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WEATHER
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warm with a few scattered show
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COORDINATION
Editor praises bill. See editorial,
page 2.
VOL. LVIII, NO. 11
Complete (JP) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1956
Offices in Graham Memorial
FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE
Chapel Hill
For Assault
By WALLY KURALT
A Chapel Hill man was fined
yesterday for assaulting a Univer
sity psychology instructor.
Ernest Taylor, owner of an Old
Fraternity Row rooming ho: 1 3,
was found guilty of assault and
battery in recorder's court. He was
fined $50 and costs, and appealed
his case to Orange Superior Court.
The psychology instructor, Al
Krebs, was unavailable for com
ment after court yesterday.
Mrs. Krebs gave this account of
the incident:
Due to the recently imposed
parking ban, Krebs could not find
a parking place Friday morning,
and finally parked his car at 8 a.m.
in front of Taylor's rooming
house. When she and Krebs re
turned at 1 p.m., Taylor walked
up to them and pointed out they
had parked on private property,
disregarding his "No Parking"
sign.
Krebs replied he thought it was
public property.
A car had parked behind Krebs
car, blocking the alley, and Tay
lor refused to tell whose car it
was. Krebs then left to get Officer
Graham Creele, who reportedly
ccould not leave his post.
Krebs called the police, told
them his story, and was told ihe
car would be moved, Mrs. Krebs
said.
Krebs returned to his car. Tay
lor invited Krebs to call proper
authorities and ascertain whether
the alley, was public or private.
Krebs said if he found the alley
were public, he intended to park
there every day, Mrs. Krebs said
Taylor hit Krebs in the mouth.
Krebs and his wife then walked
to the police station and swore I
out a warrant for Taylors arrest.
Taylor, reached at his home yes
Alumni Giving
Chairmen Meet
Individual chairmen from 57 J
towns and cities throughout North
Carolina will meet here tomorrow
at noon in the Carolina Inn with
State Chairman William H. Ruf
fin of Durham to map out final
plans for the advance gifts phase
of the Alumni Annual Giving pro
gram this year.
The advance gifts campaign will
get under way on Oct. 15 and will
continue through Nov. 30.
Ruffin has appointed seven vice
chairmen to assist him. These
chairmen are Marion R. Cowper,
Kinston, District I; R. D. Lee Co
vington, Raleigh, Dictrict II;
Franklin S. Clark, Fayetteville,
District III; James W. Poole,
Greensboro, District IV; Esley O.
Anderson Jr., Charlotte, District
V; Gerald Cowan, Asheville, Dis
trict VI; and William E. Stevens,
Jr., Lenoir, District VII.
On June 30 Alumni Annual
Giving wound up its fourth year
at the University. A total of 3,773
alumni contributed $57,621.89 for
an average gift of $15.26.
The Alumni Annual Giving
Council held its annual fall meet
ing here on Sept. 30 and made
grants to the University in such
vital areas as faculty research,
faculty travel, faculty retirement,
Chancellor's Emergency Fund,
student welfare, etc. Archie K.
Davis of Winston-Salem, chairman
of the Alumni Annual Giving
Council presided over this meet
ing. The towns and cities in the state
in which the advance gifts solici-
INFIRMARY
Tho in th infirmary yter
c'ay included:
Misses Evelyn , Beatric D
Hart, Mary Dance, Jane Eliza
beth Palmer, Ann Haney, Linda
Paul, Sue Gilliam, Julia Mari
mna Black, and Marvin Harless,
Donald Kemper, John Corbett,
Hugh Price, Clayton Smith,
Craig White, Miller Smith, Al
vin Smith, Earl Covington, Enno
Rarkendorf and Norman Smith.
Man Fined
On Prof
terday, had this to say:
"My car was parked right up
out by going forward. He (Krebs)
out b going forward. He (Krebs)
parked his car within 13 inches in
back of mine, blocking me in,
locked his car, and had his wheels
turned so I couldn't push it back.
He had plenty of room farther
back. There was a space of about
30 feet behind him. His car was
parked one foot in . front of my
steps."
A Coffee Shop worker drove iip,
said someone had taken his park
ing place farther down the alley,
and asked permission to park his
car behind Krebs car. Taylor said
it was "all right with me; x I'm
blocked in anyway.',' The worker
could not get his car in the space,'
so he left it blocking the alley.
Krebs came back to his car and
"said he "didn't care about the no
parking sign," said Taylor. "Said
he'd park here any time he want
ed. He was mad. He said, 'I'm
going to park it here Saturday and
six days next week.' "
Both Taylor's and Krebs' cars
were then blocked in by the third
automobile.
"I told him I. was blocked in for
four hours, and I didn't care if
he stayed there until tomorrow
morning. Then he went to get the
police." .
"I told the police whose car it
was, but I wouldn't tell him," Tay
lor said. "He was real mad."
"My deed calls for a 19 foot
drive. That alley is the only ac
cess to my place.
Taylor said he could, but is not
going to pay the $50 and costs. He
has appealed to Superior Court
plans to hire a lawyer, swear out
a warrant against Krebs for tres
passing and leave it up to the law
yer.
"I'm'not through fighting," said
Taylor.
Committee
Here Tomorrow
tation will be conducted and the
districts in which they are located
are as follows:
District I: Elizabeth City, Green
ville, Kinston, New Bern, Rocky
Mount, Tarboro, Washington, Wil
son, and Edenton.
District II: Raleigh, Durham,
Chapel Hill, Henderson, 1 Oxford,
Roxboro, and Sanford.
District III: Fayetteville, Golds
boro, Clinton, Jacksonville, Lau
rinburg, Lumberton, Southern
Pines, Pinehurst, Whiteville, and
Wilmington.
District IV: Greensboro, Winston-Salem,
High Point, Burling
ton, Reidsville, Mt. Airy, Leaks
ville, Asheboro, and Liberty.
District V: Charlotte, Gastonia,
Concord, Kannapolis, Belmont,
Shelby, Rockingham, Hamlet and
Albemarle.
District VI: Asheville, Brevard,
Canton, Hendersonville, Marion,
and Waynesville.
District VII: Hickory, Lenoir,
Lexington, Morg3nton, Salisbury,
Statesville, and Thomasville.
Cardboard
Membership
Has Quota
The UNC Cardboard has an
nounced that their quota of 106
members has been accepted for the
1956-57 season.
A successful campaign made it
possible for old and new students
to become acquainted with ths or
ganization, according to President
Snyder Pate.
President Pate said, "We would
like to take this opportunity to
thank everyone who helped make
this campaign so effective.!
"Stunts at the State-UNC game
were a tremendous success. Of
course, as usual, a few cards of
the wrong color appeared, but pos-
sibly (ths can be corrected in fu
ture games. The Cardboard wishes
to congratulate the student body
for such a fine performance."
Second Round
Of Frat Rush
Set Tonight
Freshmen and unpledged upper
classmen will continue in the sec
ond round of rush parties tonight
from 7 to 9:30.
Parties will continue tomorrow
night and Friday is scheduled as
shake-up day.
Formal bids will go out Monday
from 9 a.m. to lp.m. in Gerrard
Hall, at which time men pledging
will sign pledge cards and pay
fees.
Rushing began Sunday afternoon
and Monday, when men were re
quired to visit all fraternity hous
es from which they had received
invitations.
In the second round of parties,
which continues. tonight, men are
permitted to visit houses of their
preference.
Asst. to the Dean of Student Af
fairs Ray Jefferies advises rushees,
"Just be yourself."
Alb
onese
Open
Card
Licia Albanese, Metropolitan
Opera-soprano, will be the first of
five top performers who are to ap
pear on the student entertainment
program this year, beginning Nov.
1.
Other artists who will perform
for Carolina students during the
coming year include Mantovani,
master of the cascading strings;
the , General Platoff Don Cossack.
Chorus, Actor Henry Hull and
Jose Limon and Dance Company.
Students are admitted free to
these SEC programs on presenta
tion of ID cards, r . ' ' .
Mantovani and.hii orchestra xf
45, will feature his "New Music"
on - Dec. 6. This Venetian-born
Londoner, who began the era of
new music with his first album
for London Records. "Waltzing
With Mantovani," has currently
made many' records including
"Cara Mia," which was written for
David Whitfield.
A versatile concert figure, Man
tovani has music for everybody, be
it the 300-year-old "Greensleeves,"
a serenade by Tschaikowsky, or the
strains of "Charmaine," which has
come to be his theme song.
COSSACK CHORUS
Also internationally famous is
the Gen. Platoff Don Cossack
Chorus, directed by Nicholas Kos
trukoff, appearing here in its 18th
transccontinental tour on Feb. 12.
1957. ,
The booming Cossacks have per
formed in 2,100 concerts in the
USA and appeared in 65 countries
on six continents. The Chorus is
composed of the best vocal and
dancing talent of the White Rus
sian emigres, who have fought
communism in Russia.
Henry Hull, noted for his per
formance as Mark Twain, will be
presented by the SEC on March
26, 1957. Through his four decades
in the theatre he has also distin
guished himself in such roles as
Malvolio in "Twelfth Night." Jest
er Leester in "Tobacco Road," and
Edgar Allen Poe in "Plumes in
the Dust," along with such plays
as "Mr, Roberts," "The Trail of
Joan of Arc," and many others.
He has also plaved in "Great Ex
pnetations." "Objective Bdrma,"
"Lifeboat," and many other mov
ies. Jose Limon and Dance Company
will perform on April 11, 1957. Li
mon and his dancers recently
swept South America, not with
native rhvthms, but with modern
dance selections.
The members of the SEC are:
John Kerr, chairman, Joel Carter,
Don Freeman, Georee Hamilton.
Kai Jereenson, Olin Mouzon, Jim
mv Wallace, and Misses Martha
Barber and Shiralee and Barbaree
Prestwood.
Rushees
Ed Hudgins, president of the
IFC, said lest night that no fra
ternity had been convicted of
dirty rushing, and that no fra
ternity hit been barred from
rushing or pledging, as has been
rumcred.
To
SEC
PI ay makers Show Of 'Anastasia
Will Be Presented In Two Weeks
The Carolina Playmakers wil.
open their current theater season
two weks from tonight with five
performances of "Anastasia", re
cent Broadway success about exil
ed Russian nobility, at the Play
makers Theatre, UNC campus.
Adapted from the French o.
Marcelle Maurette by Guy Bolton
the story is set in Berlin early in
1926. The action is based on a
rumor that one of the Czar's chy
dren, Princess Anastasia, then 17,
escaped the massacre of the Roy
al family by the Bolshevists in
1918 and fled, into Germany.
Prince Bounine, exiled -Russian
nobleman, finds a destitute' girl,
Anya, and builds up 'the story that
she is the Princess Anastasia who,
because of wr.unds and privations,
has lost her memory. The attempt
to convince those who knew the
princess reveals a series of sur
prises about the unusual Anya.
Rusti Rothrock, Aniston; Ala.,
is cast in the title role. Mrs. Roth
rock, wife of a UNC graduate
assistant, has acted with several
community theatres, at Cherokee
in "Unto These Hills" and at the
Uniyersity of Arkansas. She is now
a speech therapist for Durham
County. '
Marion Fitz-Simons, Chapel Hill,'
portrays the formidable Dowager
Empress, grandmother of Anas
tasia, who presents the strongest
challenge to the plan of Bounine.
Mrs. Fritz-Simons, wife of a UNC
professor, has appeared in a long
list of P1 aymaker productions, in
cluding "Macbeth", "Medea", "Ar
senic and Oid Lace", "Dark of the
Moon',' "Lysistrata", and last year's
"Blood Wedding".
Morgan Jackson, freshman from
Charlotte, plays Prince Bounine.
A Korean War veteran, Jackson
has ' acted with the Paris Ameri
can Thtfatre Group in5 Parts," the
Weisbaden Theatre Guild in Ger
many, The University of Alabama
Theatre, and "Unto These Hills".
Joe Whiteaker, Pine Bluff, Ark.,
appears as Prince Paul, childhood
sweetheart of Anastasia. A Navy
veteran, Mr. Whiteaker was active
with the University Theatre at b
rr nf i,t,-c . u u .
V. of Arkansas, where he received
Graham Portrait Likely
Will Stay In Morehead
By CLARKE JONES
The portrait of Dr. Frank Gra
ham is still in the Morehead Build
ing faculty lounge.
And the painting of the former
University president is likely to
remain in its "temporary" home
for some time, according to an in
formed South Building source.
The reason for its staying there
for awhile, said the source, k be
cause some persons have been so
up in the air as to where it should
be hung permanently.
Chancellor Robert B. House, who
will determine its permanent site,
has apparently for that reason de
cided to let things settle down be
fore deciding where to put it.
CONTROVERSY
The storv behind the controversy
goes like this:
Last spring, toward the end of
the school year, the portrait was
unveiled inHill Hall, then moved
to the Morehead Building faculty
lounge.
Protests immediately followed
this action. Many persons thought
dnce Dr. Graham was such a good
friend of the students while he
was here it should be placed in
Graham Memoriral where they
could see it everyday. The faculty
lounge was rarely visited by stu
dents, some said.
Members of the committee, how
ever, seemed a little doubtful
about putting it in Graham Me
morial named for Dr. Edward
Kidder Graham, another former
University president. It would be
a slight upon the latter Graham,
they felt. .
And that's how it stands today.
The South Building source, how
ever, said it will be moved, that
it is there only temporarily.
FIRST STEPS
The first steps toward obtaining
a portrait of Dr. Frank Graham
were taken by University students
in . 1949, the year he resigned the
presidency to accept appointment
Z: $
itt&zt)
h r x
J - "
JJJ.,.... MW -mmn ng-Hnn-iVifi HiMrtilft I'tfinrr
i.okmn JmCKsON, LEFT, AND MRS. RUSTI ROTHROCK
, ...in Play makers' Production
an, acting award last' spring.,' . i
, The Rev. W. Robert Insko, Chap
lain to Episcopal students, at .UNC,
takes the role o Dr. Serensky, who
knows the pretender 'Anya, in an
other identity from that of a prin
cess. ,
l Others in' the cast are: Russell
Xink,. Jamaica. N. Y, as Chernov;
Gene Duke, Oxford, , as Petrovin;
Peter O'Sullivan, Valhalla, N. Y.,
as Counsellor Drivinitz; Betty Jin
nette, Goldsboro, as the Charwo
man; Hope Sparger, Scarsdale, N.
i., as vdra, rranic Kinaidi, Water-
bury. Conn., as Sergei; John Sned -
en, Tenafly, N. J., as the Sleigh
Drivpr anH T"ra Ton-on u 1
X ' t T - ... '
' i
, Hill, as Baroness Livenbaum.
to the U. S. Senate.
Many students contributed small
amounts but they did riot raise
enough to obtain the type painting
desired. Accordingly, at the re
quest, of some of the students, a
committee was organized in 1955
to receive contributions from
friends of Graham. The committee
included such persons as Dean of
Student Affairs Fred Weaver, State
Board of Higher Education Chair
man D. Hiden Ramsay and John
Sanders, Raleigh lawyer.
Atomic En
ergy
Exhibit Set
At Planetarium
A -modern age exhibit, "The
Summary of Atomic Energy,"
which has been prepared by the
American Museum of Atomic En
ergy at Oak Ridge, Tenn, opened
yesterday at the Morehead Plane
tarium. Free ..to the public, Ihe exhibit
will he on display throug'i Oct.
12 only in the North Science Ex
hibit room of the Planetarium.
"The Summary of Atomic Ener
gy" has been developed to famili
arize the average person with the
basic principles and uses of atom
ic energy. It includes scale mod
els of the Oak Ridge atomic and
uranium reactors and a model of
an atomic power plant as well as
panels explaining the parts, en
ergy and differencs of atoms, neu
trons used as bullets, uranium and
thorium, production of radioiso
topes and their uses in industry,
agricultore and medicine.
The exhibit may be viewed daily
from 2 to 5 p.m. and from 7:30
to 10 p.m., Saturdays from 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m., and Sundays from 1
to 10 p.m.
1
- "Anastasia" is under the direc
tion of Samuel Selden, Chairman
of the UNC Department of Dra
matic Art. Stage Manager is Dick
Newdick, Augusta, Maine, and the
set is designed by Tommy Rezzuto,
Ashville, Technical
Hhe Playmakers. ' -
Director for
Only 50 , specially-priced season
ticket books are left, at a saving
of fifty-percent, and can be ob
tained at 214 Abernethy Hall, Led-
better-Pickard's, or Box 1050. Regu-
lar reserved seat tickets, will be
' available for each production ten
days in advance for season ticket
... , .,
iiuiut-rs, a weEK in aavance lor me
i genera! public.
Squirrel sitting on lawn watch
two men on Graham Memorial
roof.
Dog sleeping througr French
3 lecture didn't learn a thing.
I gujL f m
' SEEM
Student Leaders Air
Problems Facing UNC
Leaders of student
government
will talk with their South Build
ing counterparts about four cam
pus problems.
The problems, agreed at a meet
ing yesterday, are:
1. The parking situation, as it
confronts members of the Inter
fraternity Council.
2. The need for a student group
to coordinate campus activities.
3. Compulsory physical educa
tion for veterans.
4. Allocation of men's dormitory
vending machine profits.
The meeting yesterday was at
tended by members of the Stu
dent Government Executive Coun
cil, headed by student body
President Bob Young. The coun
cil will meet Friday with mem
bers of the administration's Coun
cil on Student Affairs.
President Young said the pur
pose of the joint i meeting "is to
familiarize the student affairs
council V'ith what we feel are the
Pi Lambs Add Members
Pi Lambda Phi has added three
new members to their fraternity.
Dick Oresman of Providence,- R.
I., Stanley Greenspon of Raleigh,
and Harvey Salz of Brooklyn, N.
Y. became brothers last. week
In Bryant Speech:, .
Faculty Salaries, Preserving
Academic Freedom Stressed
I Provision of "adequate" facult
I salaries, and preservation of aca
demic freedom were two points
J stressed by Victor S. Bryant in an
j address yesterday afternoon before
t
Geology Dept.
Seeks Facts
On Earthquake
The UNC Dept. of Geology has
requested that any persons who
were in the region of eastern Ten
nessee and western North Caro
lina during the earthquake shocks
which occurred Sept. 7 and felt
the resulting tremors contact the
UNC Dept.- of Geology and Geog-
raphy or Gerald R. MacCartliy,
professor of Geology and Geophy
sics at UNC.
MacCarthy states that the Dept.
of Geology wishes to know the
exact locations at which the quake
was felt, and additional informa
tion as to the number of shocks
felt and the sensations "produced.
The. shocks were": recorded on
the " seismograph . at " UNC, Mac
Carthy says, but . geologists have
been' unable so far to pin down
the exact location of the quake.
The shocks are knbwn to have
been felt throughout, much of wes
tern North Carolina and adjacent
areas, he states. -
English Dept.
Adds Staffers
. Three new instructors have been
added to the Dept. of English, Dr.
Dougald MacMillan, chairman, an
nounced recently.
Beginning new teaching duties
with the fall semester Were Rich
ard P. "Douthit, Mrs: Frances Gray
Patton, and Derek Roper.
Roper . received his A.B. degree
from the "University of 'Durham,
England, and is a candidate for
the B.Litt. degree from Oxford.
Mrs. Patton, who is teaching two
sections of Freshman English, is
the author of the best-selling nov
el, "Good Morning, Miss Dove,"
and a resident of, Durham.
Douthit comes to UNC from
Louisiana State University, where
he also received his M.A. Degree.
He is expecting to receive his
Ph.D. Degree from LSU soon.
Dr. MacMillan also said that
there are three new graduate
teaching fellows on the staff of
the English Dept. They are Daniel
J. Gore of Fayetteville, Barbara
Donnell of Honolulu, Hawaii and
H. Ray McKnight of Charleston.
W. Va.
problems that confront student
Xovernment."
Members of the Student Gov
srnment Executive Council, in ad
dition to . Young, are Luther Hod
ges Jr., Student Council; Tom
Lambeth, GMAB; Ed Hudgins, In
terfraternity Council; Fred Pow
ledge, The ' Daily Tar Heel; Son
ny Hallford, Interdormitory Coun
cil; , Miss Peggy Funk, Women's
Residence Council;
John Bilich, Monogram Club;
Jim , Bynum, head cheerleader;
Sam Wells,-attorney general; Tom
Johnson, Yackety Yack; Miss Pat
McQueen, Women's Council?
Jim Exum, Men's Council; Ger
ald Mayo, YMCA; Stan Shaw, Na
tional Student Assn.; Sonny Ev
ans, student government vice
president; Miss Jackie Aldridge,
student government secretary;
Miss Sally Price, Panhellenic
Council, and Miss Elaine . Burns,
Independent Women's Council.
Members of the administration's
Council on Student Affairs are:
Samuel Magill, student activi
ties; J. M.; Galloway, placement;
Dr. E. McG. Hedgpeth, Univers
ity physicianj ; E. S. Lanier, cen
tral records and student aid; Miss
Katherine- ; Carmlchael, dean of
women; W. D. Perry, testing serv
ice, and J. E. Wadsworth, hous
ing. . .. .
the UNC Faculty Club.
Bryant, a member of the Execu
tive Committee of the Board of
Trustees, discussed "The Responsi
bilities of Trustees of a State Uni
versity," emphasizing that he was
presenting "my individual views"
and was not authorized to speak
"either for the Board or any group
of Trustees."
He outlined the trustee's respon
sibilities to "four distinct entities:
thi state, the University admin
istration, the faculty, and the stu
dent body."
Maintaining an adequate salary
schedule for both faculty and ad
ministrative officers is "peculiarly
the responsibility of the trustee,"
Bryant said. "This schedule should
j be one which will enable the con-
tinual recruitment of an outstand
ing faculty, and at the same time
enable the University to retain its
present distingushed faculty.
"We must expect our faculty
members' to receive offers to go
elsewhere, but we should be pre
pared through financial and other
means to fight to hold them," Bry
ant said.
He expressed gratitude to thosa
faculty ' members who have re
ceived such offers but "who have
chosen to cast your future lot
here with fhis University."
OBLIGATION
However, Bryant said, "I cannot
i feel that the state has any right to
profit financially from such loyal
ty on your part. The University is
under a great obligation to you."
- The speaker, who heads the
Trustees' committee which will
recommend on the appointment of
a new UNC president, predicted
'a glorious future immediately
ahead for this University" and
asked the faculry members to
" hold on a little longer."
Referring to important Univer-
sity positions now filled on an act
ing basis. Bryant said, "'These will
be filled, and I believe filled well,
with all reasonable dispatch. What
might have seemed stumbing
blocks will be stepping stones to
belter days ahead.
ACADEMIC FREEDOM
Three principles of academic
freedom summarized by Bryant
were: 1
1. Full freedom in research, and
the right to publish the results of
his research.
2. Absolute freedom in teaching
those subjects which a faculty
member has been assigned to
teach, assuming that the instruc
tion is "of a scholarly nature, and
compatible with the dignity of the
profession."
3. The right to formulate
and
express his opinions outside
(See BRYANT, Page 3)
the
Film Series
Starts Thurs.
The first of the film series put
on by the Film Committee of Gra
ham Memorial Activities Board,
"Tobacco Road,' will be presented
Thursday.
To be shown in Carroll Hall,
the film series will be seen on
Thursdays at 8 p.m.
The rest of the films this se
mester are: "Alexander Nevsky"
(Russian). Oct. 16; "The Belles
of St. Trinians" (English), Nov.
1; "M" (German), Nov. 15;
"Flamenco" (Spanish). Nov. 29;
"Lifeboat" (American). Dec. 13;
"Incorrigible" (Swedish), Jan.
10; "Arsenic and Old Lace" (Am
erican), Jan. 17.
Selected short snbjects will be
shown with most of the films in
the series.
GM SLATE
Activities scheduled for Gra
ham Memorial today include:
Pan Hellenic Post Office, 8:30
12:30 p.m., Roland Parker 1, 2,
3; Jehovah's Witnesses, 8-9:30
p.m., Roland Parker 1; Graduate
History Club reception, 4-6 p.m..
Rendezvous Room; Pan Hellenic
Committee, 9:30-11:00 a.m., Ro
land Parker 3.