WEATHER I , (XPected hiSh of 85. DORMS Th editors may have an enswtr to crowded tlsrms. See page 2. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1951? Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUS 2)' ii IF- mi i o Of Dora, Spencer w sm7! M ay ft V?s if U in 11 V LiU U ksJ U U U U Vbr J PS' , y , . y jJlTTSTi Complete (JP) Wire Service t . '., ' ; L1 sJ)-' . ( to If i . .:, .- -.- - .:.V - . f . r I ' . , ' t CT c Ay ' - frr a m J ail ;;l'"U h ?t:rr r V ; ; I - . .; V ' 9jj-LUW ' A' ; 7; .'"-' " 1 il r .. . . . ' ; h - ! v. i( r;'-:-r-!-:v ?f - - i r -. ; ! T ; ; ; : ! 1' . . I :i I ..' " i . l r - f ' " -.. :s I ;i i : ' - ' V I ' - - ' i I - f : : ? , ' ' ., - r ; : , - !'.'"' I I i ' .' - : , f x- ' I Z. -.: ., ' ' v ; . j..-.' f ' ; if - i ... . i . ,.,.waiili a" - - I . i -N"- : ? -''" ' J . , " ' ' . i i. i , I'HWMH I. U I. -Tin -itl in. , , us II . me House 710 Ml 1 Sfn jit! hlY M Vaa U U Li isJ IF YOU'VE IGNORED ANY: STUDENTS FOULED UP BY LAWS The University housing problem, inougat l" "r:.,rJ ;.;.t:;: h;V Warrants against students and , ing court action, have already paid r ,7 k h rhjmpi llTll townspeople who have received their tickets voluntarily, which is been fouled up by the Chapel Hill what we would preer they do zoning laws tickets are now being prepared. Mrs. Barbara Howdy, clerk of inree siuuems wimcu m house trailors on property below Warrants Are Coming For Parking Tickets In a statement made yesterday, the recently formed Chapel Hill Town Recorder's Court prosecutor UNC Asks Government For $2-Million Loan x By NEIL BASS Construction on a new 710-man dormitory and an addition al wing for Spencer Dormitory "may" begin shortly after Christmas, according to a statement made yesterday by Claude Teague, University business manager. Teague said the. Building Committee of the Board of Trus tees approved the site for the- men's dormitory . selected by the Traffic Bureau, said Eben Merntt s service station un !r cmt,( ,tcnnn!vp..n PAttin HrkPts. Those who the Pittsboro Road, J. E. Smith told, c,,ff,vipnt number ore- i don't tear them utj come in here the town Board of Aldermen Mon- pared tQ justify service by officers j to pay, and, honestly, I feel guilty day night. Mr. Smith's land is not . nrnseciitinn. we'll besin serv-1 having to take their money for ing them." New Students Survey Their Campus te Negro 3.; who won their summer-long fight to enter the University were looking over their j yesterday. While taking tests and interviews, Leroy Frasier (left), John Brandon and Ralph rtook time to stand on South Building's steps and look around. (Henly Photo) . IStudents . gin Work : )ffied'5ch6ol 4i stud ants, 63 of them irth Carolina, have begun rst year of medical studies j wording to Dr. W. Reece ; d, dean of the Medical j lew medical freshmen par j id in a tvo-day orientation T- this week, which includ- Auction to the Medical . s student activities and stu :vemmen as well as ad by University medical per- Edward McG. Kedgpeth, r'-7 pbys cian and clinical professor of medicine, the innual Whitehead Other faculty members geared as a panel to dis- Study of Medicine" were H. Burnett, Dr. A. T. barter Wells, Dr. Ed- berry Jr. and Dr. 'N. Hooker. 3 enrollment figure is the I3, fe : 954-55 freshman ih ineluded only one f'e student. Out-of-5tatPr STL'DOTS, page 2) Negro Students I via y : todays Or I sses within the city limits. The aldermen sympathized with, n has been reportej that there ! the University do something about the boys 1 Building and Grounds Committee, and employed architects for the two new buildings at a session held last Wednesday week. The Build ing Committee is composed of Reid something so unnecessary. Can't . Maynard, Burlington; Knox Mas- it?" Mrs. Howdy suggested that to meet the problem of parking, the Playmakers Start Off With Varied Schedule ' Leroy and Ralph Frasier and John Brandon are now completing their formal orientation to enter the University. The three Negro youths went through a battery of placement tests, physicals and inter views yesterday. Provided the tests were completed in time for registration Friday afternoon, the trio will begin classes this morning. At the latest, they will be enrolled by Monday morning. Brandon and the Frasier brothers are the first Negroes to be ad mitted to any undergraduate school in the South. Their applications to the University last spring had been rejected. A special three-judge Federal Court ruled last Saturday that the applications of the three youths must be processed regardless of race. An appeal on Monday by the University was refused. Subse quently, the Negroes were, admitted to the University on Thursday. While Tar Heels Suntanned, Graham Memorial Was Beehive Smith, but told him they could not are more than 80 people, most of suspend the zoning of the area. whom are students, involved with If a recommendation were made tne traffic bureau this year. by the Planning Board, rezoning According to Mr. Denny, several University establish and maintain would be possible,, they said. The persons, having heard of impend-' student parking lots. matter was sent to the Planning : Board for further consideration. P. O. Burch who has been con nected with the University for 36 years and who now is Building In spector as well as the manager of the campus police force, explained the law as follows yesterday: No trailer may be parked on a lot where there is a house; no more than one trailer may be parked on an empty lot, for two or more trailers make up a trailer court and must follow sewage laws and be parked a certain distance apart. The only trailer court in Chapel Hill under the present zoning sys- em.is on the -Airport Road. The greater district zoning ordinance covers an approximate two mile radius of Chapel Hill. Smith said a fourth student had written in regard to parking a trailer on his land in the fall of 1956. He said he was planning to build a septic tank on the proper ty soon to take care of sanitary 1 problems. While most Carolina students were contentedly suntanning on sunny beaches, or paddling happi ly in swimming pools, a perspiring crew of dedicated people were splashing about in the heat and humidity around Graham Me morial. - The end of June brought hot weather and a GM photo contest jtfttAG WANTS GOOD POETRY: rterly, Tarnation ' kohl Quarterly," liter- j editorial positions are still open., j . (lf the unjversity I The staff will held its first meet- J3e s first edition Nov. j ing next Thursday at 3 p.m. It f',.s. r, - will be held-in one of the Roland , ;ne is expected to be Parkrr lounzes in Graham Me- ri his .year, the first mortal. All persons who have in terest in working on the stall are invited to meet with them, said Editor Scarborough. Editor Bill Ragsdale has this to about the first edition of the "Tar nation," "The Tarnation' will do its best to come out about the mid dle of October, but it may come late that month, say about No vember. We've got the money, so all that would hold us up would be the material that's up to the people who write it. If you're one of that crowd, or would like to be, come on down to the office next Tuesday afternoon about 2. Cartoonists, satirists of any kind, people who know suitable jokes, those with a general interest and hAantif.il wnmen are cordially m- Snd RlKinncc 1 mfltprial. 'EuMif 1 vited. it you nave sum . many as 72 -Tnain storics carry- VaHe with no definite '-DJecl. matter, according !"arborough. fja laid yesterday "The . e first edition of the 1 w'a wclude short stories cJus writers. The f to be the best tr the Quarterly. I ?:; ecting to include Up?-. n international Vm h ?;hose name will i ' i lit ;r " for ihi, , mis year consists tb )rh. Poetry Edi 1 Hn,FicUon Editoress Ik ' Eook Review Ji: for the first summer . session fol lowers of higher education. The Memorial later carried on in its tradition of welcoming newcomers to the University by holding a wel coming party for the students en tering the second session of sum mer school. While the Summer Activities Board was keeping the summer students occupied, the members of GMAB were kept busy making plans for the winter months. Charlie Peterson, pool and bil liards expert, will demonstrate his art from October 16 through 22. Such outstanding films as "Har vey", Mississippi Gambler", and "Kind Hearts and Coronets will be presented by GMAB free of charge throughout the winter. Other fruits of the board's sum mer labor include plans for free bridge and dance lessons. Wrong Dial Look In Book Many students returned this fall to find their phone numbers en tirely new. Nine thousand copies of the new Chapel Hill telephone book were distributed on June 7, shortly after the close of school. Countless wrong numbers have been dialed since that date. This is because a large, number of the out-dated books were not turned in when the new copies were dis Hhnted. according to telephone company spokesmen. All Day stations were given num bers beginning with 89. In addi tion, the 100 lines of. 4 digit num bers which began with tne num ber 7 were given the prefix 8. The 38th season of The Carolina Playmakers promises to be a fine and unusually varied one, accord ing to Prof. Samuel Selden, di rector of the Playmakers and chair man of the Dept. of Dramatic Art. j "Ondine," Giaudoux's fantasy of "man meets mermaid," opens the season at the Playmakers Theatre Oct. 12-16. 'The Rainmakers," a comedy by N .Richard Nash, will tour the Carolinas and Georgia fol- The group plans to do two foreign lowing its production at the Play plays, a Shakespearean comedy, a ' makers Theatre from Nov. 9-13. fantasy and two modern comedies,. A modern,, tragedy A front; Spain, besides 4 the production, "as in the i Lorca's "Blood Wedding," will be past, of two new full-length plays at the theatre in a stylized produc- as well as one-acts. LECTURE Prof. John Bright, of the Union Seminary in Richmond, will give lecture, sponsored by the De partment of Religion, on "Bibli cal Authority and Theology" in Carroll Hall at 8 p.m. Sunday. NEW CHAIRS 175 new chairs have been pur chased for the Roland Parker Lounges and the Rendezvous Room in Graham Memorial. The chairs are maple and the seats are up holstered with dark green leather. 'Ondine' First Ondine, the Giraudoux fan tasy which recently played on Broadway, is the opening play of the season for the Carolina Playmakers. Tryouts for the casting will be held Monday at 4 and 7:30 p.m. at the Playmakers Theatre. New and old students, faculty members and their families and Chapel Hill residents have been invited to read for any of the 26 male and female parts. Ten copies of the script are on re serve at the University Library for those who wish to be more familiar with the parts, accord ing to a spokesman for the Playmakers. tion with music and dance Dec. 12- 16. The spring semester opens with the musical version of the famous Booth Tarkington novel, "Seven teen," at Memorial Hall, March 2-4, followed by a new play to be se lected by the staff, March 22-25. at the Playmakers Theatre. The season's final production will be Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream," staged with song and dance outdoors in the Forest Theatre May 4-6. Season tickets for $5 are on sale at the Playmakers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall (next to Scut tlebutt) and at Ledbetter-Pickard. Library Announces Schedule For Year University Library hours, according to a statement from the li brarian, will be as follows; On the ground floor, each branch, with the exception of the Ex tension Dept., will open at 8:30 a.m. : On Saturdays, all departments, except fcr the Rare Book Room, which will open at 8:30 a.m., will open at the same time but will close at 1 p.m. All departments will be closed on Sundays. On the first floor, Mondays through Fridays, the Reserve Reading Room will open at 7:45 a.m., the General College and the North Carolina Collection at 8 a.m. The Librarian's Office will open at 8:30 a.m., and the Economics and Business Administration depart ment at 8:45 a.m. The departments will close at 10:45 p.m., with the exceptions of the Librarian's Office, which will close at 5 p.m., and the North Carolina Collection which will close at 6 p.m. On Saturdays, each department will open at its usual time and close at 6 p.m., again with the exceptions of the Librarian's Office and the North Carolina Collection, which will both close at 1 p.m. The Librarian's. Office and the North Carolina Collection are also open from 2 p.m. until 10 p.m. on Sundays while the other depart ments are closed. On the second floor, the-Catalog, GkSer and Serials Departments will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Saturdays and will be closed on Sun days. The Circulation Desk opens at 8:45 a.m. and Mondays through Fridays closes at 10:45 p.m. On Saturdays it will close at 6 p.m. Sundays it is open from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. The Current Affairs and the Reference Dept. will be open from 9 a.m. to 10:45 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays, and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays. The Documents Dept. will be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays - through Saturdays, and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays. , On the third floor, the Library School Library will be open from 8:30 a.m. until 4:S0 p.m., Mondays through Fridays, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturdays, and will be closed on Sundays. During vacation periods all departments will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mondays through Fridays, from 9 a.m. to 1 pjri. on Satur days, and will be. closed on Sundays. " Stray Greeks Plan Rush Invitations The Stray Greeks Organization held its first meeting of the fall yesterday 'to organize the handling of sorority rush invitations. Dis tributing the party invitations through the Panhellenic Post Of fice in William Wolfe Lounge of Graham Memorial is an annual duty of the Stray Greeks. Lila Ponder, representative from the Office of the Dean of Women, and Pat Dixon, vice-president" of Panhellenic Council, explained post office duties to the group. "Besides issuing invitations to rushees and keping the sorority rushing machinery operating ef ficiently," Miss Ponder stated, "Stray Grek members have made it a policy to be on hand to answer questions the rushees may have if possible and to act as advisors." Stray Greeks are planning a bridge party to honor new mem bers sometime during rush. MELLOWED Apparently UNC students are being mellowed by the first fran tic days of school. The Chapel Hill Police Department reports that all is quiet on Franklin Street, and that the students "are being very nice." sey, Durham; Wade Barber, Pitts boro; Jack Blythe, Charlotte, and Carl Venters, Jacksonville. The committee selected Ray mond Weeks of Durham to do an architectial sketch of the Spencer Dormitory wing, and George Watts Carr of Durham to do a concept of the new men's dormitory. The dormitory will be con structed on the side of the hill opposite the University outdoor swimming pool. It will house ap proximately 710 students." The new Spencer wing will house about 90 women students. . According to Teague, the state Legislature passed during the last session an enabling act which gave the University authority to borrow $2 million. Upon authorisation, Teague went to the House and Home; Finance: Dept. of, the fed eral government and submitted a request for this amount. This re quest has been acknowledged and will be decided upon "in the near future." Teague said the University had faken definite steps toward the construction of the new buildings; hus it would make arrangements to borrow the money from private sources if the federal loan does not materialize. The new dormitories will house a number of students equal to the nresent number of third men in University dormitory rooms. Teague was presented with the fact that by the time the dormi tory is completed, thus . relieving the current three - man room cramped situation, the campus Dopulation will probably have grown 700 or 800 more, making three-man rooms still a necessity. He replied that dormitories could not be built to stand idle for future students because they are self -liquidating. That is to say, student fees must begin paying for the dormitories immediately after they are completed, to avoid the accumulation of a vast amount of interest. (See UNC, page 2) UNC YWCA APPOINTS DIRECTOR Mrs. Pauline Decker Brooks, a native of Roanoke, Va., has been appointed to replace Miss Betty Ray as assistant director of the University YWCA. A 1953 graduate of Westhamp ton College, of the University of Richmond, Mrs. Brooks has been working since' then as Director of Education and Youth Activities at Calvary Baptist Church, Richmond, Va. While at Westhampton, she was elected senior class president, and was also chosen to represent the college in "Who's Who in Ameri can Colleges and Universities." She is now living at 160 E. Rose mary St. with her husband, who is ' doing graduate work in the School of Business Administration. Yackety-Yaclcs Editor Jack Markham an nounced yesterday that anyone who did not receive or wishes to have a copy of the 1955 Yack ety Yack may be able to acquire one at the yearbook office or the information desk in Gra ham Memorial. There are ap proximately 430 Yackety Yacks available. Pan-Hellenic Social Scheduled Tomorrow The Pan-Hellenic Council, the sorority government which paral lels the men's Interfraternity Council, will have a tea Sunday at 4 p.m. in the main lounge of Gra ham Memorial. Also on Sunday a reception for all Catholic students will be held in the main lounge from 5-7 p.m. Professor John Bright of the Re ligion Department of Union Theo logical Seminary in Richmond, Va., will give a lecture in Carroll Hall on Sunday at 8 p.m. The Bridge Club will meet on Monday between 7-11 p.m. in the Rendezvous Room. All students have been invited. SHE MAKES CANDY AT DANZIGER'S: Hansi Terms America Uniform And Hygenic 'Wonderful So big Friend- J sights taken for granted by ly." These were the words used by Hansi Prchal of Vienna, Aus tria, to describe her impression of the U. S. Hansi, guest of the E. D. Danzigers in Chapel Hill since last October, has made much of the candy eaten by UNC students in the last year. "When I came to America and saw your country, she said it was like stones falling away from my heart because of the easiness here. Then, too, there is your democracy. It's just the country itself. "In our country " she continu ed, "there is culture and here ycu have a young country, and it is not held back by tradition, no? America is more uniform, clean, hygenic. Everything is modern and I like it that way. "Big homes and such nice furniture and cars, too . . . and a bankroll!" These and other Americans amazed Hansi on her arrival. "Only about 20 percent of my people have real cars; mostly they have motor scoot ers. When I write home to my father and my mother and tell tunities are, they can not under them how wonderful the oppor stand." Hansi's degree as a pastry worker qualifies her to own and operate a shop. On her return to Vienna, she may work with her uncle in his pastry shop. Hansi spoke of the difficult living conditions in her country. "Here," she said, "you need not feel any worry except maybe over small problems. I came here knowing I would visit, so actual ly I have not found time for homesickness, because the peo ple do not let me get homesick. When I go home, I hope to come back soon." ui me ue sure iu uu"i "- 1

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