WEATHER Mostly cloudy today, with tem peratures in the 40s. vf LIBERAL The editor's got the liberal arti cn his mind, and a soft spot in his heart for them. See p. 2. VOL. LVII NO. 90 Complete P) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1955 Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY Indents Return : I IV I J I II II 11 17 1 li 1 If II I 1.1 I m&? ipfe-r I ill f III I 1 I I ks, Gray Invited Him: w Only 3 Cuts Per Semester Says Faculty University of North Carolina students returned to their books yesterday, faced by a new faculty rule three unexcused absences per class per semester. The new rule, passed by the General Council of the Faculty at its Nov. 19 meeting, put under University law the matter of cuts, formerly left up to individual in structors. ' Now, the undergraduate not on honor rolls is faced with the three major provisions of the law: (1) After four unexcused ab sences, he will be dropped from his course with a grade of "F." (2) An absence during a two day period before or after Uni versity holidays will be counted as two absences leaving the student with one more out before being dropped and failed. (3) If the students cuts a lab oratory or class on a day for scheduled quiz or examination, he, will fail the work missed EXCUSE SOURCES The faculty law narrows down sources of excuses. Only two, the ,T . .. u ,tl , r- : University physician (the Infirm- . , 1 . J ary) and the dean of the school u-i.i. j v . ) ill W A V. L . . atuuvub I is registered, may write excuses. Students got their first official notice of the rule when they reg istered Tuesday and yesterday, in a printed sheet of paper titled "Notice To All Undergraduates." The notice explained terms of the rule, and warned that ". . . from now on the student must assume greater responsibility j than before toward his own class' attendance, for under the new rule it is unlikely that anyone save the student and his instruc- e tor will be aware of possible dif-jlor Jr- Chailotte: . , . , Jimmy Tesh, Winston-Salem; ficulties before the student has;Kt VenaHe winston-Salem: reached the automatic probation j stage." , i 5,900 For Segregation . . . Hodges The Orange County petition for , continued segregated schools, in- stigated by Dr. W. C. George of the University medical faculty, was sent to Governor Hodges last week with over 5,900 names at tached. Dr. George said Jan. 26 that he had not yet received any ac knowledgement of receipt of the document from Raleigh, and that so far as he was concerned his end of the project was complete. In a lengthy summary statement en closed with the petitions sent to the governor, Dr. George noted that the petition was intended for Orange County Circulation only, but on request had been sent to other countiqs. The signatures from this county alone numbered about 3,800, according to Dr. George "several hundred more than the maximum number of votes cast in the last election . . ." He cited a number of instances in which all who were solicited for signatures readily signed up, and noted finally that "There was virtually no circulation of the pe tition in Chapel Hill where our erperiences undoubtedly would have been different. "Strong pro paganda pressures exerted over many years" contributed to the Chapel Hill situation, he said. The petition itself, a brief docu ment asking the Governor and General Assembly to do all legal ly within their power to 'forestall the Supreme Court's race integra tion decision in schools, was made public about Nov. 15. THE PETITION "Our petition supporting a pol icy of continued separation of Created Here's Spring Schedule Here is the schedule for the spring semester, which started yesterday: WEDNESDAY, April 6 MONDAY, April 11 MONDAY, May 23 .!.. TUESDAY, May 24 through Wednesday, June 1 ....final examinations MONDAY, June 6 Commencement George Sent Out To Pasture; Home's Near University Lake George, the famous and highly-controversial campus collie of late, has been literally sent out to pasture. Mrs. A. M. Jordan, treasurer of the Humane Society, said last week that the Crane fam ily on the Critz George farm out near the University Lake had taken the dog after nobody in town wauld claim responsi bility for him. She had hoped that some local citizen would pay his license and vaccination fee and agree to let George continue to be the campus pet-at-large. However, with no such claim National Business Frat Chaper Here Names 19 Tr. . , , . , Nineteen pledges were recentlv 4 tU AlurP1 , initiated into the Alpha Tau chac- . , A, - v n . .. , ter Alpna Kappa Psi, national . . . f . . , . . . ;jroiessionai iraiernuy in Dusiness administration.- - - - - The members are: Joseph Bolen. Mt. Airy; Franklin Brooks, Green ville; James Furches, Clemmons; Herbert Hoffman, Saar; Richard Jones, Rockingham; Robert Joyce, Mayodan; William Lcftin Jr., Mt. Olive; William Ma son Jr., Dunn; Vance Moore Jr.. Tarboro; Sanford Morton Jr.. jatthews David McClure, Bangor, Maine; Billy Oakley, Mebane; Thomas Os - borne Jr., Greensboro; James Sherrill, Charlotte; Linwood Tay- Andy Vero, Norfolk, Va., and ' Sammie Weaver, Portsmouth, Va. Gets Georges Petition white and Negro children in schools had its origin in a desire to strengthen the hands of our legal representatives who would j protect us from racial deteriora tion. ' "It was based on the belief that bringing the two races together in intimate social and semi-social re lations would further their fusion into a mixed race and that such j fusion would greatly 'harm and perhaps destroy American civili zation. These beliefs are supported by scientific and historical evi dence. , "Alsi, the petition was looked vipon as a test of the assertion .hat our people are willing to ac cept a program of racial integra tion. Our experience gives little support for that assertion. , FOR ORANGE ONLY "Our program was planned for Orange County only, which is one of the areas upon which indoctri nation pressures for race integra tion have been focused. We have sent petitions into other areas on ly when they have been requested. Some of the petitions sent to other Vorth Carolina counties have been returned to us with signatures. These were sent to the Governor along with those from Orange County. In spite of the fact that our oersonal and professional duties did not permit us to make an in tensive campaign for signatures, we nevertheless submitted more than 5,000 names. Those from this county number about 3,800, sev eral hundred more than the maxi mum number of votes cast in the last election for any candidate or ut . Spring recess begins, 6 p.m. Spring recess ends, 6 p.m. Last day of classes ants being forthcoming, the po- lice refused to allow him to be , turned loose in town again as a- ouulUmcu iuC - i . t l Cranes, who have several chil dren, to take him to the coun try. George had been kept in the dog pound at the Vine Ani mal Hospital since allegedly biting several students here four weeks ago. Music Series To Be Resumed Next Tuesday Bonnie Jean Wold, Greensboro soprano, will open the Tuesday Evening Series for the second se mester with a concert Feb. 8 in Hill Hall. Sponsored by the UNC Music Department as a service to campus and community life, the series is broadcast over WUNC. Other sche duled performers in the series in clude Arthur Howes, organ reci tal; UNC Concert Band, Earl Slo eum, conductor; David Bar-Illan, piano recital; UNC Glee Clubs, loel Carter, conductor, and UNC Symphony Orchestra, Earl Slocum, conductor. Mrs. Wold, a native of North Dakota, is assistant professor at Woman's College and soprano so loist at Grace Methodist Church in Grensboro. She will be accom panied in her concert by Inga Borgstrom Morgan of the Woman's ! College faculty. j measure. "More significant than the total number of signatures is our ex- perience in getting them. For m- stance as I have driven around the county and shown the petition to people and have asked them if they ' were enough interested to take a copy and get signatures, only one person has said" no. Shortly after the petition was started two of us made a circuit through a part of the county. We showed the petition to 79 people. 76 signed. The other three were from out of the State. 'ALL WHO SAW IT SIGNED" "Mr. G. T. Cole of the southern part of the county circulated a pe tition in his neighborhood and re turned 35 signatures. Kye said: "The petition was signed by ev- wmmm mmmm 3?1 - if 'A, V : r v; DR. W. C. GEORGE , . . out of his hands ysteinn) 150 Women; 175 Others Hit Campus Some 150 new women students; and more than 175 returning stu dents tchiefly those who inter rupted their college studies for military service are enrolled for the spring semester, accord ing to Director of Admissions Roy Armstrong. . "A great housing shortage con tinues," Director Armstrong said earleir this week. "The dormi- tories crowdpd with thr mpn in a room and many veterans have been turned "away because J of the shortage of housing for themselves and their families." ORIENTATION Orientation for new women stu dents and first-year men students took place Monday, and registra tion for the spring term was held Tuesday. . Women's orientation was chiefly concerned with sessions in which coeds got acquainted with dormi tory regulations and campus rules. Entering freshmen spent Monday taking various placement tests for show Boat, a perenially pop rance examinations. ular show with audiences all ov- and entrance examinations A student government meeting er the unt' and which for new students was held Tues- never has been done on a um day, and later this week they willtvfrsity campus. The play has been ! attend sessions on the organiza- tion and function of the Honor Council -and visit divisions of the, University Library. University YWCA Holds Doubleheader Bake Sale The University YWCA held a doubleheader bake sale yesterday to help raise its part of the Na tional Centennial goal. - Cakes, cookies, brownies andli candy went on sale at Fowler's Food Store, West Franklin St., and at the Electric Construction Co., on East Franklin St. eryone 1 snowea .it io- e cA-imaxer snows nau ueeii seui iu pressed the belief that 99 per cent ew York, permission for the pro of the people of the county out-' duction in Chapel Hill was grant -side of Chapel Hill would sign if ej. they had an opportunity. I "Mr. James Rippy circulated a( petition in the central part of the county and returned 60 names. He( reported that 'Everyone signed itj who saw the petition. "Mr. W. D. White of Chatham County asked for. a petition. He' returned it in a few days with 236 names and reported that 'So far.ents from a number of churches as he could recall no one failed to m ttie community is being org- sign who had the chance. Mr. L. E. Phelps of the western part of' the e county said, 'I a.d not miss a man that I showed the petition to, white or colored." "Several oher similar experi ences from this and other coun ties were reported, although most people simpiy reiurnea me mSwcu Petitions with Comment. NOT CIRCULATED IN CHAPEL HILL "There was virtually no circula tion of the petition in Chapel Hill where our experiences undoubt edly would have been different. WTe were aware that strong prop aganda pressures exerted over many years had led a considerable number of people . of the campus support a program of racial fhte-mefl tnem- . gron. Apparently they have Among the various programs come to thin of the race problem! they plan to have during he pro in concepts of slogans rather than j Posed study, according to Hall in concepts of people, situations ; are a study of the history of and consequences. The people of,rsces and tht!r Qualities, the his this county and State generally, tory lhe NeSro ln the United however, seem not to have been States and of segregation lavvsr misled by the campaign of slo-land, if it can be arranged, a gans . J panet discussion presentation by in mi Solons Get Surprised RALEIGH, Feb. 2. CP) The Joint Appropriations Committee got a pleasant surprise from Dr. Robert Lee Humber last week. The man who has been a mainspring in the state's buying a million dollars worth of art and building a museum to house it did not ask the committee for more money. Instead he told how the money already appropriated has been spent. Dr. Humber said that with the one million dollars the state has acquired some 200 paintings which now have a value estimated at 3V2 million dollars. He reported the Kress Foundation will present the state with an additional million dollars' worth of art objects and the state has received gifts in the past year worth $600,000 for its art museum, including $45,000 since Jan. 1. Most of the gifts were works of art but they included $50,000 in cash, Humber said. All in all, Humber concluded, North Carolina will have "the greatest art museum south of the Potomac" when the gallery is opened. He said he hopes it can be opened before the Legislature adjourns. Playmakers' Auditions For Show Boat Today Auditions will be held todav cnosen Dy ine arouna riajma- ers as their musiCal snow ot me earc -. -, - Performances are slated for March 4, 5 and 6 in Memorial Auditorium. Choosing the musical produc tion of the year is always one of the more formidable tasks of the Playmakers , - staff.. ., Consideration j was given to other shows, but the Oscar Hammersiein-jerome ivern classic was the leading contender. A call to New York by John W. Parker, Playmaker business manager, revealed that Show Boat carefully guarded property and is only released to groups which Oscar Hammerstein and his col leagues feel could give it a wor thy production. FAMILIAR WITH PLAYMAKERS A secretary in the office of the lawyer who handles the musical was from Danville, Va., and was familiar with the work of the Playmakers. This led to interest on the part of those handling the I rights to the show and after in j formation about previous Play- Interracial Teen Group Sets Study Of Schools Integration .n interdenominational and in- terracial group of high school stu- anized to make a study of the schoois integration issue here this ' onth month. Sanctioned by the Chapel Hill Ministerial Association, trie group is to have the first of its five Sunday afternoon meetings on Feb. 6. Leaders of the program, , which wag initiated by the Com . ri,rh imnth ormin mot J Hi Willi I 'WAXVA V- 1 J VSMV. VTMr, in a planning session recently with several ministers. One of their number, Richard Hall of the Community Church, said they felt "By getting togeth er with youths from all churches we felt we could better under stand the problems that will face us in the school integration sit- ! uation and will be better able to oia on n Director of the Playmakers' version will be Kai Jurgenson and musical director will be Wilton Mason, UNC Music Department, who directed music for Kiss Me, Kate, last season's big- musical, and the music department's re cent production of The Marriage of - Figaro. - - - Choreography will be done by Harry Coble, Florence, S. C, graduate student in dramatic art, and choreographer last season of Horn in the West at Boone. Auditions for the show, which requires singing, acting, and dan ing talent, will be held in Me morial Hall today. The cast will include over 40 people with apr proximately five leading women's oles, four leading men, a dancing chorus of eight, and a general ,-horus of 24. There are also many ninor parts, some of which will be cast from the chorus. Show Boat has had several 3roadway revivals and recently was made into a movie starring Kathryn Grayson, Howard KelJ Ava Gardner and Marge and Go kver Champion. The story briefly concerns life and romance among the people on an old-fashioned river boat and is interspersed with such songs as "Make Be- lieve," "You Are Love," "Can' Help Lovin' That Man," "Bill," "OF Man River" and "Life Upon The Wicked Stage." students from an integrated school' in Washington, D. C, who would tell of their experiences in the elimination of segregation in their schools. 'Billions Of Combines By ETAUN SHURDELO j and the creative abilities and fa - "Billions of Years Ago," a cilities of Life Magazine for the startling and dramatic combina- j scientific portion, tion of the Scriptures and scien-j It closely ties with the scrip- tific knowledge in an effort to ; explain the birth of the universe, ; opened at the Morehead Plane- i tarium last week. j Produced in natural, rich color j and featuring three dimensional ; effects . with full stage settings, j "Billions of Years Ago" offers and dramatizes the illustration that the Planetarium visitor is witness to the creation to the uni verse. The Book of Genesis is closely followed for the scriptural por- j tion of the program. Planetarium ! officials have drawn upon the J knowledge of" leading scientists iiUm n it u m Ex-President Is Considering Several Dates Former President M.trry S. Truman has said Jie would like to be able to deliver the annual Wei! Lectures here this spring, according to Dr. Alex Heard, chairman of the Committee on Established Lectures. Truman was invited last spring by Gordon Gray, president on behalf of the Committee which selects the Weil and McNair speakers. Gray, a former Secretary of the Army in the Truman administra tion, gave the former President a cnoice ot dates on which to i speak and until Truman picks a j definite date his committment ; will not be definite. j The annual Weil Lectures are' delivered on three successive j nights. If Truman accepts, he will j probably speak in Memorial Hall j in May. The lectures are on the general theme of "American Ci- j tizenship." If Truman speaks, he j may choose any more limited to- ; pic within that range. Last year's 40th anniversary speaker, a for- j mer president of Ecuador, spoke on "Democracy in Latin America.", The first lecture on the "Amer ican Citizenship" theme was given in 1914 by former President Wil-j liam Howad Taft. The families ol Henry Weil and Sol Weil endowed the lecture series a few years la ter. Other prominent speakers forj the lectures have been William Bennett Munro, Edward A. Ross,; William Allen White, Charles A. Beard, Harold J. Laski, Felix Frankfurter and Henry Wallac In more recent years, such pro - minent persons as T. V. Smith, Richard B. Tawney, Robert M. Maclver, Eleanor Roosevelt, Edwin G. Nourse, Robert A. Taft, Zech ariah Chafee, Jr., and Galo Plaza have spoken. The Committee on Established Lecturer is composed of seven faculty members headed by Dr.j Alex Heard of the Political Science Department. J - Glade Valley's Clothirap Drive Will End Saturday j The clothing drive for the Glade ; Valley School which is sponsored (jointly by the Independent Wo j men's Council and the Panhellinic i Council will continue through Sat- urday. ! Any women interested in visit- ! ing Glade Valley School at the completion of the drive should contact Miss Marilvn Zas'er in Smith Dormitory or Miss Joan Leonard at the Alpha Gamma Del- ta house. Years Ago' Show Scriptures And tural reports, just as science and j the Bible are coming closer and closer together yearly in their concepts about the firth of the earth. Portions of Life's series, "The World We Live In," are used in the production, especially selections from "The Earth Is Born" and "Canopy of Air." The magic of the Zeiss projec-:will tor -is used to explain some of j the theories about ""formation of j stars and galaxies out of chaos, the expanding universe according to leading scientists and the changes in positions of stars over billions cji years. (SUOWOO3 o pnnnrn UUUU' HARRY TRUMAN on American citizenship Michigan's Williams To Speak Michigan Governor G. Mennen Williams will be heard in a pub lie address in Memorial Hall ai ,' ' o'clock Tuesday night. I Hiss address will be sponsor-; 1 !b" the local Young Democrats Club. Bob Windsor of Chapel Iliil. resident of the YDC, who an nounced program plans, said th'U Governor Williams' appearance here will be the first in a series of addresses by prominent Demo crats to be presented bv the YP-C during the spring semester. At; ( fner who has accepted invitation includes Senator Dick Ncuberger of Oregon, he said. Prior to the Governor's address the YDC will honor the speaker r.t a private dinner. A reception will be held in Graham Memorial 'immediately following the oro grrrn. Before his election as Governor of Michigan on the Democratic ticket in 1943. he served as deputy director for the Michigan office, of Price Administration, Demo cratic member of the Michigan Liquor Control Commission and a member of the law firm of Grii- fiths, Williams and Griffiths. lie was re-elected in 1950, 1952 and 1954. Science One startling portion is a sim ulation of the receding moon as it may have broken from the earth and moved out into space. Music and three dimensional effects will complement the Gene sis story. The entire Planetarium chamber will be bathed in nat ural color twice, for an under water panorama of sea creatures, and for depicting prehistoric mon stors and now-extinct animals. The closing "Santification" scene further emphasize the rela tion of spiritual to scientific knowledge. "Billions of Years Ago" will be presented nightly at 8.30 o'clock with matinees Saturdays at 11 a.m., 3 and 4 p.m. and Sundays at 2, 3 and 4 p m. u 1 , ! ) Jt j- , " -- ' I . . . k & : - - 1 i I y " p I V v.. 1 i t- ( -' - , " v h J ' , i 1 i f - - . ; I ? ' - i $ . til i I ' 'I I , " ' i U - - i - i "- , i --'It -v I I W '4 v -- '' ' i i