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LEATHER . with xoocUd hifih of ( I rCS 0 DO N K E Y Republicans have given him a push. Ser- editorial, page 2. Complete C?3) V7irc Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1956 Office In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUS t ir' m m borrow f.oUna Playmikers pre l.'rf "A Midsummer Night's , j begin tomorrow in the ljtre. Performances are j at 8 p m. tomorrow, 'Sat-, j'rj Sunday. "tlj by James M. Riley, mem ! lie Haymakers' staff and t -j rpt, of Dramatic Art, ..;0n features a cast of ing two UNC professors, '"-rcsen, associate professor '-it.j art, will appear as I Walter Smith, assistant I j u( statistics, will portray j. (j Riley designed the pro- ; -5 elaborate set which l';:a the background of nat f Kr.ery in the outdoor the- !'" :l the cast of the produe- Dick Newdick. of Augusta, ; Pick: Mrs. Jane Albans, r! Hill, as Titania; Russell .'Jamaica, N. Y., as Oberon; iethrest, of Thomasville, as , Gloria Di Costanza, of Rill, as llermia; Al Gor- Greensboro, as Demetrius; ise Fletcher, of Birming X as Helena; Jim Potter, hhcro. as Theseus;--Mrs. 1-i.Jh, of Chapel Hil, as Hip- Snuth, of Chapel Hill, as - ird Jurgenstn, of Chapel i Qaxce. graphy is under the di ' i Fester FitzSimons, asso fyiessor of ilramatic art. ; i for the production is by j Idstein, of Baltimore, Md., : itraes are by Miss June j I Pisfftown. S manager and his assistant Ira B. Eaton, of Winches and Sarah Cannon, of . Properties are by Robert ?, cf Rock Island, Tenn., and electrician is James Held-j .'Durham. years performance will' -ie third time that "A Mid t Night's Dream has been ?i by the Playmakers in est Theatre. Previous pro iwere given in 1833 and in ! 5 .v 1 f Playmakers Perform This Weekend In Friday, Saturday and "Sandays Playmaker production of Willi am Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream' Puck, (left) played by Dick Newdick. of Augusta, Maine, encountersiOfeeron,: played by Russell Link, Jamaica, N, Y. The play's three-day stand will be in the Forest Theatre, with nightly shows starting at 3:30 p.m. - ; ' - Exum Elected-. I-o Head Men's Honor Council 'nicSei Senior refoot Day Bbrogan wearers will step Way as seniors throw off ci socks for their annual Day Barefoot Day, with froa 3 to 7 p. m. will Senior Week. :-es at Hogan's Lake will : Jy2 by Willie Hargrave .'"Bull City Night-Hawks;" i "J prizes donated by lo , "ats; and hot dogs, cokes, :-'?s, cole slaw and other r ill be served beginning The combo, said Senior Chairman Ken Ander (''d forth until dark.' 1- of rain," said Ogburn I Eior class president, r J 2o out, hoping it will j' Wfore the afternoon "s of prizes for the draw- ad Fury tickets - in dent Council is now the court of original jurisdiction for campus code violations, election law cas es, and cases involving the stu dent constitution. Charles Katzenstein, senior from New York City, is outgoing clerk, and Sonny Evans, sophomore from Durham, is past Student Council representative. Library Vandalism, Thefts, Misuse Cited By Officials ai merchants. f ttk begsn Monday with r t:ets to Sound andJ i uesaay wun a r sottball game and and yesterday with " tat day, a maSs meeting I Hall and later indi "Ungs with college f icelior House spoke on y at the mass me Jim Exum, rising senior from Snow Hill, has been elected to preside over the Men's Council for next year, succeeding Ogburn Yates, senior from Ash eboro. Others elected to the Council besides chairman Exum are Lu ther Hodges Jr., rising senior from Leaksville, who will be the Stu dent Council representative; Jeff Hare, rising sophomore from Ann Arbor, Mich., who will act as clerk, and Ned Meekins, rising junior from Raleigh, who will fill the post of alternate clerk.. In announcing the changes, out going chairman Yates pointed out that the Men's Council is now op erating under the revised consti tution, passed recently by the stu dent body, which provides that the Men's Council shall deal solely with honor code offenses. The Stu- 'Orpheus' Is Series Show ThB Lventh movie of the Spring students . are first to suffer from irn qpries will be shown tonignt the effects of this situation film fait- ttH .irhon , t...J at 8:00 p. m. in -J7 & a rii?ii v Student wife receiving invita tion to UNC Parent's Day. Must be a mixup , her only son is 3 years old. , Local policeman leaving lav) school building saying he knew what he wanted when he went in, but "those law students" mixed him p. Student Government represen tatives heard members of the li brary staff discuss the increasing extent of theft, vandalism, and misuse of library property at a Student Library Committee, were provided with detailed, statistical Tap L p rj Q n q fe 'J 1 1 1 1 n 0w 1 T 1 Miller Pharmacy President ler, junior from Raleigh as their president in a general election held Tuesday. Other officers chosen were Vice- President Shirley Eumgardner, I West Jefferson; Secretary-Treasurer Janet Pipes. Asheville; and Men's Honor Council representa tive, Joe E. Smith, Connelly Springs. Voters in the Tuesday election also chose officers for the Stu dent Branch of the Nortlf Carolina Pharmaceutical Assn. Those elect ed were President Byron Huckaby, Winston-Salem; Vice - President Pete D Freeman, Ashebbro; Secretary Loretta Barefoot, Ashe ville; Treasurer Ernest L. Carra- way, Williamston; executive mem-J ber Charles Barger, uicKory; ana assistant to the president, Hugh Hinton, Middlesex. Past President Van H. King not ed that 181 students out of a pos sible 216 cast ballots in the election. Law student James M. Johnson said yesterday that locks should be placed on law building rooms in which students' typewriters are kept. Equipment Stolen At ping , Approximately $425 worth of audio equipment,: used in the Gol den Fleece tapping and Valkyrie bing last week-, has been stolen their own keys. "It's just a mat from Memorial Hall, according to ter of the proposal's being.'approv officials of the Fleece. I ed by the students," he said. He The equipment; including am-' then added n "felt sure they plifier, record player and loud-, would." speaker,, was apparently taken Miss Chanel Hill frtr mtfif 1 . - j.- will be chosen from 12 en trants tonight In the sixth annual Chapel Hill Beauty and Personality Pageant. Sponsored by the Chapel Hill Junior Chamber of Com merce, the event will begin at 7 o'clock in the Chapel Hill High School Auditorium. Tickets MAmW nf th. Pharmacv stu-' -uat A ma ue uuugui irom dent body elected Donald J. Mil-! any of JC's, according - iu ivi. ix. jenmngs jr., rageani chairman. Judges will be Bucky Snider of High Point, past president of the N. C. Jaycees; Edgar Gargan- llo rf Williamctnn npicirlnnl rf the N. C. Jaycees: Charles Coo per, photographer for the Durham Herald; and Mrs. J. B. Brame of Durham, who has ben active in judging many local and state beauty contests. Of tonight's 12 contestants 10 are UNC coeds, and one is an ex coed . CONTESTANTS The contestants are: Misses Dickie Pickerrell, Whiteville; Do ris Atkins, Richmond; Sylvia Sue Yelton, Bakersville;. Mary "Pee Wee'" Batten, Mt. Gilead; Elinor Cowing, Chapel Hill; Anne . Mat thews, Chapel Hill; Joan Norwood, Chapel Hill; Carol Ray, Chapel Hill; Jo Anne Knott, Oxford; Joan Willsey, Norfolk, Va.r Libby Mc Dowell, Wake Forest; Shirley Car penter, Oakboro. - Each contestant will be judged on four, basic qualities in; accor- ; dance with the rules of the f na-. onal Miss America selections. They are personality and poise, fa cial beauty, beauty of figures and talent. 1 , . STARTS AT FIVE Judging will begin at 5 pi m. today when the" contestants and judges have dinner together at the Ranch House. Here the entrants will be judged on personality and poise. : Each entrant will make three Victims reck W Locks Prd posed .S For Law School Johnson is one of seven students .whose portable typewriter was sto lpn between 12 d. m. Saturdav and 2 a. m. Sunday. He said it has been , appearances during the program nneo,i h, inotrc ho niarpH nn at the auditorium. One will be the doors and students be given from one of Memorial Hall's back stage rooms within a few days of the Monday night ceremonies. The material was loaned to the organization by Kemp Nye, owner of a downtown record and radio information to prove the extent of shop Nye often lends his equip- misuse in the library.; They were shown examples of meeting of the Librarian's Confer- cut pages, obliterations , and ficti ence last week,, I tious signatures. Each expressed Andrew H. Horn, University Li brarian, appealed for assistance from student leaders, pointing out that the entire student body's rep utation is damaged by the actions of a relative few. Horn said" the I greater majority of law-abiding Carroll Hall when BoD young, student body pres- AT? nresents "Orpheus. ickmt; Jim Exum;, chairman ot This French .xum vv - nnA director of student activities; and directed by Jean - lather H. Lawing, chairman of the s done, in his characteristic sym bolistic .tylef;Blood9fPI and "Beauty and the ea.s e lier Film Series presentations. . . The story is the old legend of 1 musician, whose wife 1111 iimnpus. a . - , et- Lidice ,S transported u. his concern over the problem and promised to take steps toward correcting it. Discussed as remedies were such alternatives .as demanding identi fication cards and setting up a turnstile check-point. No specific recommendations were made, how ever. It was felt that an infomration campaign and reference to library use in the orientation program might have better long term results. ment- free of charge to campus organizations which: do not have their own. ' A list of the stolen items includes: Garrard Model T player, with GE ' cartridge, single stylus dia mond. I Klipsch baffle, with Electrovoice 12-inch speaker. j Pilot AA905 35 watt amplifier.' Assistant to the Dean of Stu-' dent Affairs Ray Jefferies said students knowing the whereabouts of the equipment may notify him in his South Building office. None of the typewriters have been recovered despitethe offer of $100 reward for information concerning their whereabouts. A reward of $20 has been offered for information leading to recov ery of any one of the missing ma chines. . - -V in an evening gown, one in a ba thing suit and one as a perfor mance of her talent. Five finalists will be chosen from these appearances. Each fi nalist will then - make a separate aDDearance to answer one ques- - 1 nun mi any iua xtuu ju.vi6v S I lid E W ? W IE Ui Two UNC students are still in Memorial Hospital and two others are in the Infirmary as a result of injuries suffered in an automo bile wreck here Saturday. Mark Cherry, 19, sophomore from Mt. Olive, and Miss Mary Lois Rucker, junior from Spindale, are still in the hospital. The condi tion of each is reported as "good" by the hospital. Cherry" suffered a broken .right arm and a cut eyelid. Miss Ruck er, the most seriously injured in the accident, broke her right leg in two places and her left arm in one. Still in the infirmary is Miss Ann Hargrave Fullton, junior from Greensboro, and Miss Jane Marian Little, junior from Charlotte. . Dr. W. G. Morgan, associate phy sician, reports that both are "doing fine and should be released in a day or two." Career Meet' . . Planned For -7:30toniqhi- ' The final program in a series of career meetings sponsored by Alpha Kappa Psi, Delta Sigma Pi and the Placement Service will be held tonight at 7:30 in Gerrard Hall. Dr. William McGehee, director of Personnel Research and Train ing for Fieldcrest Mills, Inc., will discuss "After Employment, What?" Interested students have been invited to attend. McGehee is author of numerous articles in the area of psychology, with emphasis on training and selection of personnel in industry- He holds degrees from the Uni versity of the South and George Peabody College. He is a fellow in tne American rsycnoiogicai . . .. l. it ri 1 ; Their, answers win . De ine iindi Assn a diplomat in Industrial part of tne judging. . I Psychology, a member of the N. After the Pageant the entrants Q psychological Assn., American will vote for "Miss Congeniality' 1 gociety of directors, and of the contest. The winner will ,chairman of the N. c. Prison Ad. (See BEAUTY page 3.) , j visory Board. ' INFIRMARY Jlnhe Infirmary yester ' , dd Miis Jane Little, FwlltM, Miss Hester Mrs. Miry Moor, Miss , 'ntine, Albert Wait- Sptncer, Marshall i' John Johnson, John Virgii, B. Maynard, Douty, Oscar H. .r!e, H. Krepp, Ches- . Jmes MIUicn, i CfPnUr. . . .r a follow and Orpheus determi life attempt to bring her back to life and earth. The film is set in modern times. Little Legislative Action Due I n Mee ti n g To n ig h t By NEIL BASS Only one action is1 on tap to night for the third session of the student Legislature's 21st Assem- J a co and symbolism are mo- biy. and dress auu y -ni- iS wor.rOCntatives will convene on the fourth floor of New East Build ing at 7:30. t h nn action slated to be dealt A I M. W w The final film of the series, 10 uh fcy solons -s appr0val of five h ,hown on May 17. is the Amer- members to a committee to select iran production of "Morroccu. , delegates to the f ?i.rin Marlene Deitrich and Assn conventi0n dern. Starring tn i Ma. the French screen star Jean Ma rais Bobbitt, Bill Wible and Jeep Myatt. It would seem apparent that lawmakers are getting off to a rather slow start. Although this is the third meeting for the new as sembly, no bills and only one res olution has been introduced f rom ' Carrboro or the Campus is eligible Two 'Mothers Of Year' To Get $100 Wardrobes Students have been urged to support their choice in the Moth er of the Year contest being spon sored by a local store. Two Mothers of the Year one from town and one from campus will be presented with a $100 war drobe apiece. Any mothers or housemother from ChapeL Hill, ft : .t " v -: :- -r t' x T 4f : 1 1 ... Morrocco, 1 tn the National Student I The appointments, made by r rnnnpr. I l ne Kiaiy i . , t ' . Vna Qro Tim Admission to Film 6nlyJ llolmeSf Don Freeman,; Harriet sentations is cy - - - . the floor The one resolution was for ac ceptance of the Traffic Advisory Commission s report. According to Speaker Sonny Evans, he was "very disappointed" that no measures were forthcom ing from the representatives last Thursday night.. Letters of nomination should in clude information concerning her character, accomplishment and fa mily. The letter should also ex plain why she deserves distinction. The contest ends on May 8. Let ters should be mailed to J. B. Rob bins, Box 1107, Chapel Hill, or submitted directly to the store. V.-..-V " :-r . : .en L UNC Takes Big Four Sports Day UNC student Ira Davis is shown above he gashes a home run in yesterday s B.g Four sport, d.y held here. Carolina won the game, 16-3, and went on to win the day's .ntramural activity, over N. C. SUte Duke and Wake Forest. Complete details can be found on page 4. (Truman Moor Photo)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 3, 1956, edition 1
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