Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 18, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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EATHER . . .mA warmer, with ? Hi fair " fjh in thrmid-50's. , The editors point to the ecmL" j debate over the student Ccnitiiw tion. See page 2, !-r v j ew VJV.-NNNrv Zm . Wn -s- A - IsX V fL ' , ' . '. , y. c- -- : ; '-. ... . Jl Complete fc?) Wire Service ' CHAPEL HILL, NORTHCAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH IS, 1956 - Offices In Graham Memorial ' FOUR PACES THIS 1SSU3 :r x;: Danforl h ; 1 YMCA To Choose PFFICAIS SAY: , 1e . !p-;-' i -' Officers-Tomorrow trntcsnce kxdms Aire w l ROBERT FROST bert Frost iiting Here 'is Weekend t Frost, the dean of Ameri ts, is making his annual t this weekend and will ; poetry before the acade jnunity in Hill Hall at 8:30 w night. winner of all major a poetic honors, has been to the University each for many years. While in e meets old friends, talks '!j to students in English jerican literature classes, ii his poetry to an audi it each year fills Hill Hall. xum Gives Plan Jolve Parking Mess j Exjrn, UP nominee for pres i the student body, came t"erday with a student-en-s'aa for solving the park i';!em here. "I DroDose that ents be responsible for en ; the parking regulations, it the fines which come !itions be used for -the :tion of new parking lots," ssnouBced in a prepared i- - e'is'some available space A throughout the campus : be: utilized. . " " atend to exhaust all these ties before thinking of any restriction on student cars," presidential candidate pro- 7 college campuses are ad with the parking pro- Here at Carolina the stu "ive an opportunity to work 'solution for themselves," said. I University Party Daily Tar Heel reported in cutlines for a pic the UP nominees for of M the student body that -p nominee for secretary ja Sue Waldner. "m this was incorrect. ;p candidate for secretary S5S Sue Walker. QM'S SLATE j"vit'es scheduled for Gra ijwwrlal today include: ( ' Musicale, 8 p.m.. Main fiends, 11-12:30 a.m.. Concert Series, 3-5 p.m., I Presbyterian Church, II -m., Roland PrUr 1. 1. i APO Room; Bahai, 11 nd Parker 1; Newman VIIMIIMICCi "OOCihous Contmrfnc " Student Party, 8:30 p.m. J t; EP'scopal Church, 10 Rendzvous Room. I heduld for Gra emorial tomorrow in- j,' 4-5 P-m., Grail Room; P m., Grail Room; Grail, f Room; S,udent Par' 11 P-m.. Roland Parker i Orientation. 4-6 p.m., Prker 1; UNC Card- P-m., Roland Park- ' XUd3ef Coee, 3-5. V ;0odhouse Conference l' Committee, 7.-8 ,odhouse Conference Court, 8-11 P-m. ,,, conference Room; i '.Council. 2-2:45 p.m., Council D 'Club, 7-U p.m., Ren- 0fn; APO, 7-9:30 p.m., Miss Susie E. Roberts, senior from Asheville, has been awarded a Danforth Fellowship according to an announcement yesterday from Dr. Keruieth I. Brown, execu tive director of the Dantorth Foundation. She is one of 25 winners in the country. The scholarship entitles Miss Roberts to spend a year on a col lege campus other than her own in order to work with religious ac tivities already on that campus. The work is -considered as field experience in religious work. Miss Roberts, along with the other winners, known as "Danny grads," will not know which camp us she will go to until after com pletion of a 5 weeks' training program at Camp Miniwanca, Mich. Assignments will be made then, according to the announce ment. Miss Roberts, a member of the Valkyries, hight women's hon orary group, and vice-president of Carr Dormitory, has been active in campus religious activities, es pecially in the Wesley Foundation and the YWCA. She is also a mem ber of t'ne Methodist Church choir. SHERWOOD H. SMITH JR. UNC Senior Named For Morehead Scholarship Sherwood H. Smith Jr., UNC Senior from Jacksonville, Fla. is one of 35 young men named to receive coveted Morehead Scholar ships for study at the University, beginning next fall. The thirty-five were selected after screening on the district and regional level, and were interviewed here by the Morehead Foundation trustees. John Motley Morehead, who estab lished the educationaid for young men of promise, was present for the final selections. Applications Available For Study At Goettingen Student exchange scholarship ap plications for" a year's study at Goettingen (Germany) University are now available ,at Graham Me morial, the YMCA and the German Dept,- One student will be selcted from UNC in early April for study ;in one of Goettingen's. seven depart ments Protestant Theology, Law and Social SciencfSj.Medicirje, Phil-1 osophy and Psychology, Mathema tics and Natural Sciences, Agricul ture, and Forestry. . Fraternity 'Workshop Held This Weekend Representatives of the interfra ternity councils of five North Car olina colleges met here this week end for an Interfraternity Coun cil Workshop. : ; The Workshop, sponsored ' by the National Interfraternity Con ference, was attended by I,F. C. student leaders and faculty advisJ ors from Duke, Wake Forest, Dav idson; N. C. State, and Carolina. An orientation to the program was givn by Horace G. Nichol, of Latchmont, N. Y., who is chai .man of the National Interfraterni ty Conference. In addition to Mr. Nichol, discussion groups were led by George Chapman, national Elections of new YMCA officers will be held tomorrow night at 9 o'clock upstairs ia the Y 'Building, Candidates Meeting Is Tomorrow The required meeting of all can didates for campus offices will be held tomorrow night. - It was erroneously reported by The Daily Tar Heel that the meet ing would be held Saturday night. All candidates are required to be in Gerrard Hall at 7:30 p.m. Excuses will be granted "only for (1) internment in the Infirmary; (2) conflicting classes, and (3) other reasons approved by the Chairman of the Elections Board," according to Article VHI, Section 1 of the General Election Law. "Candidates not attending this meeting and not having excuses as provided (above) . . . shall be dropped as candidates," according to Section 1.- i - "They may be reinstated by con tacting the Chairman of the Elect ions Board," according to Section 1, "within 48 hours after said meeting." Musicale To i Be Presen Here Tonight:- The third Petite Musicale of tle semester will feature . William Goettingen University is located executive secretary of Theta Chi; Klenz, 'cellist, tonight at 8 p.m.: in in a small lower Saxony town by Charles Boyd, national vice-.presi-1 the Main Lounge -of Graham Me- of Delta Tau Delta; and Clem , morial. ' " ' the same name, which is in Fouth- j dent ern Germany a few miles from the i Holding, national vice-president of iron curtain. j Beta Theta Pi. "': .o 1; Y r I Si i ir r r 1 I - t EDGAR ALDEN AND DR. WILLIAM NEWMAN ... vnll perform here Tuesdau UNC Music Faculty Members Will Present Recital Tuesday Edgar Alden, violinist, and Will iam S. Newman, pianist, will pre sent a recital of sonatas in Hill Hall, Tuesday at 8 p.m. Members of the Music Depart ment Faculty, Alden and Dn New man have appeared together m recitals in , Chapel Hill and throughout the state of North Car lina under the auspices of UNO Extension Division. Their program Tuesday will con sist of the following works for vio lin and piano: Jean-Marie Leclair s sonata in G Minor; Beethoven s Sonata in C Minor, op. o0, No U Richard Strauss' Sonata in E-flat, 0PAlden, head of the, string divis ion of the. Music Depanment gwes courses in Mus.c His ory.ry and appreciation, and se rve assistant conductor of the Urnyers Ity Symphony Orcne.tr. . Former ly concert master of tae Carolina Symphony and of the Moazrt Festival Orchestra in Ashe ville, he has appeared as soloist with both of these as -vell as other orchestras. As first violinist of the University' String Quartet, he' has played in numerous chamber mus ic recitals throughout the Caro linas. Newman is chairman of the pi ano division -and gives courses in appreciation and graduate Music ology. He has.been making annual lecture-recital tours in various parts of the country-for the Arts Program of the Association of American Colleges. In addition to his concertizing, Dr. Newman conducts the annual clinic for piano teachers and stu dents which is held here in June. He is author , of "The Pianist's Problems", "Understanding Music" and numerous other publications. Klenz will be accompanied by Miss Carol Sites, pianist. The re cital is presented by. the Graham Memorial Activities Board. Klenz, who is at the moment as sociated with the University Music Department, has included' in his career studies with composer Ern est Bloch and conductor Fritz Reiner. Work on the continent includes studies at the Academy at Foun tainbleau and the Paris Conserva tory. He has appeared in London, Paris, Florence, and Buenos Aires. He has played in Stokowski's famed All-American Youth Or chestra and during his early years of study was selected for the "ex clusive Curtis Institute of Music, located in Philadelphia. , In recent years he has played with the North Carolina Symphony and has appeared jiere for several recitals. His program today . in cludes works by J. S. Bach, Max Bruch, Franz Schubert, Gabriel Faure, Handel, and Boccherini. The Petite Musicale for Sunday, April 8, will feature' the Basing stoke Sextet, which has appeared here before. The sextet is a small company specializing completely in the opera of Gilbert and Sullivan, well known English composers and librettists of light operas. according to an announcement from the Y. Positions to be filled are presi dent, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and two executive com mittee members. v A slate of candidates for the positions will be presented by the Nominations Committee, headed by Ed Hennessee, YMCA vice- president. Other nominations may be made from the floor. The slate to be presented by the Nominations Committee is as fol lows: , ; President, Gerry Mayo and Roy Taylor; vice-president, any presi dential candidates hot elected to that office; secretary, Charles Mc- Caw; treasurer, Curtiss, Daughtry, and executive committee members, Doug Cantrell and Bob Olson. r Mayo, a rising junior from Falk land, has served this year as treas urer of the YMCA and as a mem ber of the Y Advisory Board, Race Relations Group and the Program and Policies Committee. He was a delegate to Southern Area YMCA Council Assembly in Atlanta, Ga., last month. He is also co-captain of the fencing team and a member Of Westminster Fellowship and (he Student Party. ! Taylor, a rising senior from Greenville, has held '..he office of secretary in the YMCA this year. He is a member of the Program and Policies Committee of the Y, the Student Party, the Student Legislature, the . Interdormitory Council and the Westminster Fel lowship. He has also been active in (he Phi Assembly and has served on the Campus Coordinating Coun cil. Last month, he was also a del egate to the Y Southern Area Council meeting. . McCaw, a veteran and a rising f ophomore from Hamlet, .has sejr-J frved on the Y, Cabinet and the Co op Committee this year. He has ft i Vx r ' 3 4 x r" . . V 3 i v j. it is -j Widow Jenkins And Farmer Lambert "Miss Maggie" Jenkins, played by Flora Roebuck, is a husband hunting widow school teacher with an eye for matrimony with slow talking farmer Keith Lambert, played by Paul McCauley, in the Caro lina Playmakers' new student-written folk comedy, "Cat In Gloves," slated to appear at the Playmakers Theatre this weekend. Cat 1 n Glo Th ft VQS ufcsuoy "Cat In Gloves", a new Carolina Swimming Coach Ralph Casey, folk comedy, will be the next pro-j Aunt Resa has been' caring for her also participated in the Executive duction by The Carolina Playmak-. dead sister's family for seven tee. Daughtry, a rising junior from ; 0f the Playmakers' staff,, the com- ! Smithfield, has headed the YMCA edy was written by Baxter Sasser, Council of the International Re--ers, this Thursday thiough Sun Wtions Council, the , Program and day at , the Playmakers' Theatre at Policies Committee of the Y and 8:30 p.m., with a 2:30 matinee the Conference Planning Commit-, Sunday. . years, and. has been almost wife and mother to Keith Lambert, played by Paul McCauley, and Keith's three children. The "al- Directed by Foster Fitz-Simons ' most" proves to be a wide margin Publications Committee this year. He has served as editor of the 1955 Carolina Handbook and the 1955 56 student directory. A member of Sigma Phi, Epsilon fraternity, hef Set in the area of sasser's na HARTUNG Dr. Walter II. Hartung, profes sor of pharmaceutical chemistry, will speak to the Lutheran Student Assn. tonight at 6 p.m. at the Lu theran Church. He will speak , on "The Meaning of Being A Protestant." BA Students Roy Lawrence, alumnus of the University and presently in Hie administration of the Graduate. -SchoolNof Business Administra tion at Harvard University, wilt be on campus tomorrow. Lawrence will meet with in terested Students during the afternoon in the office of the Dean of Student Affairs. Anyone interested in further information may call Dean Weaver. has been chairman of Campus Chest this year and a member of the Student Legislature,, serving on the Rules Committee. Cantrell, a rising senior from Seaford, Del., has been a member J of the . Y Cabinet and Executive Committee this year. He has serv ed as co-chairman of the YMCA YWCA Conference at Bricks and has participated as, a member of the Freshman Camp Planning Committee and v the Y Program and Policies Committee. He has also been orientation counselor for two years and a member of the Elections Board for three years. 01on, a rising sophomore from Kenly, has been active in the Y Freshman Fellowship, Race Rela tions Group and Freshman Camp Planning Committee. He is also a member of the Phi Assembly and the Student Party., who received i his M.A. degree in Dramatic Art at UNC last June and is now teaching at St. Mary's College in Maryland. tive Mt. Olive, N. C, the play is in the vein of the early UNC student-written folk-dramas three and four decades ago, in the era of Playmaker's founder, Frederick H. ("Proff") Koch. Most noted of the early UNC folk-playwrights are Paul Green, Bernice Kelly Harris, and Thomas Wolfe, who studied playwriting before becoming a novelist. The posters being used , by the Playmakers' publicity department for "Cat In Gloves" are the same ones used thirty years' ago to ad vertise the regular folk-plays more frequently presented at that time. The posters, in perfect condition, were recently found in storage in the basement of the Orange Print Shop. - The story of "Cat In Gloves." is when husband-hunting widow, "Miss Maggie", played ,.by Miss Flora Roebuck, rides into town with an eye for matrimony. Aunt Resa, who was too timid and un-scheming to stop Maggie from luring away her intended husband 20 year before, still keps her blue lace wedding dress which was never worn. She finally gives it to her niece to wear on a date, and just about gives up hope of every marrying Keith, who' nearly succumbs to the flirtations of Mag gie. Family unity turns out to be a bigger obstacle to, Maggie than she had reckoned for, though, and Resa wins her man. : Acording to the Playmakers' publicity director, "If the perform ances provide as many laughs as the rehearsals have, for the cast, director, and observers, the play should be one f the funniest ever seen on : the Playmakers stage. The seduction scene' is hilarious." Tickets for the five perform ances are available at 214 Aber- nethy Hall, Ledbetter - Pickard's, about honest, hard-working Aunt or Box 1050, Chapel Hill. All Rosa, played by Les Casey, wife of1 seats' are reserved at $1.50. 205 Make A-& S Dean's List The Dean's list of the School of Brown, Laurel, Md.; James B. Bui Arts and ' Sciences has been re- litt, III, Swarthmore, Pa.; Graham leased. I J. Burkheimer, Jr., Wilmington; The following students were Miss Martha Elizabeth Cannon, taking a minimum of fifteen se mester hours of work and re ceived grades of "B'Y or higher on all work taken in the fall semester. Miss Frances G. Alderdice, Mi ami Beach, Fla.; Charles 11. Ash ford, Jr., New Bern; Clinton Kes ler Atkinson, Lilesvllle; Miss Eliz abeth A. Baumann, Staten Island, N.Y.; Keith Lamberth Bentley, No- Shelby; Miss Jaqueline Cary Cap- erton, Charleston, W. Va.; Claudius Le'roy Carlton, Jr., Chapel Hill; Miss Patiicia Anne Carter, Chapel Hill; Norman Allison Chamberlain, Matthews; William Curtis Charles, Rocky Mount; Miss Mary Jane Cocke, Asheville; Francis Eugene Collins, Jr., Lum berton; Robert Braswell Condrey, Enfield; Miss Ann Bowlus Cooper, ravian Falls; Ralph Luther Bent- Columbus,' Ga.; Miss Marry Carolyn ley, Moravian Falls; Miss Betty Joan Bissell, Chapel Hill; Charles Corley, Orangeburg, S. C; James T. Cornwell, Chapel Hill; Miss Sidney Blankstein, Greensboro; t Mary Jean Crawford, Rowland; Miss Erolyn Jenkins Blount, Nash- David Neal Crissman, Chapel Hill; ville; John Gray Blount Washing- John Russelly Curtis, Bessemer ton; Robert Martin Boerner, Wins- City; Miss Frances Eugenie Stu-ton-Salem; s I binger Daugherty, Chattanooga, . Michael Lynn Boyatt, Wyoming, Tenn.; Bruce Reynolds Davis, Ohio;' Miss Ellen Evelyn BrauerJ Lumberton; George Thomas Davis, ChaDel TIlll PnWt PtI Uritt 1 Phsnpl TTi 1 1 - Lumberton; Miss Nan Wilma J Ira Lewis Davis, Bayonne, N.J.; Robert William Dawson, Elmhurst, N. Y.; Henry Hursell Dearman, Statesville; Miss Diana Jo Dibble, Danville? Va.; Miss Roberta Har vey Dixon, Raleigh; James Stephen Dockery, RutherfordtDn: Miss Shir ley Jean Downing, Fayetteville Charles' Jerome Dunn, Jr., Ahos kie; Miss Joy F. Earp, Raleigh; Miss Sarah Elizabeth Edgerton, Golds boro; Charles P. Eldridge, Jr., Ra leigh; Miss Ann Adams Ellison, Ft. Thomas, Ky.; Miss Laura Powe Ervin, Morganton; Miss Sylvia Kathleen Evans, Chapel Hill; James Gooden Exum, Snow Hill; Miss Wilhelmena M, Falkenberg, Charlotte;' Miss Edith Bringhurst Farnum, Ardmore, Pa.; Miss Mar jorie Anne Fernald, Chapel Hill; Louis Joseph Fisher, III., High Point; Miss Mary McGuire Fite, Charleston, W. Va., Peter Hunter Fite, Miami, Fla., Robert Eugene Fleming, Jr., Smithfield; Miss Sar ah Alice Folger, Milledgeville, (See DEAN'S LIST. Page 4) T Letters Hove Applauded New Tests By JIM NICHOLS Tar Heel parents who fear their sons and daughters may not pass the new entrance examinations 'can be assured that the state is not erecting "Keep Out" signs. To the contrary, "Come On" signs are being put up, for tha tests are expected to disclose stu dents who "ought to he going to college" and do not go. Scholarship assistance will be sought for thrm. - That assurance was made known by University officials who ex plained some of the conditions of the Board of Trustees' new admis sions policy, to become effective in the Fall of 1957. At the same time, the University indicated re ceiving a large number of letters applauding the decision. "DRY RUN" Announcement has been made of a "dry run" entrance exam experimental tests to be adminis tered April 7 and April 14, 1D50, at 23 testing centers throughout the state. Scotching rumors that the tests for entrance to the University will be excessively high, Dr. W. W. Pierson, dean of the Graduate School and chairman of the All University Committee which help ed prepare the admissions require ments, said (1) enrollments are not going to be pegged at the pres ent level, (2) studies covering the pasT four ' years show that only 3 or 9 per cen of an entering fresh man class would have been reject ed during those years had the new admissions plan ben in eifect. (3) these studies also show that less than four per cent of those stu dents who would have been reject ed were able to pass their work and graduate. Although the plan as adopted ap plies only to the Consolidated University at Chapel Hill, Greens boro and Raleigh, there are indi cations the system of examinations may be extended to all 12 of the state-supported institutions of high er learning in the state. Advice of the State Dept. of Public Instruct ion also is to be available in ad ministering the tests. OTHER ASPECTS Some other aspects of the ex amining system are: 1. tests will not necessarily keep out students who are pooTr pre pared, mem.ely because the high schools they have attended are not as good as certain other high schools or preparatory schools. The examinations will be compre hensive enough to test aptitude, potential ability, as well as the level of scholarship already attain ed. If the student is teachable, and if he has prospects of main taining the University pace, ad mission will not be denied. 2. Those who don't pass the ex aminatiorv the first time will get a second chance if they request it. 3. There is no truth to the state ment that the size of the student bodies will remain at the present enrollment level. The plans envi sion an incre'ase in enrollments of qualified students. 4. High school students not plan ning to go to college but who score high on the test will be en couraged to change their minds and attend the University. Schol arships will be sought for them. (See EXAMS, Page 4) IN THE INFlBMAnY Studetns in the infirmary yes terday included: Miss Yvonne D. Berce, Miis Elizabeth A. Malloy, Miss Sra D. Cobb, Manuel C. Kranis, Herbert A. Thuemmler, Joel N. Dobkin, James H. Mathis, Eric R. Roper, George H. Johnson, James R. Dillingham, George S. Best, James E. McDavid Jr., Miss Linda L. Cleveland, Miss Martha W. Rouse, William C. Akin and Doujlas V. Sharp.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 18, 1956, edition 1
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