f
ourr
Outlaws Segregation ln:'rablic z 11
inansporira'yin
WEATHER
,Mcl.'i,h W,,,l hlsh
EIGHT
, ' ' ' f- . .- ..... - i -.
frf-,-- i jj.yi.gaji- -; . , -
Thar how many days the s
dents have to solve the u!:r :
problem. See editorial, pz 2
i W
iivii
NO. 144
Compute (P) Wire Service
innioiroaii
!
Hspifa
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1956
Jl
Offices In Graham Memorial
FOUR PAGES THIS
o
j
Jl
r UN
n
31
ml
c
hi
'e 1
!
I
40:
ir f
.,. in the organizational
; 0 the Division oi
C Affairs of the University
jounced yesterday by
4r Rohcrt B. House, with
I j of Acting President Wil
a,v and the unanimous
dot the health affairs com
I, of the Board of Trustees.
Ca of the committee is Vic-
Vnt of Durnam
f.l Hospital is ' to be
under the administrative
';.jon of the dean of the
"of Medicine.
'.j actions which do not at-
fundamental administra-
nt the Health Af-i
vision include employment
fial agent to be responsi-J
ij the business manager" of.
' siversity, and authorization
i'ie to guide the structure, J
L and policies of the di-,
the action taken is suoject
val of the Board of Trus-
School of Medicine, School of
Pharmacy, School- of Public
Health, School of Dentistry and
iSchool of Nursing.
The director of the hospital will
be a department' head in the
School of Medicine. Tne cnange
ic snhnriuled to become effective
between July 1, 1956 and July 1,
1957.
Director of the Division of
Health Affairs is Dr. Henry T.
Clark Jr. Dr. V. Iteece uerrynm
is dean of the School of jIedicine,
and Dr. Robert R. Cadmus is di
rector of the hospital.
Chiefs of the other scnoois are
Dr. E. A. Brecht, dean of the
School of Pharmacy; Dr. E. G.
McGavran, dean of the School of
Public Health; Dr. John C. Brauer,
dean of the School of Dentistry,
and Miss Elizabeth L. Kemoie,
dean of the School of Nursing.
s?6 Siuide
Make- H ig
best
OWL ho
fm
Ban Based On Old
i. i
School Decision
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su-Jof the bus lines by Negroes
I
...nr morlA in the
hpadins the sixfold :
jiti --
Center which includes the
swell Will
flk At Di
luguration
t i
I Honorable Herbert Seaweil,1
ji candidate for Governor
republican of Carthage, will
i the principal address at the
pi Senate inauguration
pies tonight in Di Hall at
IxL. -
IwelL renowned wit, and one
'ablest public speakers in:
s . '
ale is a member oi me Dar
took will be "Current
pin the Light of Ignorance"
a he rather facetiously puts
nil probably change tne
i course of civilization". His
3
will cover, he says, "every
from integration by the
se Court to dis-integration
e H-bomb of nuclear sci
t
cers of the Di include David
senior of Asheville and At-
! General of th Student
I who, as president, will mak'e
5ditinna1 inaugural addreSSI
aa Grant, Senior of Beth-
president pro tempore;
pcElroy, critic and former
lint of the Di: Steve Moss,
I of the Senate;, Bill Self,
l?er; George "Jeep" Myatt,
jArms; and Scotty Hester,
aia.
itedin? thf pprprnnnies. Sea-
I Till be honoripd at a dinner
Carolina Inn tfiven by
ient R5j n,fr nffirers
1 ouu
Ambers of the Senate. In
successful bid for the gov
1 candidate Seaweli re
(' more votes than any., other
pcan since 1900.
i -. -vui iveiu lias .
I prominent members of the
p and administration and
Public was also cordially in-
the inauguration cere
land reception following, in
Jl Hall, 3rd floor New West.
Will DfkUato Calf
Ncoholic Bcvcrfiacs
T y
i'ODen and nnhlio c1 nf all
I! Of alprvVinl in Knwoi'aff S in
lte of NTnrfi r'ai-nlina will
, .wvu
r object of- the debate in
I'Mlantropic Assembly this
r to sllii.J k. JVntn Vinth
j r . 1 t ...ill
j ana lacuuy, wnica wn
ftface in phi Hall, fourth
t V . .
w East building, at e o
r "
lading to Phi spokesman
Jfolman, the bill should be
Glee Club And
Chorus To Give
Concert Tonighl
The UNC Men's Glee Cub and
Chorus, conducted by Joel Carter,
will present a concert in Hill Hall
today at 8 p.m.
tv, firct half of the program
A. -
will be devoted to selections sung
by the Glee Club with Hunter un
man .of Roxboro accompanying,
after intermission, the mixed chor
,,e will sin? a trrouD of Jewish and
Israeli songs, and conclude with
Randall Thompson's "The Peace
able . Kingdom"; Miss .ShirleyCar- j
penter of Oakboro will accom-
nanv !
Soloists with the Men's Glee
Club are Richard Peterson, tenor
from Asheville; David Small, bari-
tone, Morebead City; Hugn jyiasun,
bass, Fayettcville; ana Jirs. wnu
Patton, soprana, Missouia, uj-
Miss Roberta Dixon, mewsu
prano from Raleigh, will be solo
ist with the Mixed unorus m uuc
of the Jewish songs.
"Th Peaceable Kingdom" is a
sequence of sacred choruses for
unaccompaniea huacu
text based on the Prophecy of
Isaiah. The title was inspired by
Edward Hick's painting. Commis
sioned by the League of Composers
u Harvard Glee Club and the
iUi iu- .
Radcliff Choral Society, the work
was published in ivoo.
preme Court yesterday unanimous-
ly outlawed segregation ui y"
nn ail ni'iblie buses in effect
meaning on all public transporta-j
tion.-
ihP action was taken in a brief
'order on a case arising in Colum
bia, S. C. This upheld a lower court
decision that the same principles
on which the Supreme Court ban-
ned race segregation in tne puuuc
't
T vsterdavV action, the Su-
J -
nfamo rmirt bv inference branded
as frivolous South Carolina's ap
peal to it to uphold segregation m
transportation.
Its unsigned order cited a case
itw sinker v. O'Connor. In that
case, the high court threw out an
appeal and said it had been taken
"without any authority of law" and
"thereby needlessly consumed our
schools applied al5o to public trans-, time." . a-
1 5rrAH a rutins? bv the U. S. Court
TSnrtatinn
For the South, wnere segregauuu
is imbedded in state laws, it has
significance only a little short of
the school ruling. . ,
I Hubert Pierce, manager of the
Chapet Hill Union Bus Terminal,
$aid yesterday he .would await
instructions from his superiors
before doing anything about the
Supreme Court's decision doing
away with segregation of passen
fc SersJn publk.buses. He said the 4
term i naT was used -by the Caro-,
Una Coach Co. which has main
offices in Raleigh, and the Queen
City Coach Co., which operates
out of Charlotte.
i
fst to many thinking peo-
"6 moral, financial, ana su-
SUVU'U V w v- "I
1 ,verest to members. Speaker
CVUrtU said, because of the
vk.un ui a new oc6vm-
tiiat will take place at that
Order Of Grail
Holds Banquet;
Fifty Attend
"Free to Face the Future" was
u nniP snoken on by Howard
U1C - - - .
Holdcrness, president of the Jcf
frson Standard Ufe Insurance Co.,
at a banquet here Thursday night.
The banquet was given by the
Order of the Holy Grail, campus
Approximately 50 people attend
ed the event, including both past
and precsnt members of the organ
ization. .
Holdcrness, Grail member m 1922
23 graduated from the University
with a Bachelor of Science degree
: nrtV ratirs in li)Zo.
Ill m a n'v-"- , .
He attended tne narv-i"
ness School for two years in 1923-
25. Holdcrness workea nis
from the bottom witn
o.,in-ri sprvinir as secretary and
omi, ,
vice-president beiore Decuunus f -
sident in I9o0. c.
Delegata Ed McCurry, of Shelby,
welcomed both present and past
members to the oanqu -
Luther Hodges Jr., ot
gave a resume ot tne
vrtics throughout the year.
Eleven newmemDcn,reucu,
itiatd by tbe Order were presented
membership certificates during the
meeting. . th
Former members present at the
. . um in th Carolina mn,
included Mayor r - v;
ham, W. Brantley Womble of Ra-
leigh, Dean of btuaent - - -
H Weaver, and Assistant Dean of
Student Affairs W '
The Grail was iounucu
to build better relations between
fraternity and non-fraternity men.
J,ck Markham. D. P.Hngt.X Cecil Harts,. & Nancy S.eph.n
... hard to 9et Sod. & rn, ledgc phot0
Monday's 'Chile Hot' To
Star 'Pee Wee Batten
Sound -d Fury will d,plfy Us ai.- , program agai
new production entitled uiiie s the only performer
Hot" next Monday. Tuesday and ast mm"ast y P
Wednesday. and VersaUle Performer Award.
is a poienuany -
r - . r,oo!in
Ala., for instance,
i?AVllfvwF v f -
has experienced prolonged turmoil
over the segregauon-on-iranspu
iX 1"V. VA M . C -T
Richmond holding
i v ,
cprrrpfration on intrastate bus-
e iiiuv wvft v0- - f
pt fthat is. DUSes operaieu vuiiij
within one state, as are city buses)
'viAiatM the federal Constitution.
tip annellate court decision,
handpd hown last July 14, said the
Court decision laying
down the 'separate but equal" doc- i
. a 1am r
trine in transportation can uu lun
ger be regarded as a correct state
ment of law.;,-,.-, - i
Th. full tpvt of the brief order
dismissing an appeal by th,South
Carolina Electric & uas uo. miviy
said:
"Per curium by the court: the
appeal is dismissed. Slaker v.
ATnnnnr 27R U. S. 188." .
South Electric & Gas had appeal-
. . .
By CHARLIE JOHNSON
Sixteen students and one faculty member were tapped into
the Order of the Golden Fleece in impressive ceremoni..
held in Memorial Hall last night.
The 54th annual tapping ceremonies of the h .ghost Hon
orary' on campus preceeded the annual Valkyrie bing.
The lone faculty member taken in vas Dr. Preston H.
Hipps, lonjiume uv Fauj.wjv -Classics.
The new student members are:
Norwood Bryan Jr., senior of Fay
etteville; Guyte M. Cotton, senior
of Clinton; Henry H. Dearman,
senior of Statesville;
Tim Rxiim. iunior of Snow Hill;
Ramanathan Gnanadesikan, gradu-
at..tiident of Madras, India; wn-
iiam E. Graham Jr., lw student of
TonVcnn Jnrin?s! Charles J. Kat"
zenstein, senior of New Yont,
N. Y.; Louis Kraas, senior oi
Charlotte;
Tom Lambeth, junior of Win
stonSalem; . Ray Long, senior of
Marion; Fred A. Powledge, junior
bf Raleigh; Jim Turner, senior of
Winston-Salem; Jerry Vayda, sen-inr-
of Ravonne. New Jersey;
Burt Veazey, senior of Raleign;
Com WpIU Jr.. iunior ot neius-
1 baK,V(vhi!!. senior oi
Vllie, ClllU UW a u-s,
Asheville. .
OFFICERS
Service, spoke at the tapping ban
quet, held alter the tapping cere
monies. Shoemaker became a
Fleeceman in 1933 as a UNC
undergraduate.
Tho Golden Fleece selects men
from the junior class or above for
their "highest -qualifications m
character, ability, achievement
anrl leadership." The Order, sec
ond oldest college organization of
its type, was founded ne
1903.
Fifteen students were tapped in
last year's ceremonies. Since wc
Order's inception, obb men
been singled from among
classmates for tapping.
- .Distinguished Fleecemcn in na
tional and University life inclu !?
William C Friday, acting presi
dent; Robert B. House, chancellor
of thP university; former presi-
j .
Officers
Thomas C.
frir 1955-56 were
f!reasv. Jason; Man
Hvparchos; Bev
"'"b " ' . . .
Webb, Grammateus, and Charlie
YaTborough Jr., Chrystopher.
nnn c Shoemaker, former edi
tor of the Asheville Citizen and
dents - Frank P. Graham ?.r,-a
don Gray all of whom were tap
ped into the Ord:r as v.v-
graduates.
In state service, members
elude Govrnor Luther B. Uod
latp Governor William
Ttmstead. and Associate Juj
William H. Bobbitt of the
South Electric & uas naaappe-i-, - - f fte wuuam . - -
ed from the ruling of the court of I "porUng! Carolina Sureme
in-
11
tion question, uivmva'6 - - . . -
"Nurses, AAangum, St. A., Tri Delts Win
. c, A.cnrPSpnted Came' received the longest ova-pk.t- Parade
By NEIL BA55
St Anthony Hall, Delta Delta
Delta, Nuress Dormitory, Mangum
Dormitory and Baptist Student Un
ion awlckd off with honors in the
Valkyrie Sing last night.
St. Anthony Hall edged out Chi
Psi to win top honors in the frater-
longest ova-j skit - "Parade of Politician," -
nity division. The St. At presented Came. "mroke s secnd to the Nurses' pren
"Hnele Tony's Thirsty Thirteen." . tion of the night. Bedlam Drone
uuv ... , : r- oFttr! taiinn.
Thp Tri Delts presented an elab- j
orate production entiuea
; o Tinir Moon" to take top spot
from the'KD's in the sorority divi
sion.
The KD's skit,
tation.
Mangum DormUory, the sole cn-
loose for several minutes after
their presenxauun w . , - dormitory division
. -tr-v . In t . I I i ill l liv, -
The Nurses- uorm ; j
With Sprin--won a ieng- Sot the .top spot M sU U.
former named Miss Mary Cecelia
Batten, alias "Pee wee.
Miss Batten is a celebrity in
her own right. In 1953, she was
one of three' performers from
North Carolina (she comes from
Mt. Gilead) who attended and,
"Rnrlin and IV
periormeu i" : .
of th South," a yearly
V
event held in Miami and sponsor
u -c ...UinV ?Via u;s: nf
as a resun oi wn.t-.
fered a job in a New York night
club. The talent scout who made
the offer was a singer with Ted
Mack and a, night club performer
v,;coif Hp was in Miami on his
honeymoon, and happened to hear
Mice Ratten sing.
iTicC Ratten was also invited to
;in2 in the "Hill-Billy Homecom-
The Home
88 Coed Counselors
Named For Next Fall
s
Tickets for Sound and Fury's
Chile Hot" are new on sale in
Y-Court, Kemp's, Town ' and
Campus, Ledbetter-Piekard, and
Graham Memorial. TheVrice is
$.50 for students, $1.00 for non-students.
pvnriL iiuiu n .. : .n ; "onnpssse
Pd bv radio and television stations of :mUsieal en.
7 ' . v tcrtainment of. all sorts, some hill
UPWilltlect
New Officers.
Tonight In GM
,iivoreitv Party members will
. r- ,v, firct time since spring
meet iui n,r: , ,
Sections tonight at 7.30 in Eoland
Parker Lounges 1 and 2 of Graham
. c f ihn meeting, ac
me puiH"3 . r,-,,
Pirtv Chairman bin
coraing i" a.-j
. rt oirrt oarty officers
-aoiS.iuii, i3 w a -
for the coming year, wmu.
cs chairman, vice-chairman, secre
tary, and treasurer.
P. is expected mat, amui. , u
Jim Exum and John Kerr will be
ent on the past
campus election. Exum is past UP
floor leader in the student legisla
ture, and Kerr is the newly-elected
treasurer of the student body".
Sabiston said yesterday, "I sin
.prelv hope all Of our members
" " ii .3 Al-tSd. irnru 1 TT1 I Uillo " . .
will be able to attenu uia Sound . and turys
portant meeting. Next year the UP . 1 r she - win - play the
is anicipatlcg an even bigger and Chile Latih love.
better year, Ty who tries to trap an American
complished if ve elect c p I rnulti-billionaire.
party leaders. r
bill v.
ou nnipr the second invi-
OJic ovi.i-i'"
inlnn and san2 for three perform
ooc Thon "some man with the
rhrvpr Comortion" wanted her
to sing on the Eddie Cantor Show.
"I 'would have," she said, "if I
thought I had had the talent." She
added that she was not unduly
modest, either. .
Miss Batten arrived with her
ot rarnlina lasf fall. Pre
viously, she had attended Stevens
in Missouri, where her
V,UHtfe- a ' .
musical alsnts were displayed in
o vnrietv of shows
Currently, Miss Batten is pre
n apt in one of the five
s
Eighty-eight counselors for next Jane
fall's women's orientation iw
been selected, Women's Orienta
tion Chairman Annette Nivcn an
nounced recently.
. AriviQor training will begin
Thursday, April 26, with a meet
ing in 106 Hancs.
m a m n d dormitory chairmen
1 M w -
were Misses uaruaia
Ivor, Jewel Buff aloe, Carr; nsn
Harrer, Smith; Lee Ann Curtis,
'Alderman; Jean Peay, ' spencer,
and Nancy Turner, Nurse s uonn.
Th now advisers are: Misses
i U. - T
Donna Lou Anderson, Sheila Ang-
stradt, Penn Anthony, Lster isai
lentine, Carter Baxley, Harriet
Bpbbitt, Mary Llew Bowers, Ellen
Rmupr .Tov Brown. Beth Buie,
Mary Burgwyn, Elaine Burns, '
Anne Byerly, Bess Chandler,
r,rtPr fhanin. Polly Clarenbach,
Carolyn Corley, Sarah Crawford,
Erma Dance, Faye LarK, ueny
Dxon, Betsy French, Peggy J? uuk,
Lois Anne Gallagher, Mary Launn
Gravelv. Carolyn Hackney,
Marrrarnt Hafer. Adele HagOOd,
Margot Hammond, Virginia Has
sell Beverly Hcaton, Gwen Hein-
Marian H0DCK. -aruiiiic
' T
Hume, Maria Hunter, Ann jeu
ings, Dorothy Johnson, Caro
T,nn Nancv Latumore, vu0
WAaVWWf
liner. Betty Jane Maddison, wim-
frd ATartin. and Sylvia McArthur.
p-ctniiP McCure. Maria McCord,
MMTadden. Patricia Mc
IXajWJ ' , -r,V,.o
TTftrri M PIIOI1. Otuooiia
Faye Miles, Mary Ruth Mitchell,
m1v.v Barbara Murray,
Anne Newsome, Elizabeth -Nichol-
son, Angcline fapazis,
Parker, Sally Patterson,
Ann Poindexter. Eliiabeth Reese,
Melba Remig, Frances Ellen
winnip Rouse, Mary L-
IW U-viwia, . ' c
Kucker, Neltie Sanders,1 Betty Sav
age, Linda School, Carolyn Seyf
frt Virginia Shalibo, Ruthie Sm
dell', Anne Smith, Carla Smith, Pat
sy Smith, Carole Soles, Jo Ann
Sowers, ; .
Stockton, Mane
liu -" -,,1,
Stokes, Celia Jo Strader, Molly
Trautmann, Barbara Lynne Turn
er Nancy Turner, Susan Walker,
Mary Jane Wallace, Sara Walters,
Happy Watson, Jane Welch Louise
Wells. Barbara Jane
Shirley Williams.
,,.t,.c- t tho Orientation Com-
mittee are Mis.es Ginger Floyd,
, : cninv .Tov arp. Nola Hat-
t. rrawfil. and Barbara
Vathv LcGrande and Dot
Grculach are serving as -u
trainers.
ru,!-,,, fnr adviser training
are Misses Dot Grculach and Kathy
LeGrahd. '
'
nOMALD J. MILLER
...national student officer
Young Select
Group To PAcili
Traffic Study
Student Body President Bob
Young yesterday announced ap
pointment of a special Traffic Ad
visory Commission to study an u
report on the current campus tral-
fin citiiaf ififl.
hi.
Former Student Party Chairnu::)
Norwood Bryan will serve as commission-
chairman, Young announc
ed. itnivrrsi'v 1 trustees recently
placed the problem of campus traf
fic conditions in tne nanus u
dent government officials. I
requested that a solution to v.,
problem be made available
them on May 1. Prcsiaent u .. ,
slid yesterday the special com:r.i3
sion will have a report by Thurs
day of this week.
Phi Eta Sigma
Newly initiated members of
Phi Eta Sigma can obtain their
membership etrtificates in 312
South Buildinf, according to
Dean Mackie.
Public hearings will ta i ' ' '
foday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in " y
land Parker 3 of Grahm I'!
morial by the special Train:
Adisory Commissicn. Chsirmn
Norwood Bryan requested yes
terday that all interested per
sons wishing to appar fctfo?
ere t!
commission
do so at that tirs.
Student Named Officer
In Pharmacy Association
ti,i v Miller iunior of Ra-
ra nlected chairman of the
c'iLt branches of the American
"- . .x iUa -ntinn
Pharmaceutical Assn. ax
al convention in uetrou i.cu,.
Ta n9r-Miller was vice-chair
jjddl J r .
rmvention m Miami.
man a i la.v. - .
Ui will preside at the convention
in New York in lyo'.
Keith Palmer Named
n Club Prexy
7 ilivaa" , .
Members of the-Germans wuoj - Martha DarUr, ur
a' ntiinrrs l a i
held an election ui """.V" he
meeting last Tuesday night at the
SAE house.
Newly-elected officers are: Pres
. . t.':,u Poimcr. Kappa Sigma;
Vice-president George Ragsdale
DKE; Secretary Mark Cherry, Phi
DelU Theta; Treasurer Gordon
Brown, Beta Theta Pl
Other members of the comrr.
tee arc Darwin Bell, a Victory V
r rrsident and a married -
Chairman of the Student Lc-IA
ture's Rules Committee; Stanli
Shaw, NSA Coordinator;
Charles Canfield, a freshman. B:
; a member cf the Stude nt F. rt
Shaw of the University Party
Canfield is an
campus politics.
1D!
leper: