a half hour before the afternoon v curtain, Playmakers lluIHlBUliM1l'lENHll'llllIWI'lll """ ' 1 " lIMMHl.j :.;f - - t Zf v J & 4 4 v jr . - ! ' -V I. v 1 i - 'V ?r , -UJ 11 i .n-imittiifflr -if "" President, of the Carolina Dra matic Association, sponsoring the annual Drama Festival which finishes a four-day run here to day, is Miss Laura Plonk, found er and director of the Plonk School- of Creative Arts in Asheville. Festival Ends; Drama Awards Given Tonight "Bluebeard," a costume and make-up contest, and presentation o awards by Chancellor Robert B. House will wind up the 31st annual Carolina Dramatics Festival today. The original play, "Bluebeard," by Erleen Marquardt, will be pre sented by the Marquardt School of Speech and Drama of Charlotte this afternoon at 3:30. The make up contest will take place at 11 a.m. in the Playmakers Theatre,; and Chancellor House will present awards to winning schools in the, festival tonight at S:45. Student Council Group To Study The Student Council elected Ken Penegar of Gastonia as its new chairman this weekend, the first meeting of the council since the spring elections. "I am looking forward to work- ing with the new council and pre- t paring for its excellent contribu- tion next year, even though my association with the group will of necessity be a brief one," said chairman Penegar at the time. Penegar will graduate in June. One of the first official acts of the new chairman will be to ad minister the oath-of-office to all the new student government offi cials at the inaugural ceremonies in the Legislature next Thursday night. The council itself is expected to have to deal with the reform proposals for the whole student judiciary that have recently come out of the Judiciary Study Com mission. ' Newly-elected members of the Student Council who were sworn in were Cynthia Ward, " Eleanor Saunders, Jackie Steed, Edward Nelson for the six months seat; BilT Calvert, Charlie Wolf, and John Woe-ten, Kingston. secretary Walton Joyner for the three at- treasurer; Ron Oldenburg, Biloxi, large one year seats. The other Mississippi, Business manager; hold-over (Penegar was a hold ov- Charles Culbreath, quartermaster; er) from the previous council is Don HalL Chapel Hill, publicity Gerald Parker. 1 manager. Offices in Graham Memorial ver crew members swept paper cups and straws left from previous prac tices from the floor. Others climbed ladders to change white lights to blue and red, and fasten bockdrops with clothes hangers. Mingled with the onlookers and propers were the amateur actors in hand-made costumes, heavy make-up, and white dust in their hair. They drank cokes from the Y and stared at worn copies of the . . plays they were in. When the two o'clock bell rang, the Senior High director called his Greensboro players up from the dressing room. The sound-effects man, operating the high school recording machine, clicked a but ton that began a recording of sound effects for the play. (The curtain was drawn, for Door." Opening of a in the basement of the theater Mr. John W. Parker, executive di - rector of the festival, sat behind stacks of oaDers and tickets. "All! of the participants and interested ceived the second PProP people come down here to the iration' saw its request cut from Green Room," he said, "to check j 527,630 to S23'130 in, find out what's going on, and! Tile Daily Tar Heel received meet everybody." $22,088, or more than $4,000 less than the newspaper's original re This is Mr. Parker's 20th year of ' quest. Most of the DTH cuts came running the festival, and he said in reduction of staff members' sal that this year's production is on f aries and in allowances for print the whole higher than since the ing costs. war. "The festivals give the stu- The executive branch of student dents a chance of real trooping," ; government had its request hiked he continued. "They experience all from $3,670 to a final grant of the hardships of professionals, im- $3,850. The legislative branch was provised scenery, setting up props given $730 and the judicial branch that they are unaccustomed to, and j recevied $56. living in barracks-like conditions. The University Club's request of They learn to rough it, and have '$145 was increased to $605. A a lot of fun, though, and everyone wants to come back another year." "Each of the four days of the ; festival brings a Digger audience to the theater," Mr. Parker said, j "Tonight the Goldmaskers from Goldsboro will stage a full-length j 1 production of 'Cinderella.'" He; 1 gr0UP) dted byj1 umversity itudent Co' $ir. Clifton Britton, has won 68 awards in the past nine years. Elects Penegar; Judicial Reform i , - Jw J " j: r 1 KEN PENEGAR Prudent Council chief Carolina Band Members Select Pruitt New Head U.N.C. Band officers have been selected for next year. They are Ken Pruitt, Winston Salem, president; Herb Wainer, Winston - Salem, vice president; FOUR PAGES TODAY Total $9 rganizations Daily Tar Heel, Yack Suffer Budget Cuts; Executive Fee Hiked By RICHARD THIELE The student Legislature ap proved $90,685 in total appropria tions for campus organizations as it passed the student government budget for 1954-05 at its Thursday night session, which lasted until well after 11 o'clock. rrhe Thursday night meeting was the last at w-h i c h Baxter Miller presided as Speaker. - The $90,000 in estimated ex penses for the coming year will come from a to tal of about $98,048, accord ing to Budget MlLLfcR - Committee member Joel Fleish- man." Appropriations approved ranged from $15 (for Student Council) to $33,600 (for Graham Memorial). The large appropriation for Gra ham Memorial will come partly from the student fees for GM which were raised to $6 this year hy the Legislature. I The student publications re Quests, among the largest single titems deluded in the budget, suf- ,lerea Dea cuts- Th Yackety-Yack, which re- breakdown of other appropriations is as follows: Debate Council, $1,375; Orientation Committee, $890.50; Carolina Forum, $1,800; M e n ' s Interdormitory Council, $635; Women's Residence Council, $650; Carolina Quarterly, $525; Sections Board, $325; National btudents Association, $2o0; Con- A highlight of (Thursday night's session occurred a little before 11 o'clock, when a row broke out over proposed appropriations for the senior class party and the class gift to be left to the University. When it appeared that the class appropriations were going to be voted down, the UP delegation got up and started to walk out. Newly elected senior class president Char lie Yarborough rose and said, "We think it (the class appropriation) is coming to us, after all thesa years . . . ." Legislative tempers were soothed, however, by the efforts ef Speaker Baxter Miller and Graham Memorial Director Jimmy Wallace. Wallace calmly got up and made a speech which, as SP Representa tive Bill O'Sullivan put it, "spread oil over the troubled waters." When the row finally died down the seniors were left with $800: $500 for their class party and $300 for the gift. Beach Weekend This weekend will be fine for beach-lovers, according to J. W. Posey, weatherman at the gov ernment's Raleigh -Durham Air port station. Posey forecast fair and warm weather for most of North Car olina, with widely scattered morning and evening thunder showers in the western portions of the state. Expected coastal highs are around 80 today and tomorrow, with expected lows in the upper 50's. The beaches, said Posey, will not be cloudy. y .