i, .... WEATHER Partly cloudy and contin ued hot with 87 high. Yes terday's high, 87; low, 65. RUL ING The editpr asks for rule clarification. See page 2. Complete JP Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILLi N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1954 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY wi.umt la 1 1 NUMBER 181 omes To error Joshua S. James, candidate for the office of state treasurer, will speak tonight in the last of the University YDC's "Meet the Candi dates" program. James will speak in Gerrard Hall at 8 o'clock. The UNC Young i a: v5v l 1 4 JOSHUA S. JAMES . . . meet the candidate New Filmstrips On Exhibition At Planetarium A method of automatic continu ous showing of filmstrips has been devised by technicians of the Morehead Planetarium and it is now, through the cooperation of Life magazine, presenting "Giotto's Life of Christ" in one of the Plane tarium exhibition cases. This is believed to be the first time that color film strips have been projected continuously and automatically. "Giotto's Life, of Christ" will be followed by two other film strips of beautiful color reproductions of the popular Life magazine features, "The Earth is Born" and "The Miracle of the Sea." I C x S" ' I s f - , " s " ," - , . i I : ; j ..c--J:;h r;; :Vr.:;:..r: -,-,v:- T :sv- - Ti f e " ' ' Vv,s-.- - i A-vi - ' 1 I, - r Mr.TZ?'Z; Z'&j&ntmal mtmimm.mm NEW QUARTERLY EDITOR JIM DUNN AND EX-EDITOR CHARLOTTE DAVIS more appeal for the other 94 Q ants More w (The nv cHtor ot the Carolina I The faculty board o the Quar Quarterly plans io turn next year's terly, consisting of Phillips Rus literari .magazine to the lighter , sell. Dr. Harry Knssell Miss Jesse side lie is Jim Dunn, sophomore Kheder, and Dr. Hugh Holman Enli-h maior from Charleston, notified Dunn Monday that he had c- n ..-v, ,t-,rn ti mpnt was an- nounced yesterday. "I am earc to see if we can't .1 tu n,i -irtprlv annealinsi toi a larger pus." he oi ine cam - - ! i percentage raid. "Risht now it is a! macnyiViP that interests only cer r,m fvnps nf nponle. For too many, ctnt's it vPrv heavy and dull ' to wade through.,: larinff Char- Ictte Davis, plans to change the type of poet and non-fiction to have a sense of humor and make xv :.-x f m-, a more win nveiy one. tiis ium come out next fall. issue To Ik In d Hall ::Af8 Democrats will hold an informal dinner in James' honor at the Pines Restaurant at 6:30 p.m. James is the father of Richard S. James, Carolina sophomore. The father and son are from Raleigh. Bob Windsor of Winston-Salem, vice president of the local YDC, will introduce James. Yesterday Windsor urged all students and townspeople to attend the dinner and the speech. Transportation to the Pines will be provided at 6:15 from the Caro lina Inn. Reservations for the din ner can be made by calling stu dents Tony Wright, Charles Hyatt, Charles Dean, or John Houge. The University YDC Constitu- tion provides that the group treat all Democratic candidates equally, and support them in state elec tions. Previously the organization has brought N. C. senatorial can didates W. Kerr Scott and Sen. Alton Lennon to the campus as part of the "Meet the Candidates" program, and recently brought James' opponent in the Democratic primary, Edwin Gill the incum bent. . Pete Mullis and Doc White chuckling through "Over Sex teen" in the Treatment .Room at Woollen Gym. B-V-P's activities team mov ing wooden bench to traffic island in front of post office, sitting down, and observing flow on Franklin Street. uarterly Editor Humor ucc" mus xx He has been a member of the Quarterly .siaii ior uie pim lwui years, working on the fiction board a j-"x, - - --j or-- tuop ann. rnis vear serving as dook review euuoi. uxxnu " also present editor ot tne corn Cobb, Cobb Dormitory's weekly publication While in prep school in Concord, Massachusetts he edited the Mid- dlesex school magazine and was its .yearbook editor. Last summer he spent " working for the Readers uigesx Magazine in the book n I department. For the two previous Starts Sept. 10 Orientation Fall Plans Announced fThe Orientation Week program for fall was announced yesterday by Chairman Rollie Tillman. Orientation Week will begin Fri day, Sept. 10, with a welcoming session for freshmen and counsel lors in Memorial Hall. There will be meetings for freeshmen with advisers and counselors later on Friday. That evening they will meet in Memorial Hall again for a welcoming address from the Ad ministration and the showing of the film, "In the Name of Free dom." Saturday is taken up with entrance tests and campus tours. On Sunday afternoon, Sept. 12, the annual chancellor's reception will be held for all new students in front of Graham Memorial. ,The next week, Monday through Wednesday will be devoted to reg istration, physical examinations and group meetings with Orienta tion counselors, the freshman pic nic, and coed open houses. Monday, Sept.' 13, there will be a special student government meet ing in Memorial Hall for new stu dents. At that time th'e - honor system will be explained to fresh men and new women students. The Coed. Ball is scheduled for Friday night, Sept. 17, and Graham Memorial Day is Sept. 18. The lat ter will feature special displays, a tour of the building, and an introduction to the activities and offices there. students wno are chosen as Orientation counselors will have two, meetings to discuss this pro gram and to talk over som'e of the problems th - counselors- face. These meetings are tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, May 4, and May 11. At that time the new edition of the counselors' manual (See ORIENTATION, page 4) ozine summers he was a counselor in a Massachusetts boys' camp, where he was in charge of the camp newspaper. Dunn has had a fiction story published in the Quarterly and an other will appear in next month's issue. The second win concern tne trials of education of a prep schooier . , x x- He says inai nis wruing lnieresis came partiy because of his mother, who writes for the Ladies' Home Journal and has worked for the New Yorker and Harper's Bazaar magazines. Dunn would like for those inter ested in working for the Quarter ly next year to see him in the aft ernoon in the Quarterly office, Graham Memorial. He emphasized that work is not confined to those qualified in writing. Jim D Mag 70 Coeds Get Advisory Jobs In Orientation Women's Orientation Council Chairman Luanne Thornton an nounced 70 coeds as counselors yesterday. They, are; Ann Pooley, Jackie McCarthy, Mary Ann Hayes, Joyce Carter, Elsie Broom, Joan Chapman, Trudy Leefler, Ruth Yount, Lucia Traxel, Caroline Davis, Sandra Wax, Nata lie Kooker. A . . , Emily Urquhart, Babs Whitting ton, Marion Linder, Sara Alice Jackson, Henrietta Bell, Betsy Goodwin, Nancy Whisnant, Marsha Poague, Marilyn Zager, Monica Justice. Gladys Hatcher, Carol Nation, Sonia Bergan, Eve Roebuck, Ginna Timberlake, Zeff Pappas, Margaret Neiter, Liz Lynn, Joyce Sparger, Joanne Tannehill. Lorraine Yancey, Ginger Currin, Jane Edwards, Barbara Ann Mc- Ree,. Ann Huffman, Nancy Julian, Alex Thacker, Mary Gant Lewis, Ann Jones. Louise Coffey, Virginia Anne Green,e Lee Strickland, Jean Ray- bum, Myra Davis, Carol Webster, Emily Finch, Kendrick Townsend, Phyllis Ogburn, Lucia Johnson. Susan Fink, Judy Jackson, Lou' (See COEDS NAMED, page 4) SP Names Fleishman Chairman; Reidy Fink, Harrington Elected Bennett, Dean, Long, Cook Get Other Jobs fThe Student Party named Joel Fleishman as its new chairman at a meeting in Graham Memorial Monday night Fleishman is a Junior from Fayetteville majoring in history. He is a member of the student Legislature, and chairman of the Carolina Forum and the Carolina Political Union. Dave Reid of Asheville was named vice-chairman. Reid is a junior majoring in history. Sue Fink, a Chapel Hill sopho more, was named party secretary. Bob Harrington, freshman from Greensboro was elected to the party treasurer post. Tom Bennett, Charlie Dean, Ray Long, and Amy Cook were elected to fill SP advisory board offices. Bill Formyduvall sergeant-at-arms. was named Yack Asks Beach Photos For Next Year's Annua! Going to the beach? The 1955 Yackety-Yack can use your snapshots of individuals or groups playing and having fun at i the beach (or anywhere), the edi- to be initiated into the six-year-tors said yesterday. ! old honorary society. The initiates Snapshots may be left at Gra-Jare to meet at the Old Well at 3 ham Memorial Office or mailed p.m. and go from there to Ger to the Yackety-Yack, Chapel Hill. 1 rard Hall for the ceremonies. 'T & & These ARE THE LEADckS IN THE Leadership-Fellowship pro gram concluding today for student government officers. The affair will be highlighted by a banquet tonight to which all student gov ernment officers have been invited. Left to right in the pictuKe are Mary Kit Myers, Marilyn Hafcel, leadership chairman Nancy Home, Judy King, and Carolyn Johnson. R. B. Henley photo! Needed: 250 Pints Last Day For Blood The Red Cross bloodmobile ends a two-day stay at Graham Memorial .today and officials yesterday expressed disappointment over the first day's donation of 150 pints. They hoped that today's turnout would push the drive to the goal of 400 pints. "It's a painless procedure which takes only 30 minutes," Co-Chairman Frank Plott said. "We hope students will respond as graciously as they have in past years." - The specifications for giving blood provide that the donor be in good health, if under 21 years of age present parents' consent, and have not given blood within the past six months. Appointments may be made today at Graham Memorial. The hours are from 11 o'clock this morning until 5 o'clock this afternoon. The blood will be shipped in refrigerated trucks from here to the regional blood bank in Charlotte. If the whole blood is not used in 21 days it will be made into plasma. The blood is given to hos pital patients at no charge to the patient. Last fall the campus donated 633 pints during the bloodmobile visit. A good part of the donation was the collective effort of Air Force and Navy ROTC units here. Senatorial Candidate Wingfield Drops In For Question, Answer By CHUCK HAUSER A candidate for the United States Senate, in his shirtsleeves and bubbling with energy, popped into The Daily Tar Heel office yesterday to ask a question, make a challenge, and expound a creed. The question: Why hadn't the candidate, Alvin Wingfield Jr., been invited to speak in Chapel Hill by V - I . : V . FLEISHMAN to head SP Old Well Sets Rites Thursday The Order of the Old Well will hold its annual initiation tomor row afternoon. Approximate' 70 students are; the Young Democrats as have his;writers of newg st. . opponents, incumbent Senator Al ton Lennon and the favored chal lenger, former Governor W. Kerr Scott? The challenge: If he is invited to speak here, Wingfield, erstwhile typwriter salesman, radio commen tator, and accomplished amateur linguist, said he will be glad to answer "extemporaneously, in German, any questions asked me in German." In Russian, the candi date said, he would have to have the questions written out before hand, since he is not quite so apt at translating that language off the cuff. The creed: When you're run ning for political office, don't pull any punches. Wingfield didn't pull any yesterday. He made himself comfortable in the wooden office chair. He look ed natty in a gray silk tie and a thin white monogrammed shirt. When he started to talk, it was with a convincing ring and a smooth resonance usually heard in the voice of an experienced orator. He discussed several things he doesn't like: Socialism, Kerr Scott, and Alton Lennon. Wing field's definition of socialism is "any decision on the use of capi tal goods by the government." His definition of Kerr Scott is "a clear case of the things I oppose." Lennon? "A clear case of nothing." What was Wingfield's position on American intervention in Indo- china? "The American Congress should pass a resolution that unless the Chinese ' Communist forces are withdrawn from Indochina within (See WINGFIELD, page. 4) Pefe Ivey Will Speak At Banquet New Officers Gather In Lenoir Hall At 6 For Editor's Speech A. G. (Pete) Ivey, associate edi tor of the Winston-Salem Sentinel and an alumnus of the University, will address the annual student government banquet tonight at 6 o'clock in Lenoir Hall. Ivey's topic is unannounced. He is a native of Rocky Mount and graduated from the University in 1935. While here he was editor of the Carolina Buccaneer, famous forerunner of the present-day Tar nation humor magazine. Ivey also was a member of the Golden Flece, highest men's honorary or ganization. In 1938 and 1937 he was director of Graham Memorial. After his graduation, Ivey was editorial assistant on the Alumni Review, official UNC alumni pub lication. In 1951 he won a Nieman Fellowship for study at Harvard. Tonight's banquet will mark the end of the three-day intensive training program held for new student government officers. The affair will cost diners $1 a plate. Inauguration of student govern ment officers will take place to morrow night at the Legislature's meeting. The banquet, an annual event, two years ago was christened the Frank Porter Graham Student Government Banquet in honor of the former University president for the help and encouragement he gave student government. Any student interested, whether or not a campus officeholder, may sit in for the dinner after paying the $1 charge and Ivey's speech. For the speech alone there is no charge. Press Entries Due By May 6 To Be Eligible Entries in the Press Club's forth coming competition for outstand ing writing must be in by May 6, awards chairman Clint Andrews said yesterday. Writers on The Daily Tar Heel staff and members of the School of Journalism may submit entries, Andrews said. Subscriptions to Time magazine and certificates of achievement will hp awarrlprl tr niitctanfiincf editorials, and features. One per- son may submit no more than three entries in each category. En tries must be in the printed form of the articles, pasted on white sheets of paper with the entrants name written on the back. Name of the paper publishing the ar ticle and publication date must also be given. Entries must be turned in to Andrews at 16 Old West or to Bynum Hall, secretary Mrs. Mark Scroggs by May 6. Fairy Antics, Spirits Part Of May Play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" of spirits and fairy antics will set the theme for the annual May Day pageant Sunday afternoon at 2:30 on the side lawn of Mclver Dorm itory. Presented in honor of the May court, the pageant will feature original choreography 'by Mary Helen Crain, co-chairman of May Day with Judy King. The cast of characters are Dan Reid of Raleigh, Puck; Nancy Mur ray of Raleigh, the Fairy Queen; Martha Boyle, Alton, 111., the Peaseblossom; Jan Carter of Wash ington, the Cobweb; Gene Over bek of Fayetteville, the First Greenseed; Joan Brown, Coral Gables, Fla., the Second Green- sed, and Connie Carbaugh, Roan oke, Va., the Moth.