) I iefs Brief h From UP Bulgars-Spain Cf NEWS O Trailer Camp O Ruffin Returns O Music Recital Cause New Rift " -A O in f ! 1 1 1 - I yv t fi 11 f f 0 Of U. S.-Russia Secretary Byrnes Refutes Red Charges Washington, March 11. To night again, the United States is at odds with Russia on questions concerning both Bulgaria and Spain. Secretary of State Byrnes says he has rejected Rus sian charges that a note he sent the Bulgarian government was in "violation" of the Moscow agreement. On the contrary, Byrnes says, his note urging that the left-wing Sofia regime' be widened to accept two opposi tion leaders on mutually accept able terms was "the very es sence" of the Moscow agree ment. Chinese Armies Race To Occupy Red Areas Chungking, March 11. Chi nese Communist armies are re ported on the march across vast areas of Manchuria tonight, rac ing to occupy key cities in the wake of a sudden Russian evac uation. The k Chinese news agency reports that the Red Army is about to evacuate an other city, Harbin, 235 miles north of Mukden. And a strong Communist force is said to be on the outskirts waiting to take over. - Pravda and Tass Hit Churchill, Vandenberg Moscow, March 11. Earlier today, both the Communist party paper Pravda and Radio Moscow bitterly attacked both Winston Churchill and Senator Vandenberg as "false friends" of Democracy. Pravda says Churchill's proposal for an Anglo-American military al liance would mean the end of the Allied Big Three and of the UNO. Strike Bill Approved By Senate Committee Washington, March 11. A Senate labor subcommittee has approved a watered-down anti strike bill for Senate considera tion. After the subcommittee de leted the so-called restrictive provisions of the stringent Case Anti-Strike Bill, about the only thing that remained was the legislative number on the out side. The Senate version pro vides for a national mediation board and voluntary arbitration of labor disputes. Hannegan Asks Action On Minimum Wage Bill Washington, March 11. Post master' General Robert Hanne gan journeyed up to Capitol Hill today to tell Democratic Senators that President Truman wants a 65 to 75-cent an hour mini mum wage bill enacted and quick. At the meeting held in the Senate office building, Han negan told Democrats that a compromise measure was not enough. World Monetary Meet Elects Vinson Head Savannah, Ga., March 11 Treasury Secretary Vinson has been named: permanent chair man of the Board of Governors of the World Monetary Fund. The head of the Russian observ ers at the Savannah, Georgia, conference s"ays he doesn't know whether the Soviets will accept membership in the World Bank and Fund before the sessions close two weeks from now. See NEWS BRIEFS page t VOLUME LIV Ml I J I) 1 1 )M, ill lf)f imO'u pwtytiw.m) 'JWW lllillf: ' 9 4 Two of the coeds who will be featured in the all Brahms pro gram being given tonight at 8:30 o'clock are shown above. On the left is Mary Louise Emery of Salem, Ohio, and on the right is Carolyn Bowman of Shelby. Both are pianists. Music Department Ensemble Gives All Brahms Program Five Musicians Play in Hill Hall Tonight; Program Features Clarinet, Piano Sonatas Two talented graduate assistants and three promising under graduate students of music at the University will join to give an all-Brahms program in Hill Hall here tonight at 8:30 o'clock. Playmakers 9 'Blithe Spirit' i 1 Set To Open By Elaine Patton Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit" is to be presented in the Play maker's Theatre tomorrow night at 8:30 o'clock, and Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights un der the direction of Foster Fitz Simons, assistant director of the Carolina Playmakers. The play, a fantastic farce, is the st&ry of a man and his sec ond wife who plan an evening's entertainment for their guests by having a medium perform for them. The cast of characters includes a neurotic medium, a dignified doctor, a ghost, and a normal couple. Prominent members of the cast are Leroy Love, Asheville, as Charles, the husband; Lois Warnshuis, Staten Island, N. Y., as Ruth, his present wife; Jean McKenzie, West Palm Beach, Fla., as Elvira, the ghost of his first wife. All seats are reserved and tickets may be obtained at Led-better-Pickard's or in the Busi ness Office of the Playmakers Theatre in Swain Hall. Students Present Musical Program In Hill Tomorrow A student recital will .be pre sented in Hill Music Hall tomor row at 4:05 p. m. The program will be varied, consisting of vo cal, flute, and piano solos. Andrew Griffith, bass, accom panied by Charles Stevens on the piano will sing "Nina" by Pergolisi and a Scarlatti com position. A Beethoven sonata will be played by Ruth von Bramer. Catherine Lewis, flut ist, will present Debussy's "Syrinx" and "Serenade" by Lavignac. She will be accom panied by Durema Fitzgerald.' Gene Stryker, baritone, accom panied by Herbert Livingston, will sing two selections, "Man is Full of Trouble" and "Solitude." See RECITAL, page U THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- CHAPEL HILL, N. C, f f ' y K:vtf::.'.y!".v.. ifLuVir-i-n lyforiiHrwtf-"iT" ' The participants are William Fitzgerald, a sophomore' from New Bern, clarinet ; Miss Emily Porter, Moline, Kansas, graduate assistant, 'cello; William Waters, freshman from Roanoke Rapids, piano; Miss Carolyn Bowman, Shelby, senior, piano; and Miss Mary Louise Emery, Salem, Ohio, graduate assistant, piano. Their program will include three movements of-the Sonata in E flat major, op. 120, by Mr. Fitzgerald and Miss Bowman; "Capriccio in F sharp minor," "Intermezzo in E major," and "Rhapsodie in B minor," Mr. Waters ; and three movements of the Sonata in E minor, Op. 38, Miss Porter and Miss Emery. The three piano selections are typical of Brahms' later piano works which reveal his mastery of the piano, while the two clari net sonatas were inspired'by the fine clarinet play of Muhf eld, well known clarinetist of Brahms' . time. The first sonata for pianoforte and violoncello in E minor, op. 38, is the first ex tant duet of Brahms and its finale is unique in chamber mu sic, being a strict fugue. Coeds Demonstrate Athletic Prowess At Woollen Today Fencing, tumbling, dancing, and other phases of the physical education program for coeds will be demonstrated this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the women's gym nasium. The afternoon's activities in clude various skits and perform ances by the different classes. There will be a special tap danc ing feature. Members of the conditioning class will tell how posture expresses personality. The hygiene classes will produce a short skit containing hints on healthy living. Dances will in clude Russian, Latin American, European, and several folk dances. Sponsors for the demonstra tion are : Bonnie Bellomy, Bar bara Boyd, Joyce Fowler, Mary Evans Goodwin, Margaret Gould, Patricia Harry, Bill Lloyd, Mar garet Martiny Ellen McCallam, Jean McDaniels, Holly Smith Neaves,v Camilla Ray, Sophia Saunders, Penelope Soufas, and Winona Summers. V sSS. I 1 " I .-.',v.-.-.-.-.x, -.'.-a-.-.v -v.-. J i ' TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1946 Dorm Building Is Approved By Trustees No Date Is Given For Construction - The University Board of Trus tees, meeting in Raleigh yester day, gave its stamp of approval to contracts providing financial arrangements for construction of the five new dormitories recently authorized by the board. Chan cellor R. B. House, who attended the session, along with Presi dent Frank P. Graham and Con troller W. D. Carmichael, de clined to divulge terms of the agreements. Under the three-way contract between the State of North Caro lina, the Chapel Hill branch of the University and the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, the state leases ground for the build ings to a University foundation and the foundation borrows money from Wachovia to finance the construction. No Date Given The board also authorized ar rangements for extension of utilities to the "new dorms. There is no indication as yet concern ing a possible date for beginning construction. Tentative sit.es ap- See DORM, page U Smith Returns Here After Being Chosen As Typical GI Type Wiley Smith, Jr., of the fresh man class, has returned from New York after a successful week in New York as a member of the 1946 Bates College Board. Chosen as the typical returned G.I. to serve on the board, Smith proved himself a capable target for the photographer's lens. He was a B-17 pilot stationed in England, and flew twenty-nine missions over Germany. He is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsi lon fraternity. Bates Fabrics has chosen twelve outstanding college stu dents since 1939 to check fabric popularity, campus trends and to talk over its advertising plans in a preliminary trial on actual students. This year there are only two boys on this year's board. The other boy besides Smith was Bill Hacket, twice Ail-American from Ohio State, Smith will be seen soon in Life" and "Esquire" magazines. Roy Armstrong As Director of Admissions " if Wii-rftiTfn-r-Vil'-'ifr'-'-.ilfii - ifinnrii frinirr " -nnrwum-mi-nniM ARMSTRONG UNITED PRESS Trailer Camp Site Okayed for Spring Mag Sponsors Photo Contest Best Looking Man Will Be Selected Carolina coeds will vote this week for their choice of the "Best Looking Man at Carolina" in a Mag sponsored contest. Fra ternities, dormitories and men's organizations are requested to turn nominations into the Mag office before Monday. The winner will be featured in the April Mag and he and his date will be given free tickets to the Carolina Theatre. The Porthole is donating two free meals and Wootten-Moulton is making three 8 by 10 portraits of the most handsome man on the UNC campus. He will also be awarded a gift from the Caro lina Sport Shop. It is not yet known whether the pictures of Carolina's gla mour boy will replace the usual pin-up girl spread. Connie Hendren, Mag editor, has announced that individual nominations will not be accept ed and that each entry in the contest must be sponsored by an organization. . Vets To Entertain Carr Girls Tonight In the second of the series of parties to return the hospitality that has been shown them, the Veterans on campus will hold open house for the girls of Carr dormitory tonight in the Vets' clubhouse at 7:45. Blackie Black, chairman of the entertainment committee, an nounced that another floor show has been planned for this party. The show includes Don Shields, who will do impersonations. George Jackson will entertain at the piano and there will be a drums number. Also a surprise feature has been added. All campus veterans are wel come. Senate Meets Speaker Lib Schofield has an nounced that the Coed Senate will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Roland Parker lounge of Graham Memorial. ResumesTask Roy Armstrong, who has served in the Navy for the last three years, has returned, to his duties as Director of Admissions in the University. Following aperiod of training at the Midshipmen's School at Columbia University, Mr. Arm strong was assigned to the Ad jutant General Office of this State as liaison officer for North Carolina. During his last year in the Navy he was on sea duty as gun nery officer and participated in the occupational invasions of Okinawa and of Wakayama and Wakanura in the Japanese main land. He was recently discharged See ARMSTRONG, page U NUMBER 31 x uiauuiu iiuau nica Scheduled as Site By Mary Hill Gaston Men are now at work clearing off the old high school grounds located on Pittsboro road above the Phi Delta Theta house to provide a site for a trailer camp to be used by University stu dents. Authorization for the project has come from the build ings and grounds committee as a result of requests from a num ber of married veterans. The camp should be completed for use at the beginning of next term. Its area will take care of approximately 20 trailers. The University plans to set up bath houses and toilet facilities for the trailer occupants and to con nect water and utility lines to the grounds. Trailers to be located on the ground will be owned by the oc cupants themselves, as the Uni versity does not plan to purchase any to rent to students. Fami lies living in the area will pay for the heat, light and water provided them and will pay in addition enough to cover costs of maintenance, which will include garbage collection, cleaning serv ice for the bath houses and toi lets and upkeep of walkways. As yet there is no provision for signing up applicants for space in the trailer camp, but announcement of a manager of the area should be forthcoming soon. The proposed trailer camp, though it will not be large enough to accommodate many families, will prove at least some relief to the housing shortage so severely felt here ; especially among married veterans desiring to bring their wives here. It will provide temporary relief un til the 176 government-owned prefabricated houses promised Carolina arrive. A large number of colleges and universities all over the country have bought trailers to be rented to married students, See TRAILER, page U Ruffin f Dormitory Will Be Returned For Civilian Use It was disclosed yesterday af ternoon that Ruffin dormitory, used by ROTC students for the past two terms and before that by the Pre-Flight cadets, will be turned back to the University for civilian students at the be ginning of the spring quarter. An ever-increasing number of discharges, plus 37 men grad uating this term, will bring the total of military men here next term down to approximately 298. This will include about 205 ROTC's and 93 marines. At the beginning of the winter quar ter there were 342 Navy men and 103 marines here, making a total Of 445, according to the enroll ment figures. Return of Ruffin for civilian use will leave Manley and Man gum for ROTC's and Grimes for the marines. After this term all dorms housing military men are scheduled to be returned to the University as the V-12 program assumes a peacetime status.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view