Briefs From UP
Russ-British
Clash Arises
In UNO Meet
Red Delegate Hits
English In Indies
London, February 7. The
UNO has rolled one' stumbling
block out of the way, only to find
another staring it in the face.
Last night hopes rose when
Russia withdrew her charge
that the presence of British
troops in Greece threatened the
peace. But this afternoon' those
hopes dove, once again. Because
another Russian delegate
Manuilski of the Ukraine was
uttering those same charges
again, the only difference being
that it is British troops in the
Netherlands East Indies who en
danger world security. And for
the second time this week Brit
ain's Bevin promptly told a high
Soviet official that he was lying
in regard to British policy.
Dutch foreign minister Van
Fleffens sided with Britain im
mediately. He said that British
troops were forced to go into ac
tion against Indonesian extrem
ists. And then the battle was
on.
Ukrainian Manuilski charged
that Britain let Japanese troops
remain in power in Indonesia for
a month after Japan's sur
render. He complained that
British troops were used to sup
press the national aspirations of
Indonesians, that they attacked
without justification. And
Manuilski wound up by demand
ing the security council appoint
a special commission to investi
gate on the spot and establish
peace in the Dutch islands.
Then came Bevin's turn.
Flushed, and obviously angeredr
the foreign secretary cried "I
give you the lie that we attacked
Indonesians. We went into In
donesia to rescue allied internees
and we were fired at."
One by one, he answered and
rejected the other Russian
charges.. And Bevin concluded
with an objection to the demand
that a commission be sent to in
vestigate. Instead, proposed
Bevin, the parties in the Indo
nesian dispute the Dutch and
the Indonesians should be
urged by the UNO to reach an
agreement.
No-Strike Bill Passes
Washington, February 7.
The Case Anti-Strike Bill has
been sent to the Senate for ac
tion, after passing the House fry
a vote of 258 to 155. The Senate
is tied up by a filibuster, and con
siderable delay is expected be
fore it takes up the House meas
ure which would make unions
liable in the courts for contract
violations; ban foremen's
unions, picket line violence, and
boycotts ; and enforce a 30-day
cooling off period.
Boat Clash Nears End
New York, February 7. The
tug-boat strike which has
brought a critical fuel shortage
to the world's biggest city ap
pears to be near a solution. Of
ficials of the AFL tug-boatmen's
union indicate they have re
ceived a new and satisfactory of
fer from the companies, and will
present it to the. striking work
ers for a vote tomorrow.
Murray-Truman Meet
Washington, February 7.
CIO President Philip Murray
conferred with President Tru
man this afternoon. Murray
says he gave Mr. Truman a com
plete report on this weeks pri
vate negotiations between the
steel workers union and the steel
See NEWS BRIEFS, page
7 d
VOLUME LIV
Summer School
Enrollment
Looms Large
Phillips Urges
Prompt Signup
All students now in the Uni
versity are urged to decide soon
whether they will attend the
1946 Summer Sessions, as a ca
pacity enrollment appears im
minent, Dr. Guy B. Phillips, Di
rector of the Summer Sessions,
announced today.
A deadline date for applications
to the Summer Sessions will be
set in the near future, he said.
Present students will have
first choice on rooms, but if they
do not make applications for the
summer term by the deadline
date, their rooms will be given
to incoming students.
' To date, over three hundred
more outside applications have
been received than were received
at this time last year. Normally,
the summer sessions have only
about one-half capacity enroll
ment, but it is believed that the
1946 term will find every room
on the campus full.
"The summer program is now
being organized," Dr. Phillips
said. "It will be a 'Fourth
Term,' so to speak supplement
ing the Fall, Winter, and Spring
terms as the regular graduate
and undergraduate courses will
be given under a well-staffed
faculty." v .
There will be two terms of six
weeks each, with the following
dates: First term, June 13-July
20 ; Second term, July 22-August
29.
Tar Heel Topics, a pamphlet
outlining the set-up here at Caro
linahousing, courses, costs and
eligibility are being mailed to
applicants desiring information,
and a catalogue, now being pre
pared, will be mailed, explaining
in more detail the conditions of
the Summer Sessions.
Coed Legislature
Raises Totals
Of All Sororities
The Coed Senate in a called
session Tuesday night passed a
sorority representation amend
ment to the WGA constitution,
which will be voted on by the
coed student body In elections
slated for February 26. The
amendment increases sorority
house representation in the Sen
ate from one to two members.
The Senate felt this measure
was warranted due to the num
ber of girls living in sorority
houses. The constitution allows
two representatives to each co
ed dormitory housing more than
50 women, and heretofore only
one Senator has represented all
sorority houses.
Plans were also made Tues
day for a Coed Hour program to
be held at 5 p.m. February 21 in
IJill Hall to introduce candidates
for WGA off ices to the coeds. Im
mediately after the program the
Senate will entertain all coeds
at an informal tea in Graham
Memorial.
A third measure decided on at
the Senate session was a change
in the by-laws of the group. Sen
ators voted that proxies will be
no longer accepted to excuse ab
sences, as proxies are unfamil
iar with Senate procedure.
-THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST-
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1946
Murine Honor Guard
For Hyder Seeking
Rides To Asheville
The funeral for Bert Hyder,
Marine V-12 student who was
killed in a plane crash Satur
day, will be held in Asheville
next Sunday.
Military honors will be ac
corded at the funeral provided
enough Marines from the unit
here will be able to secure trans
portation to Asheville. The
Marine unit is officially author
ized to send only one representa
tive to the service. However,
the Marines want to form a
guard of honor at the funeral
and have secured emergency fur
loughs so that they will be able
to go. Six of the guard of honor
have already secured transpor
tation but there are still fifteen
in doubt. In order to form the
guard of honor all twenty-one
will be necessary. .
If you know of any rides for
these Marines to Asheville this
weekend please contact Marine
headquarters.
REV. J. G. HERRIN
New Baptist Chaplain
To Fill Pulpit Sunday
The Rev. J. G. Herrin, new
student chaplain at the Baptist
Church, will fill the pulpit at
the regular morning service
Sunday at 11 o'clock. The Rev.
Richard Howerton, state Bap
tist Student Union secretary,
also will take part in the service.
Rev. Herrin served as assoc
iate pastor in Columbia, Mo.,
prior to his coming here. He is
a graduate of Wake Forest Col
lege and of Union Theological
Seminary in New York. While
at Wake Forest Rev. Herrin was
BSU council social chairman for
four years and state BSU presi
dent in 1938.
The office of the chaplain will
be in the student room of the
Baptist Church.
Tri Delt Pledge
Jean Youngblood of Concord
has pledged Tri Delta sorority.
x- -
Old Prof Recalls Athletic Feats Of Faculty
InDays Of Handlebar Moustaches, Nosebags
By Sarah Spratt
I enjoyed your piece in last
Sunday's Greensboro News
about Carolina's faculty ath
letes," commented the Young
Professor to your correspond
ent. "I'll give you an A on style
but a D minus on content. It
makes an oft-repeated tale
stale as year-before-last peanuts
in the cracks of the Yankee Sta
dium bleachers. I had read the
facts many times before and
heard the records ad nauseam.
Chapel Hill babies have been
teething on them for forty
years. Your list of heroes, my
CT
Gala, Colorful 'Chimes' Production
its Campus
Fashion Show
Bids On Sale
For Thursday
Tickets are now on sale in
the Y, at Ledbetter-Pickard's
and in coed dormitories and
sorority houses for the Carolina
Independent Coed Association's
Valentine Fashion Show to be
held next Thursday 'night at
7:30 o'clock in Hill Hall.
The show will feature 60 com
plete outfits from Montaldo's ex
clusive fashion shop in Greens
boro, worn by 15 selected coeds.
All clothes shown Thursday
night, in addition to many other
dresses, suits and accessories,
will be on display Friday and
Saturday on the second' floor of
the Varsity. Saleswomen and
fitters from Montaldo's will be
there both days to show and sell
the clothes to coeds and towns
people. " '
CICA President Evelyn Davis
has stated that this sale should
be of especial interest to coeds
this year, since many of them
will not get to go home to buy
clothes due to an almost non
existent spring vacation.
Selecting Costumes
. Models selected Tuesday will
go f to Greensboro Yearly .next
week to choose costumes and ac
cessories they will wear in the
show. Each of the 15 coeds will
model four complete outfits.
Price of the tickets is 50
cents. The following girls are
selling tickets in their respec
tive dormitories : Evelyn Stokes,
Kenan; Lib Henderson, Archer;
Louise Anderson, Smith; Betty
Jo Blanton, Carr; Blancne
Jacobi, Spencer; and Nancy
Greenwall, Mclver. Sorority
presidents will have charge of
tickets for their houses.
President Davis has extended
an invitation to the show to all
students, men and women, wives
of veterans and faculty mem
bers and to Chapel Hill towns
people. Hillel Foundation
To Hear Buchstane
Miss Grace Buchstane will de
liver a message on Palestine to
the Hillel Foundation tonight at
7 :30 o'clock in the Roland Par
ker lounge of Graham Memorial.
The message will be part of the
regular service but a discussion
of the problem will follow the
talk.
dear young lady, was the-old
classic roll call. You see, in our
roaring 'Forties the old Ivy
League stuff is not the great
shakes it was in the early 1900's.
Chick Harland's ten seconds at
Princeton, for example why,
since Chick's day scores of dubs
have sprinted through ' Prince
ton in shorter time than that.
Hick Hobbs and Doc Lawson
played ball in handle-bar mous
taches and loud stockings.
"You've got your champeens
from the dean's list. An inno
cent little girl, you've suffered
journalistic contamination by
With Premier Showing
PHYLLIS SULLIVAN
Seventy Sign
For Law School
Registration Hits
Total Of 109
The Law School registration
yesterday of seventy new stu
dents brought the total in the
school to 109, and by the end of
the registration period from five
to ten more will probably sign
up, Mr. R. H. Wettach, Dean of
the Law School, has announced.
As against twenty-seven vet
erans among the forty-two stu
dents who registered for the fall
term, there are sixty-two vet
erans in this group of seventy.
Among the veterans is a woman
student, who was a lieutenant
(jg) in the Coast Guard, and a
former lieutenant commander
in the navy. There are only two
male civilians, with six women
students filling out the list.
The greatest growth is in the
first year class, which to date
has seventy-six enrolled stu
dents. Thirty-nine of the fall group
of forty-two have enrolled, and
nearly every one of them has one
or more medals or ribbons. A
mong them are two former lieu
tenant colonels, and a Marine
major. One of the lieutenant
colonels, who was in the Infan
try, Armored Division, in Nor
mandy, northern France, Arden
nes, Rhineland, and central Ger
many, could hold his own among
the medal-holders on this cam
pus, as he has all the following:
Distinguished Service Cross, Sil
ver Star and Oak Leaf Cluster.
the Old-Well-and-South-Build-ing-Davie-Poplar
Myth. You
just picked up the ancient busts
in the Hall of Fame, or. copied
names from the marble tablets
in Memorial, and dusted them
off. But you missed even some
of them. And you muffed all the
shiny chromium-plated new
record-busters.
"Now, here is a starting list,
fresh stuff, with citations for a
few modern stars. And here are
some directions to guide your
researches (if, in the interest of
truth and reader goodwill, you
See PROF, page U
Opening Night
Summer Session
Law Enrollment
NUMBER 4
SEC Sponsors
Student Show
Of 50 Stars
First Call at 8:30
In Memorial Hall
The Student Entertainment
Committee brings its first pro
duction of the winter season to
the campus tonight in "The
Chimes of Normandy," a delight
ful comic opera, presented joint
ly by the University Music de
partment and the Carolina Play
makers. The opera, under the direction
of Douglas Hume and Paul
Young, will be held in Memorial
Hall at 8:30 tonight and Satur
day night. The production has a
cast of more than 50 and is ac
companied by a 25-piece orches
tra. Phyllis Sullivan and John
Bridges star in the production.
Other major parts are sung by
Alice Summers, Edwin Easter,
Andrew Griffith, and Rex Cos
ton. The stylized costumes of sev
enteenth century France have
been executed by Irene Smart,
and the scenery designed by Fos
ter Fitz-Simons, both of the
Playmaker staff. Robert Bur
rows is technical director and
the lighting is designed by James
Crutchfield.
The play is the story of two
foundlings reared by Gaspard,
an old miser. An array of gaily
dressed peasant maidens, lovely
costuming, and expertly designed
scenery, promise to make the
production outstanding in the se
ries of Student Entertainment
programs that have been pre
sented on the campus.
Interfrat Council
Discusses Revision
Campus Rushing
Methods of improving rush
ing procedures were discussed by
the Interfraternity Council at its
meeting Monday night. Repre
sentatives of the various frater
nities offered recommendations
for rules to govern the next rush
ing season.
. The council held a general
opinion that the rush season
just past was most successful,
according to Pete Pulley, secre
tary. Restricted H dates for
rushees on the first night and
definite rushing hours for the
rest of the week were accepted
as good aspects of the last sea
son. Other rules for next season
were referred to a committee
which will shape them into vot
ing form for the next meeting.
Council members were also
reminded of their responsibility
to the honor code to help fulfill
the house privileges board agree
ment to which all fraternities
have subscribed.
Returned To. Campus
Hobert McKeever, Phi Gam
ma Delta, has returned from the
Naval Air Corps this week to en
roll in law school. His wife, for
merly Opie Charters and editor
of the Mag, will join him in the
near future.
i