margin f nyi 1 1 1 in mfl''m,fWiSf m y g ny CAitOUHA ROOM Of 7 Hat B70 UNC BUDGET ... A final push set page 2 lair and Warm. JllXi. Jt N VOLUME LXVII, NO. 15? Complete Ufi Wire Service CHAPEL HIU., NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1759 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUf y w w viPiii' a lyUy1-!? Bills To Foster Cooperation, Amend Legislature's By-Laws Come Before Solons Tonight t !l t nnin :i:c meetings of speaker of the Legislature not la (.r .mi. I ciMit it tutits and a i trr than two weeks prior to spring' t .rn' ti ! 1 1 ' Student l.egisla-i elections. ' 'ift- t' !ro will (.nnc up at the! A bill, introduced by Dave Jones I " jd.!iue met;ng tonight. I(SI'), to amend the Legislature by- Ih.- M.l'Ti, meet at 7.30 in Maws would permit legislators nmv I" i U..M. 4:h floor. New lat. ling from their districts during a I'v dm Ciiurmcr 'SP bill ! session to retain their seats for the 'i.,;v.r fqiir-d rail) legistat r two weeks following rlisqualif ica t ." ii p.i ctiii-, in the various j tinn. h omsim.; un,! in h.s district. I The intent of the bill is to allow Tlx- ! i.I a deteated. but re- time for the vacancies to be filled it ilccl .,:nrnded at the Iat without diminishing the number of legislature meeting. ! people in the Legislature. Concerning the bill, Dewey Shef field, Student Tarty chairman, said estcrday, "I am very much in fav or of the NSA bill and I urce leg islators to take constructive action I and pass it. 1 ded hill encourage I Another Jones bill, which was v,. . !ir. ,(1 legislators w ith j defeated last week, to increase the O'.r ..Ms!ituents IPSO-60 appropriation to the NSA I o h le-.slator w ould then be re- j delegation by $85. possibly will be I it 1 to Mibm ;t a written report brought up again tonight, accord ('' nm, hi activities to the irg to Jones. American Histories Series Edited By UNC Professor Me: !, m P." k.s. Inc . of New Ynik. !.i. .ip,no;incel the publica-t-t.'i in Vp'eirher of the first vol i: t.r of ;i r- m rio o( documcn f. v Ann riuin histoiies. under the ;:nur i! cJership of George F. s I r. of ( li.'i'e! H:ll. T!v tiiNt work to appear will be "'The ('onle let.H y; A Documentary ll.Vor)." ed.fej hy Inert D. Kir- .hi. o! the University of Kcn- l , , V (it er m Iimhs in the .verier, to be i .t!Vf "Meridian D cir.iunts of A:v-i it, ,,n H story Series." will in (li1, a general history of the Unit ed v.i'es to by High T. Lef l r of the University of North Car- !;r t. in spr.ng 1h0; a companion I t .r) of the United States from t '! tn 'he present, by Frank W. K! n'rr;, .iN of thp University ,u .rfh C.irulifJ.i. in spring VMiO h stnry r? Amencan diplomacy, h Robert A. Divine, the Univer sity of Texas, in .skiing li'tM); an American constitutional history, by Louis A. Pollak. Yale University Law School in fall HMU); a two olume American intellectual his tory, by Alan Heimert, Harvard University, in spring 11. A two-volurr.e history of Ameri can .society, by George F. Scheer, cut or of the series, in fall and four other titles now being pbnneO. to be published in 12 and 1W3. The basic purpo.se of the "Meri dian Documents of American His tory Series." according to the pub lisher's announcement, i.s to make available in an attractive and in expensive format, with brief, inter pretive, unifying commentaries, the principal documents of American history. Doctor Paid Tribute By 160 Friends More than lfiO fraternity broth ers . wives, special guests, and friends have paid tribute to Dr. j Roger E. Sturdevant for his con tributions through the years to the Xi Psi Phi dental fraternity. The affair was sponsored by the Beta Beta Chapter of Xi Psi Phi at the Carolina Inn over the week end. Dr. Sturdevant has been as sociated with local chapters since l'M4 when he was initiated into the University, and efforts to organize Beta Beta Chapter SENIORS! Today is the last day for seniors to pick up their graduation invi tations. Some 100 orders are still re maining upstairs in the Y Build ing. These may be picked up be tyeen 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. today. Postmaster J. Paul Cheek of Chapel Hill said that the large in vitations will require eight cents postage. Four cents is sufficient for the small invitations weighing less than one ounce. I w o SenSo rs Win Awar ufstandin ! Psi Chanter at finally by his and foster the here. As the guest of honor. Dr. Stur devant presented the senior stu dents of the fraternity with their pins signifying graduation. He also presented the seniors' wives a charm pendant bearing the fra ternity seal. The testimonial speech was pre sented by Dr. Robert J. Shankle, who has been associated with Dr. Sturdevant both as a student and fellow educator at Emory and UNC. j Dr. Shankle is now a member of ! the operative staff of which Dr. . Sturdev ant is the present head of ! the department. Dr. Shankle's as sociation with the gviest of honor gave him ample background for a presentation which included many "parables" of Dr. Sturdevant. Negro Named To Board: Pastor Leads Ballots CHAPEL HILL The Rev. J. R. Manley. pastor of the First Bap tist Church, led the ticket in yes terdays voting for the Chapel Hill Board of Education to become the first Negro ever named to the lo cc 1 school board. Named to the other two seats were Dean Henry Brandis Jr. and Grey Culbrcth. In all, six sought the three school board posts. Man ley received 1,125 votes in leading the field. Named to the Town Board of Aldermen were Sandy McClam roch, F. E. i Gene Strowd and Roland Giduz. Obie Davis, a mem bt r of the board for the past 20 years, was oeieaica in nis dki ioi re-election. Two other candidates were elect ed without oppostion. They were O. K. Cornwell, mayor of Chapel Hill, and William T. Stewart, judge of Recorder's Court. " s. - y t it it i V 1 V. t&ftqpitmi mini. : Ernest H. Abernethy Prize, 4$ John J. Parker Award Given Donald Furtado Anne Frye Two UNC seniors have won cov eted awards for work in the field of student government and student publications. They are Ann Frye of Hickory and Donald A. Furtado of Garner. I Miss Frye is the 1959 recipient of the Ernest H. Abernethy Prize in student publications. Furtado re ceives this year's John J. Parker Jr. award for unique leadership in student government. Miss Frye, a holder of the Louis Graves scholarship in journalism, has worked on the Daily Tar Heel for two years and is presently news editor. French Government Grants 2 Scholarships A French Government grant to UNC has provided two scholarships awarded this week to students in the Department of Romance Lan guages. Jimmie D. Tedder of High Point and James M. Villas of Charlotte, both juniors majoring in French, are the lSr.9 recipients of the schol arships. Valued at $150 each, the Senior Day Closes With Hogan's Party The last flings of Senior Day will he held tonight when Willy Har- i v v o e inrl hie wmSn onl nrt fi l n members of the class of '59 at Hogan's lake. After the "ball" at the Patio Tuesday afternoon and night and hard, hard classes Wednesday and today, seniors need one more night of relaxation and fun before they hit the books for those finals. So the Senior Social Committee :'ixi the Dean of Women's office are cooperating. Tonight is that night. The Lake and grounds will be open all day for members of the class to sun, svvim, fish, cook sup pei, and what-all. Official activities will get under way around 8 o'clock when Willy Hargraves shows up. There will be music, jokes, fun, dancing and more music. And all this can be enjoyed by coeds and their dates until midnight. Philanthrop Henderson By IIOBART STEELE A resolution that John Cooper, president of the Harriet-Henderson Cotton Mills, should rehire striking workers in place of the strike breakers now employed was de feated by the Philanthropic Liter ary Society at its regular meeting Tuesday Night. Rep. Stan Black introduced the bill and spoke for its adoption. Black said Cooper forced the strike bv failing to renew a 14-year-old arbitration clause in the union con tract. He said that the violence present in Henderson was due to Cooper's refusal to bargain in good Playmakers Tonight Present Inherit The Wind' At 8:30 In The Forest Theater ics Down Resolution faith, in that he hired only a few of the striking workers back. Rep. John Brooks protested the resolution, saying that the right to arbitration was not basic for labor unions and that only 10 per cent of American unions have such argeements. Brooks further stated that man agement had a right to omit a portion of an agreement which it believed unfair to them. Manage- i merit's money and that of many stockholders is involved in the oper ation of a business he said, and the fundamental duty of a man ager is to his stockholders. She was Press Club president for the past year and is a member of Kappa Tau Alpha, honorary jour nalism society, and the Matrix So ciety, honorary journalism society for women. Miss Frye will join the news staff of the Charlotte Observer in June. Furtado has served as student body president and vice president and as speaker of the Student Leg islature. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity, the Order of the Holy Grail and Order of the Golden Fleece, the campus's two highest honorary organizations. A member of the Naval Reserve Olficers Training Corps, he will enter the United States Navy after graduation in June. The Abernethy Award of a pla 'iuc and $50 cash was founded in 1942 by Ernest H. Abernethy, class of 1922, Atlanta, Ga.. for the stu dent adjudged by a committee to have done the most distintive work during the current year in the field of student publications. .. ; t V 1 f r 1 ' t ' f J A. Hs J Ticturtd bov art Robert Kttltr as Catct and Sallty Pulltn as Rachel in a ctn from tht forthcoming Playmaktrs production of "Inherit the Wifd" tonight. to be presented in the Forest Theater at 8:30 Final Concert By Symphony To Be On 12th The UNC Symphony Orchestra, I under the direction of Prof. Earl Slocum, will present the final con cert of the Tuesday Evening Se ries in Hill Hall May 12 at 8 p.m. Tuesday's program will feature Mr.. Lilian P. Pruett as guest solist in Mozart's Piano Concerto in C Major, K. 503, and Howard Han son's Symphony No. 2 (Romantic). Mrs. Pruett, graduate assistant instructor in piano in the UNC Music Department, is a graduate of the Mozarteum in Salzburg and Vassar College, Pougbkeepsie, N. V. Before entering graduate school a.; a musicology student, she taught piano at Miss Hall's School, Pitts field, Mass. In Chapel Hill, Mrs. Pruett has appeared on both the Tuesday Eve ning Series in a solo recital and on the Petite Musical Series as harpsi chordist with chamber ensembles. Mozart's piano concerto was composed in 17. in Vienna. Scored for strings, flute, oboes bassoons. horns, trumpets and drums, it is one of the last piano concertos written by the composer. Howard Hanson, director of the Eastman School of Music in Roch ester, N. Y., recently received the National Music Council Citation as "Conductor of a Symphony Orch estra who has rendered outstanding service to American Music." Edu cator, conductor and composer, Haason has won many awards for his compositions including the Prix de Rome, Pulitzer and Alice Dit son Award. Interviews Continue For UP Positions Coed Fines Discarded In WRC Action Tuesday All coed dormitory fines were discarded in action taken Tuesday night by the Women's Residence Council. The council also elected Jean Crewcs chairman of the summer school WRC. She is a member of the council and president of the Nursing Dormitory. The council considered all girls for the, office who are now resi dents on campus and who will at tend both summer sesions. Under the new dormitory rule j instead of fines, girls will receive j up to three warnings for soft ' drink bottles found in the rooms. unmade beds and food not in tins. After the third warning the girl will receive a campus effective one Hank Patterson, University Par- mesters and will be a town rcsi ty chairman, has reminded UP dent next fall. members that the Executive Com- j A chairman and four members mittee will continue interviews of the UP Membershin Commit- from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Grail Room tee. This committee is responsible v'eck from the day of the next for these party positions: A seat in Student Legislature former party members to join or reaffiliate with the party and for from Town Women's district. The seat will be vacant after the close of the present Legislature session tonight. Coeds seeking this seat must have a "C" average and at least 25 hours in the last two se- for contacting incoming students. ,;llPI!CC- inis aocs 001 coum 3S one other nrns-npftivp m.-m!r unci of the five offences toward Wom en's Honor Council. Kay Boortz, chairman of the checking GMAB activity cards in Women's Residence Council, an the fall. j ncunced the appointment Tuesday A chairman and four other mem- j of Carolyn Sikes to serve on the bers of the Publicity Committee. ' Student Council for next year. Thr C.irolim Playmakers pre- nt their final offering of the Y reason. "Inherit the Wind," t'.night through Sat lrday in The I . rest Theatre at 8:30. The dramatization of the famous 1tnnse evolution trial features Lloyd Rorstclmann, Fred Sitton, John Sneden. Dotiglavi Whitehall, Rohrrt Ketler and Sally Pullen in t!. b-.Klmg role.t. AN in the cast are Pat Sim mons, Jock Lauterer, Rill llannah, Link, Carolyn Quinn. Chenault William Bailey, Margaret Starnes, Spence, Marily Zschau, Bob Fletch- Wayne Garber, Hunter Tillman. Carl Killingsworth, Carl Justice, Tommy Thomas, Darwin Solomon. Joel Gibbons, Gene Lanier, Betty Rhodes. Myra Lauterer, Herbert Drinnon, Ed Lively, James Tedder and James Pot eat. Chuck Nesbit, Douglas McDer- niott, Tonny Millili, Judy Rosen- zweig, George Mannase, Russell er, Frank Carlisle, Becky Davis, Nancy Coleman, Lloyd Insinger, Sam Baker, Roy Hunt, Phil Ken nedy, Jack Jackson, Don Gottsch alk, Tommy Patterson and David Holbrook. The direction of the large cast is handled by Thomas M. Patterson, associate professor of dramatic art, assisted by Craven Mackie and Sally Greene, The complex settings of the court room and the street of a Southern town are designed by John Stockard, graduate assistant in the depart ment of dramatic art. Lighting is by Jim Armacost; costumes, by Iene Smart Rains. There are no reserved seats for "Inherit the Wind." Tickets are available at The Forest Theatre box office, beginning at 7 o'clock on performance evenings. Tar Heel Air Force Award Goes To Air Science Professor ft 4 5. mm Vv .-'' : 0 : f G. M. SLATE Activities in Graham Memorial today include: SP Executive Committee, 1:30-2 p m., Woodhouse; UP, 3-6 p.nu Grail; PIFC, 5-6:30 p.m., Wood house; UP caucus, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Grail; SP caucus, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Roland Parker I; Dance Lessons, 7-9 p.m.; Roland Parker II; Stu dent Council, 7:30-11 p.m., Grail, and WRC freshmen orientation, 8 II p.m., Woodhouse, '"::'j ,.' 2 si s r .: A. 3 V m m m is fi Tfe'. . 1 AIR FORCE AWARD Col. Franklin W. Swann, air science professor here, receives the Tar Heel Air Force Award from Cadet Lt. Col. Willi am F. Parker (right). Cadet Col. Stan Godwin (center) observes the presentation. Col. .Franklin W. Swann, air science professor here, was pre sented . the Tar Heel Air Force Award during ceremonies this week. Col. Swann was made a member of the honorary organization known as the Tar Heel Air Force because of his many accomplishments dur ing his tour of duty at the Uni versity AFROCT Detachment. He has been credited with mak ing the local AFROTC unit one of the outstanding ones in this area. In Chapel Hill community activ- local Little League baseball team for the past two summers. Col. Swann leaves the Univers ity in the summer to serve a as sistant air inspector for MATS Headquarters at Scott Air Force t ities, he has been in charge of the ( Base in Illinois