TUESDAY ISSUE Next Lnae Friday Vol. 34, No. 34 Student Group Says Restrict Auto Owners The University’s 50-mem ber Student Legislature has unanimously approved a rec ommendation that owner ship of automobiles by cer tain groups of students be prohibited. It was under stood that the recommenda tion was endorsed by Dean of Student Affairs Fred Weaver and sent through the office of the Chancellor of the University to be de livered to the Board of Trus tees. The Visiting Committee of the Trustees will discuss the report on May 16 and the full board will receive it on May 28. The student report, drawn by a Traffic Advisory Com mission appointed by newly elected student president Bob Young, made the fol lowing recommendations: 1. Freshmen entering the University in the fall of 1956 and thereafter be re stricted from keeping auto mobiles in Chapel Hill dur ing their freshman year. 2. Beginning in the fall of 1957, sophomores w ho do not wiaintain a “C” average dur ing their freshman year be restricted from keeping cars in Chapel Hill. 3. Violators of traffic reg ulations, be tried by a Uni versity traffic court, with fines going to the student government treasury. 4. All student car-owners be required to pay a regis tration fee of $2.50 per year, the receipts to be used for enforcement of regulations and construction of parking facilities. The Commission added that it felt its recommenda tions were only a partial so lution to the problem. ‘Chile Hot* Playing At Memorial Hall “Chile Hot,” an original musi cal comedy presented by the Uni-! vtrsity’s Sound and Fury drama organization, opened at 8 1 o’clock last night in Memorial j Hall and will continue tonight (Tuesday) and tomorrow night at the same time. The musical has a South Amer ican theme, and is entirely stu dent-written, including the mus ic and lyrics. Jack Spooner, a senior studying television, wrote the script, and Miss Jane Ed wards, an English major, is the director. Both appear in the show. Attend Convention Mr. and Mrs. Charles Notting ham attended the convention of Quality Motor Court Operators; at Charlotte during the weekend. Mr. Nottingham operates the University Motor Court here. e : '|H wPI «■» fe j^fl Miss Helen Hyde, Gravely’* Director of Special Service*, examine* a handbag made by Linwood Smith. fly H 'wl * dk Mr*. Lmlm Ayer*, right, and Mr*. Mary Davis work mi Mg* per jewelry la the record sad library room of Gravely. The Chancellor By I .ouis ’Graves I am setting down a few facts about University Chancellor Robert Burton House to go along with the portrait by the Weekly’s staff artist, William G. Man gum. When I start to write any thing about a person as Avell known in the community as Mr. House I say to myself: “What is there new I can tell about him? Everybody already knows it all.” But after a moment’* thought I realize this is wrong. Chapel Hill's population is constant ly changing and growing, and a great many men and women who have come here in recent years may know little or nothing about a man whose career is familiar to others among us. Not only that, but children’s growing up has added a big element to the population that is ma ture enough to have become 'acquainted with, and to take an interest in, the record of a fellow citizen. Naming figures is of course nothing but a guess, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there are today five or six thousand people in Chapel Hill who have come here or grown up here since there has appeared in print more than maybe a mere incidental mention of the de lightful book, “Miss Sue and the Sheriff,” that Mr. House wrote about his father and mother. Whoever is moved by this mention of mine to get the The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy book and read it will, I am sure, call down a blessing on my head. Something else that a great many people don’t know about Mr. House is what happened to hipi in the First World War. He had been graduated from the University here and had gone to Harvard for ad vanced studies. Because he was in Massachusetts when (Continued on Page 8) First Deadline for Mother’* Contest Today (Tuesday) is the last day mothers may be entered as contestants in the first of two drawings for “Outstanding Moth ers of 1956” in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. Children and adults may regis ter the names of mothers with any merchant in both communi ties and at as many stores as they desire. Tonight all the names will be collected, and from them three names will be drawn. Tomorrow (Wednesday) the registration starts all over for the second drawing to be held on May 9. Again the names may be entered at as many places as desired. On May 10 the names of the six selected mothers will be plac ed in a hat and the final draw ing for the coveted honors held. Gift certificates ranging from SOO down to $lO, engraved gold pins, and corsages will be award ed the finalists. The six selected mothers will attend the May 10 drawing, to be held in the office of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Association. The trade promotion committee of the as sociation is sponsoring this con test in conjunction with Mother’s Day, May 13. ’Absolutely No Color Line .. At Gravely Sanatorium: Less of That Unjelled Atmosphere By J. A. C. Dunn Gravely Sanatorium is a busy place. The corridors are long and spotlessly clean, the rooms are tidy and comfortable and spotlessly clean, the offices are brisk and shining. People are moving around all the time, up and down the corridors, in and out of the rooms, from Door to Door. There is less of that un jelled atmosphere peculiar to hos pitals; Gravely is not as tense as an emergency room, or as un settled as a regular hospital ward. A visitor does not feel, in Gravely, as if every face he saw were wondering “how soon I will I be out?” Most Gravely patients know they are in for a fairly prolonged stay, and re act accordingly. A chat with Miss Helen Hyde, I the Director of Special Services in the Sanatorium, uncovered some interesting facts about life in a Tuberculosis Sanatorium. | Miss Hyde has a sensitive thumb : on all the activities inside Grave ly—she supervises the patients’ diversion, vocation, rehabilitation, and apiritual guidance. Ist short, she makes Gravely patients hap- I W- The average life of a tcbereu leaia patient (It I*. according te CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1956 Chapel Mill ChaU L.G. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Prichard Eaton, who spent the winter here, set out in their car last Friday for their home in the Berkshire mountains of western Mass achusetts. I have this bul letin from Mr. Eaton, writ ten on a postcard that bears a picture of beautiful Guil der Pond on the Mount Ev erett Reservation near the town of Mount Washington: “Fair all the way north and got home at 3:30 Sun day. This morning (Mon day the 23rd) woke to see 3 inches of new snow on the ground. Elise was distinctly annoyed. So were the poor birds.” That reminds me of what I have heard of Miss Esther Conant’s trip to Boston. The day for which she scheduled it, Wednesday, April 11, sounds like spring but was about as nasty a day as we had all winter —a cold rain falling and a sharp wind blowing. This bitter weather was one more reason for the many friends she had made here to hope, you might say even pray, for her to post pone her departure. If she had been going by train or automobile she might have done so, hut she had bought a seat on a plane for Boston, and a seat on a plane is something not light ly to he wasted. If you’re a measurably confident air traveler you’ll take the air port people’s word for whether or not the flying will he safe. The Eastern's agent at the Raleigh-Dur ham airport said that all weather reports indicated safety, so flight No. 76 to Boston would go ahead as usual. The Eatons took Miss Conant over to the airport and she hoarded the plane in a slanting, biting rain and a wicked wind. Her first let ter to a friend here brought (Continued on Page 2) At Plemmona Inauguration In last Friday’s paper two men were omitted from the list of Chapel Hillians who were official representatives of colleges and universities at the inauguration of William 11. Plemmons as presi dent of Appalachian College. They were William H. Peacock, who represented Maryville Col lege, and William E. Rosensten gel, who represented Northeast Missouri State Teachers College. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith were omitted from the list of Chapef Hillians the Weekly’s reporter saw at the inauguration. Enters Duke Hospital Carlton Byrd, manager of Belk- Leggett-Horton, Inc., in Chapel Hill, entered Duke Hospital in Durham last (Monday) night for minor surgery. Miss Hyde, as bad form to call 1 > tuberculosis “TB” as it is to call i • the hounds the dogs at a fox i ; hunt) runs something like this; i | First, the patient is admitted i . and placed in a private room un- I . til thorough medical workups 1 Sj WL ■r . x. | 'I" H‘V*'r //"-‘'v % * | fl V'>*V- '..’V /-.'vV : -r'; ' ','y\ \ f <~ * > I : ‘VX r” /*;**’ ; |H ’ fl|ll -'<-v 1 ‘ '■ '' r J *■*„ ’ £*„ * ‘ "“’r"" II Bessy Potto, Gravaly patient who Is s retired Riagliag Brothers etemi and a cireas veteran es many yean, works as ’ a water-coUr pelatiag es a clew a. la the herhgraaad are several . 1 otbor solatia** ky Mr. Petto. New Officers Elected By Hospital Auxiliary 'S':* |l Xr,, Jjlr fIHMB New officers and chairmen of the North Carolina Memorial Hospital Auxiliary smile hap pily as they face the year to come, having just been able to donate $5,000 to the Hospital for air-conditioning rooms and wards for critically ill patients. As they stand, left to right, they are: Mrs. Ethel G. Fore, chairman of volunteers for the admitting office; Mrs. Gordon Black , well, member-at-large on the executive board; Mrs Clarence Heer, recording secretary- Mrs Ernest Wood, first vice-president; Mrs. W. W. Pierson Jr., president; Mrs. Frederic E. Nimmcke’ co-chairman of the hospital shop; Mrs. Raymond Kaighn, chairman of volunteer services• Mrs’ W. Reece Berryhill, social chairman; Mrs. William Stewart, publicity chairman; and Mrs. David Davis, chairman of public relations. Mrs. William C. Friday, second vice-president was absent at the time the picture was made. (UNC Photo by J. B. Clay.) ‘A Midsummer Night's Dream ’ Opens for 3-Day Run in Forest Theatre Friday The Carolina Play-makers’ an nual outdoor spring production, “A Midsummer-Night’s Dream," to l>e given this coming Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, will mark the third time that this Shakes pearean comedy has been pre sented by the UNC drama group. All three performances will be given at 8:30 p. m. in the Forest Theatre. James M. Riley of the Play makers’ staff is directing the new production of Shakespeare’s story of morals and fairies in volved in love complications. Heading the large cast are Mrs. Jane Albans, Chapel Hill, who played the lead in “Ondine” last fall, as Titania; Dick Newdiek, Augusta, Me., as Puck; and Rus sell Link, Jamaica, N. Y., Oberon. The cast includes Jim Potter, Goldsboro, us Theseus; Mrs. Mary Smith, Chapel Hill, as Hippolyta; James Sechrest, Thomasviile, as Lysander; Gloria Di Costanza, Chapel Hill, as Hermia; A1 Gor- Twelve Beauties Compete Thursday for ‘Miss Chapel HilT Title and Honors “Miss Chapel Hill,” who will represent the community in the annual state-wide Juycee-spon sored “Miss North Carolina” con test this year, will be chosen at Chapel Hill High School Au ditorium Thursday night, begin ning at 7 o’clock. Twelve Chapel Hill and Uni versity beauties will compete for the honor. They and their talents are: Misses Carol Mason, Chapel Hill, reading; Evelyn Ann Mat thews, Chapel Hill, painting; Joan Norwood, Chapel Hill, read ing; Jo Anne Knott, Oxford, piano; Joan Willsey, Norfolk, dancing; Libby McDowell, Wake Forest vocalist; Shirley Carpen ter, Oakboro, piano; Mary Bat- have been completed. A thorough medical workup involves exami nation and observation culminat ing in a definite medical diag nosis. Simulutaneously, the pa tient is orientated into hospital (Continued on Page 3) don, Greensboro, as Demetrius; Louise Fletcher, Birmingham, Ala., as Helena; Carla Williams and Jim Poteat, both of Char lotte, as Philostrate'and Egeus; Walter Smith and Kai Jurgen sen, both of Chapel Hill and members of the UNC faculty, as Bottom and Quince; Paul Mc- Cauley, Fayetteville, as Snug; John Sneden, Tenafly, N. J., as Flute; Ted Parker, Clinton, as Snout; and John Whitty, New Bern, as Starveling. The fairy attendants to Queen Titania are two mother and daughter pairs, Mrs. Lanita Stuart and Megan Stuart, Ral eigh, and Mrs.: Barbara Bounds and Bobbie Bounds, of Chapel Hill; Dee Casey, of Chapel Hill; Nancetta Hudson, of Goldsboro; Mrs. Anne Smith, Mrs. Hope Heifers, and Gretchen Fink, all of Chapel Hill. Ladies, lords and attendants iii the court are Marilyn Walker, (Continued on Page 8) ten, Mt. Gilead, vocalist; Dickie Pickerell, Whiteville, musician and vocalist; Doris Adkins, Rich mond, dancing; Sylvia Sue Yel ton, Bakersville, writing; and Elinor Cowing, Chapel Hill, cead i*ig. g The judges will be Red Gur ganus of Williamston, state president of the Jaycees; Bucky Snyder, High Point, past Jay cee state president; and Charles Cooper, prise winning' photo grapher of the Durham Herald. The day’s events for the con testants will begin at 3 p.m. Thursday when they will parade through Chapel Hill. At 5 p.m. they will sit down with the judges at dinner at the Ranch House, where they will be judged on poise, etiquette, and person ality. At the High School auditorium, they will make three appearances —in bathing suit, evening gown, and talent offering. Five final ists will he selected from the 12 and will be asked pertinent questions on world affairs and and ambitions and their answers will determine “Miss Chapel Hill” and runner-up. “Miss Chapel Hill” will re ceive a S2OO scholarship to any school of her choice, and a gown and bathing suit of her selection which she will wear in the state wide contest at Morehead City July 26-28. The state winner will compete in the “Miss America” contest at Atlantic City later in the summer. For their appearances at the High School Auditorium, Pokey Alexander will be master of cere monies. Tickets for the event will be sl. Monk Jennings is chairman of the contest this year. Chapel Millnotei Taylor Green dreaming there was a new baby at his house; last one of his five children was born 27 years ago. • • • Mas ia bedroom slippers, pa jamas, and blue lounging robe standing in side door of Pres byterian Church at 11:30 Sun- $4 a Year in County; other rates on page 2 Phone Call Brings Antarctic Message Mrs. Isaac M. Taylor heard the voice of a stranger when she got out of bed to answer the telephone at 4:30 a m. one day last week. The caller said he was Stanley Johnson of Greens btoro, that he was a “ham” (ama teur radio operator), that right then he was in communication with Mrs. Taylor’s husband on the Antarctic continent, and would she like to send him a message. Mrs. Taylor gave Mr. Johnson a message for her hus band, and Mr. Johnson repeated to her on the phone some of the things Dr. Taylor was tell ing him over the wireleje ft«| Antarctica. One of them was that the wind was blowing at 75 miles an hour and that this was quite usual there. Dr. Taylor is at the McMurdo Bay base of the Byrd expedition. Winter is beginning there now, and the expedition will be physi cally isolated from the rest of the world till November, when planes will arrive bringing mail and supplies from the United States. At that time, also, Dr. Taylor and other members of the group will move from Mc- Murdo Bay across much of the continent to a region near the South Pole. Through the medium of Mr. Johnson, Dr. Taylor told his wife that everybody at McMurdo Bay were well and safe. Mrs. Taylor, who lives to the south of town near the Route 15 By pass, told a friend yesterday that considering the way peo ple drive on the Bypass she wouldn’t be surprised if her hus band were safer in Antarctica than he would be driving from home to work here in Chapel Hill. Program Announced for the 1956-57 Concert Series; Tickets Now on Sale The 1966-57 program of the Chapel Hill Concert Series was announced yesterday conincident with the opening of season ticket sales. Beginning October 10, the Con cert Series will feature Eileen Farrell, soprano, to be followed by the Chicago Opera Ballet on January 22, the Obernkirchen Children’s Choir on February 21, and Witold Malcuzynaki, pianist, on March 28. Ail the programs will be given in Memorial Hall. Mra. A. 8. Winsor, chairman of the membership committee, said that it “is definitely ad vantageous to purchase season tickets. This method assures one tK *» ]R6B . JraH - W •«£JStffli fit**. 'sEgßw3& aammm imß ?* *v llpfß||fthk,:. , «?*M r TUB ORKMJfIKBWSIIFJ® ClHtdtoy.rjt’Jl .CHOIR j,_. mu TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday Society Offers $5,000 Gift to Air Condition Rooms of Sick Five thousand dollars is being donated by the N. C Memorial Hospital Auxiliary to air-condition rooms and wards for critically ill pa tients, according to an an nouncement made last week by Miss Elizabeth Branson, co-chairman with Mrs. Fred eric E. Nimmcke of the Aux iliary’s Hospitality Shop. The money has been made available from profits made by the Shop, where maga zines, candies, cigarettes, gifts, and other sundries are sold for patients and their families. The shop is staffed chief ly by faculty wives and the increasing number of older people who have retired to live in Chapel Hill from its membership of almost two hundred women. Net worth of the shop was listed as ►58,680.09. It is anticipated that in stallation of the air-condi tioning will begin soon, at the discretion of the Hos pital authorities. In the absence of the re tiring president, Mrs. Flet cher Green, on account of illness, Mrs. Russell Grum man, constitution and by laws chairman, presided. New officers elected were: Mrs. W. W. Pierson Jr., pres ident; Mrs. Ernest Wood, Ist vice-president; Mrs. Wil liam C. Friday, 2nd vice president ; Mrs. Clarence Heer, recording secretary; jfc* responding secretary; Mrs. E. McG. Hedgpeth, treas urer; and Mrs. Gordon Blackwell, member-at-large. Committee chairmen were promptly appointed, as fol lows: Mrs. Raymond Kaighn, volunteer services; Mrs. Wil liam Stewart, publicity; Mrs. (Continued on Page 8) Fellowships Given UNC Faculty Men Bee Story on Page 6 The Southern Fellowship Fund, Inc., of Chapel Hill yesterday an nounced awards to young faculty members of the University to engage in advanced study and research. They are: Hal H. Ballew, Shasta M. Bryant, John M. De- Grove, Morton Y. Jacobs, John F. Mahoney, Lawrence F. Mans field, Henry C. Randall, Dana P. Ripley, Diffee W. Standard, Edward D. Terry, and Carl C. Moses. of a fine seat for all four at tractions and offers an oppor tunity for substantial financial savings.” Reserved memberships for the entire series are $7.50 and un reserved memberships are $6.50. “Season tickets should be ord ered immediately,” Mrs. Winsor said. “Check or money order should accompany all mail orders, which should be addressed to Chapel Hill Concert Series, Box 80, Graham Memorial, Chapel Hill. “The program we are offering for the third season of the Con cert Series is one of the best diversified talent available,” Mrs. Winsor added.