iii ""V U.!!.C ' ttBHARY SERIALS SEPT. BOX 870 CHAPEL HILL. TUC. criviry i oni GRAHAM His departure presents several problems. Sea editorial, page 2. VOL. LVIII, NO. 2 Complete (JP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1956 FOUR PAGES THIS ISS'J! Offices in Graham Memorial iyfT I CM Football ghi WEATHER OT . A ' V Tj c W , HsPCr ( . j MoIr ,unny . eool; wllh ... f .. ry) fly il r h-fi 1 "DTI fife ft SV . si rJv fix i -fiw '.GmBii& rade p.m. A parade and pep rally tonight will precede tomorrows opening football game with N. C. State here. Head cheerleader Jim Bynum said the parade would start at 8 p.m. in front of Woollen Gym. Bynum plans to lead the parade through the campus, circling past all the dorms, and winding back to the intramural field beside the gym, where the pep rally will get under way about 8:30 p.m. . The cheerleaders, riding in con vertibles, along with other stu dents in cars, walking people, peo ple on bikes, and possibly part of the band will be in the parade, Bynum said. The cheerleaders will unveil several new cheers, on which they have been practicing since Sept. 10. Exact detail? were incomplete last night but Bynum said the pro gram will be completed early to day. The rally will last for about an hour after the parading stu dents reach the intramural field, Sorority t. Rush Week To B egin Sorority Rw?h will begin formal ly today with the Pan Hellenic Tea In Graham MemoriaL : By attending this tea a girl in dicates her intention of partici pating in sorority rushing, accord ing to Miss Harriet Lewis of the Pan-Hellenic Council. All girls at tending this tea automatically .re ceive invitation from the six so rorities on campu? for the first round of parties Monday. Failure to attend the tea eliminates a girl from rush. Girls wishing to participate in rush and unable to attend the tea should notify the office of the Dean of Women, Miss Lpwis said. Tea invitation time are as fol lows: 7 p.m., Smith, Carr, Nurses' dormitories; 7:30 p.m., Alderman; 8 p.m., Mclver, and 8:30 p.m., Spencer. The Pan-Hellenic Council has urged that this schedule be strict ly followed. At the tea, girls will be introduced to Miss Martha Decker, advisor to the council; members of the council; the soror. ity presidents; and the sorority rush chairmen. 'Ruby Gentry1 Will Be Shown Free Tonight "Ruby Gentry," the first of the new movies in the Graham Mem orial Activities Board Free Film Series, will be shown twice to night in Carroll ,Hall, at 8 and 10 p.m. According to bfficials in charge, the film is a story of a "beautiful, passionate woman of the swamp lands ; of eastern North Carolina who fights the easy way for a position in a community of aris tocrats." Starring are Jennifer Jones and Charlton Heston. It's a movie "that's a must for any patriotic Carolinian," they said. No smoking will be allowed during the presentations. INFIRMARY Those in the Infirmary yester day included: Clay F. Church; William G. Lynch, Earl T. Ki"kman, Donald C. McMillion, Claudius L. Carl ton, Alvln W. Smith, Harry M. Giles Jr., Michael P. Cap, Harry L. Ellerte Jr., Harccurt A. Mor gan III. Wi Start At Gym unless the students show a desire to continue, Bynum said. All the cheerleaders have been working on the arangements of the night's program, Bynum said. The cheerleaders will make their first appearance of the year be for the entire student body tonight They are Misses Mary Lee Breece, Gwen Heinzen. Patsy Poythress, Amy Morse, Val Von Ammon, Shirley Dees, and Larry Ford, Tom Davis, Frankie Black, Harold Wil liamson, Pete Julia, Miss Joan Wender and Bynum. "I hope the student body will turn out en masse so that the people in West Raleigh can hear that we mean business," Bynum said. Students Invited To Ball In Rock Hill The Winthrop Recreation Assn. of Rock Hill, S- C. has invited the University student body to its "Bermuda Ball" on Saturday, Sep tember 9. in the Peabody . Gym nasium In Rock Hill. Student President Bob Young received the invitation this week. The ball will be from 8 to 11:43 p.m. Carnpu Seen-- c Students walking past Graham Merr.;vrial tcith squirrel sitting on shoulder. Soccer team stopping practice as elderly lady walks across mid dle of soccer field. news in FRANKFORT, KY. (JP) Har ry Lee Waterfield, acting gov ernor of Kentucky, said last night a decijion on whether to with draw the National Guard from the towns of Sturgis and Clay will depend upon what action courts take in school integration suits. This means the troops will be on hand at least until early next week. LONDON (JP) Twelve of the nations attending the meeting on the Suez Canal in London have accepted the plan for a canal us ers' association. Sources close to the big three say they think all of the nations except Pakistan, and possibly Sweden, will adopt a dccaration of intention to set up the association. The London conference ends today. In Washington the State De partment invited 10 American ship pilots to come in and talk things over. The pilots have ap plied for passports to go to Egypt to work at the Suez Canal. Ac cording, to the State Department, there is no restriction on their going, but it feels they ought to know the tensions they would walk into. Meanwhile, in Cairo the cap tain of a British rms ship said yesterday that Egyptian recruit ing agents lured away 16 of his crew members with promises of high-paid jobs in Egypt. The cap tain said he had to speed out to sea from a port in Libya to keep other crew members from deserting. None of the deserters was British. INTRAMURAL OFFICIALS Students majoring in physical education are needed as intramural officials for tag football. Those in terested have been asked to come to 301 Woollen Gym on Tuesday at 4 p.m. . -- F , -4 - sfci St x,i ' f I, UNC Students Wait Fcr Drop-Add Processing Students wait wearily in line to get their class schedules changed at the Central Records Office in Hanes Hall. Drop-adJ closes tomorrow at noon. Students wirh drop-add problems have been urged to report to the Hanes Hai3 basement as soon as possible with the proper drop-add forms. Freshmen and sophomores must obtain the forms from their advisors. Upper classmen are required to have slips from their advisors and the dean of their respective schools. (Photo by Truman Moore) Three Coeds Named For UNCs Representatives In Annual GU Qtieen Contest " Tomorrow Three Carolina Coeds have been selected as UNCs contestants in the race for Consolidated Uni versity Queen. UNC Campus Is Used For Civil Rights Filming The Carolina campus was the scene yesterday for the filming of a picture by the Fund for the Republic, an organization sponscr- sored by the Ford Foundation. The film deals with ciail rights and UNC was chose nfor a sub ject irince integration has been in effect here since 1951 with no violent opposition as there is in some southern schools. This year 13 Negros have enrolled. The film deals with civil rights and UNC was chosen for a sub tury Studios of Raleigh, will show interior and exterior scenes. Ap proximately 600 feet of film, which would last 18 to 20 minutes if nothing is cut out, was shot. The film will be made available for CBS-TV, NBC-TV. and all major network syndicates. 1 t is---' v 'i. ? 'A YDC Memiaers Solicit For Members Members of the Carolina Young Democrats Club are shown above soliciting students to Join their club. From the Stevenson-Kefauver signs they are using, thsy seem to be taking advantage of the com ing year, (Photo by Truman Moore) "i ' tTT iinm Tri")inniinTi.iii Hi T :'m. 1 4, 4 They are MLs Lucinda Holder ness of Spencer Dormitory, Mis Jane Welch representing tlie Chi Omega Sorority and Miss Jane Lit tle representing the Pi Beta Phi Sorority. The CU Queen will be selected rom nine contestants, three from Woman's College in Greens-boro three from N. C. State in RaleigTi and the three from UNC She will be Crowned at a dance in Woollen Gym after the game sponsored by the Order of th Holy Grail. All nine contestants ""ill be presented at the half time of the football game tomorrow. Other girls in the contest to select the 3 o represent Carolina were: Mioses Dickey Pickerrell. Kappa Delta; Phil Kraftt, Mclver; Pat Dillion, Alderman: Ann Smith, Alpha Gamma Delta; Barbara Subscriptions Students, faculty members and townspeople who wish to con tinue receiving the Daily Tar Heel by mail have been asked to notify Dale Staley, subscription man ager, at 9-3361. Rates are $4 per, school year. Students who wish, to send the Daily Tar Heel home can do so at the same rate. V i t 4 .zr i viT: r. iii 1 v wW-is 1 Ti rfr mTinipi.j. ji njiinni.jji4i-, r.i.pii!. .inHi nW 1 imjui rtw .M "r n ' 11" I l s, ' fohnson, Car and Marion Dickens, Smith. All nine contestants in the CU 3ueen contest will receive gifts "rom a local merchant and a cor age from a local florist. CU Day is sponsored by the Consolidated University Student Council, which will meet Saturday norning with the University Trus. tees in the Morehead Building. The reception after the game is also sponsored by the Council. The reception will be in front of Graham Memorial immediately 'ollowing the football game. Approximately 1,000 WC girls are expected to come for the game and other CU Day activities-. Playmakers To Give Program Here Today "Adventures in Playmaking" is the program scheduled for the Playmakers Theatre tonight at 7:30 clock, to introduce informally The Carolina Playmakers, dramatic group at the University. Samuel Selden, chairman of the Department of Dramatic Art and Playmaker director, will give his annual illustrated lecture, includ ing a history of the famous Uni versity theatre. Members' of the department will tell about its history and that of the Playmakers, now entering their 39th season of play;?. Sel den vill announce plans for the coming season's , activities and describe types of participation open to everyone. The name "Playmaker" is given not only to members of the de partment and student? of Dramat ic Art, but to everyone who par ticipates in a Playmaker produc tion, all of which are open to the public. Six productions planned for the 1956-57. season are "Anastasia," recently given on Broadway; "An drocles and the Lion," by Shaw; O Neill's "Desire Under the Elms"; the musical comedy, "Brigadoon"; a new play in it? first production; and "Peer Gynt" by Ilenrik Ibsen. CAMP PICTURUES Anyone wishing . to order a freshman camp picture may do so at the YMCA office through next Monday. The charge for each pic ture is $1.50. . tilt Mooei To Be Here 1 By CLARKE JONES Contracts for the building of the three men's dormitories and an addition to Spencer women's dormitory have not yet been awarded. A special meeting of the Consolidated University Board of Trustees will be held here tomorrow at 11:30 a.m. to formally authorize S2 million for the new buildings here. Holding up' the contract-n-warding, acco ding to University Business Manager Claude Teague, are the architectural plans. "The architects (George Watts Carr' and Raymond Weeks, both of. Dm ham) are working on them all r.long," he said. Frat Men Plan Protest Against Parking Bans The Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity plans to protest the parking regu lations imposed by the Chapel Hill aldermen last summer banning parking on Rosemary Street. The fraternity men who are temporarily being allowed to park at the old Institute of Government building, feel that the regulations leave them "in the middle" and '"in a hole." The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fra ternity, which is affected by an other phrase of the regulations re stricting parking on Columbia Street, is backing up the protest very strongly. These frat men- feel they are being placed at the mercy of the town. Several men, having talked . wth- some- townsmen.' indi cate that the regulations are meant to apply pressure on the Univer sity to build its own parking lots. "I feel it is unjust," says Mike Lanner of SAE. "No one uses the space except fraternity men; it's ridiculous to make a guy move his car when no one else is using the space. I think it's just a reason to keen cars away from school." "It makes things crowded and harder on frat men; they took away another lot, you know. I just don't like it," Dudley Baird said. October 1 Is Deadline For Student Insurance October 1 has been set as the deadliine for applications for stu dent insurance. The cost of the policy is $9.50 a year. According to Ray Jefferies, assistant to the dean of student affairs, the premiums' cost has dropped since last year. Insured students will be cover ered fo up to $1000, and for up to $200 for surgical expenses. If the student dies, his beneficiaries will receive $1000, Jefferies said, "I think this in surance plan payed off for us last year." He pointed out that the in surance comes to less than 80 cents a month. The insurance coverage is for a 12-month period, including the periods when students are travel ing to and from Chapel Hill, and Governor 'Drops Drawers' To Advertise N. C. Products RALEIGH, SEPT. 20 JP) -Gov. Hodges will do a lot to advertise North Carolina's products. He'll take a shower wearing a native North Carolina suit or even drop his pants slightly to show off Tar Heel made drawers. Hodges is shown in these two poses in a seven-picture layout in the new issue of Life Magazine. The Governor- said he got an ad vance copy last night and "pro ceeded to hide it under the pil lows so- Mrs. Hodges wouldn't see it." - Mrs. Hodges finally did see the pictures, he said, "but she didn't make any outcry" when i-he saw the pose of the governor standing next to his bed with his pants dropped slightly adjusting a pair of "indigenous" drawers made at I w ft Q ) Autho M U DISCRIMINATION "It's just plain discrimination against frat men," according to Charlie Tompkins. "We feel ihat the main problem," Jack Jones said, "is to have to come back from classes every day to use that fluid we have to clean little blue marks from our tires." The Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity expresses the views that the regu lations leave frat men with no place to turn and that frat men keep the town in busines and are due a little consideration. The Alpha Kappa Psi Fraternity has taken a' mild approach to the parking regulations because it has 'its own parking lot; but various members- feel- it r -a "little incon venient, although they plan no pro test. ' The Pi Beta Phi Sorority feels left "in a hole." The girls plan no formal protest, although a few are protesting individually. They hope to ease the problem by building their own parking lot, for vhich some money has already been ap propriated. A few other groups plan to meet to discuss the regulations; so, by no means, is this parking situation settled yet! while they are on vacation. Jef feries said last year there were not many claims but during the summer the company payed on policies several times. Applications for the insurance are available at the Y and at Graham Memorial. The policy is made available through the Pilot Life Insurance Company, Raleigh. Jefferies ex plained that students here will pay a slightly higher premium than students at State College be cause of the surgical coverage. He reminded students who al ready hold policies and are eligi ble to receive payments for claims must file claims with the com pany. Blanks are available at his office and the Infirmary. Asheboro. A girl reporter wanted to know just what - are "indigenous" drawers. Hodges replied, "they are drawers that stay where they be long." The governor said there was a picture "even worse" than the one showing him adjusting the drawers that the magazine did n't use. Hodges admitted with a smile that a governor ha? to make a lot of "sacrifices." GM SLATE No activities arc scheduled on the Graham Memorial slate for today. Tomorrow OUTlilS n ia "-jr'J "It take:, a good while to dra-.w up plans. As soon a they are ready they will be reviewed," he said. It will take about "a month or six weeks" to let the contract to bid ders. The actual construction of the buildings will not start probably for a couple of months, Teague aid. t The dormitories were proposed last fall after a request for a $2 million government loan was granted by the Federal Govern ment's Housing and Finance Agen cy. Teague made th request un der authorization of the 1955 Gen eral Assembly. There was only one men's dorm itory to be built behind Kessing Pool to start with and would have housed over 700 students. Construction was , expected to have begun on it and the addition, which will . provide for approxi mately 75 coed.s, shortly after Christmas, 1935. Later it was decided three should be built with ipace for a total of 600-650 students. Thi3 caused the architects' plans to be changed. The bidding and con struction was also put off. The special meeting of the Board of Trustees was called for the formality of authorizing the funds. Teague explained the loan has already been approved but the trustees have to formally adopt a resolution adopting it. The loan will be paid back in 30 years, Teague hopes, from sur pluses received from a $30 increase in dormitory room rent per per son. The increase went into ef fect last fall. Senior Tack Pictures Are Being Made Senior clajs pictures for th. 1957 Yackety-Yack are now beins made in the basement of Graham Memorial, according to Editor Tommy Johnson. Hours are from 1 to 7:30 p.m. every day except Saturday and Sunday. Seniors have until Fri day, September. 28 to have th?Sr pictures made. Girls have been aiked to wear dark sweaters, biack, brown or lark blue, with one ' strand of pearls. Men have been asked t3 ear dark coat , white shirts, and conservative rep ties. The schedule for taking the photographs of other students 13 is follows: Oct. 1-5 Freshmen and Nuis ng School (except Senior Nurses) Oct. 8-12 Sophomores, Phar macy School, t)ental School, and Dental Hygiene students Oct. 13-49 Juniors, Medical School, Law School, and Graduate School. Library Gefs Autograph Book Of Civil Var Man The autograph book of a Ral eigh druggist and Civil War vet eran has been acquired by the Southern Historical Collection ia the Wilson Library. The book belonged to James ?.IcKimmor., class of 1BG0, and was signed by his classmates and other students at the University here. nni