Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 26, 1946, edition 1 / Page 1
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EDIT Press and Politics .Blag Election NY Impressions NEWS Phantoms Win IRC Speaker Grill Reopening i -T7 ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- VOLUME LTV CHAPEL HILL, N. C TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1946 UNITED PRESS NUMBER 36 .mamtoii Ca Meet Final NCAA rrn id st 1 nigh t Brfefs From tf Byrnes Makes Warning Talk At UNO Meet International Laws Supported in Speech Hunter College, The Bronx, March 25. Secretary of State Byrnes opened the second ses sion of the UNO Security Coun cil this afternoon with the warn ing that no nation has a right to take the law into its own hands. Indicating his willingness to ac cept any honest settlement of the Iranian dispute, Byrnes repeated what he has said twice before that the UNO charter doesn't try to outlaw changes in the world, but it does outlaw the use of force to bring changes. Byrnes said it was right for nations to try to settle their disputes among themselves, but if any dispute can't be settled by friendly nego tiations, he says, it must be brought before the Security Council. Iran Official States Reds Are Withdrawing Tehran, March 25. An Iran ian government spokesman says Red Army troops are withdraw ing from the country under the terms of the Anglo-Russian- Iranian Treaty of 1942, rather than because of any new agree ment. The spokesman says Iran and Russia have not signed any new agreement, since it was not necessary. Canada Charges Anew On Red Atom Spying Montreal, March 25. Docu ments introduced in the Canad ian espionage investigation re veal that Moscow called on its agents in Canada for docu mentary information on ' the manufacture of atomic bombs immediately after the second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. Russ-Canadian Attache Recalled by Moscow Ottawa, March 25. The Sov iet military attache Lieutenant Colonel Gregory Popov has been recalled to Moscow. Popov succeeded Colonel Zabotin, the Russian military attache charged with organizing an espionage ring in Canada. Outlawing of A-Bomb Posed by State Dept. Washington, March 25. An international agreement to out law the manufacture of atomic bombs has been recommended by a special state department ad visory group The study has been presented to the Senate Atomic Energy Committee in closed session by Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson. OPA Must Be Retained Says Bernard Baruch Washington, March 25. Presidential advisor Bernard Baruch says full production is the only permanent cure for in flation. Until that can : be achieved, the elderly financier urges retention of the OPA for another year and a legal ban on strikes and lockouts. IRC Brings Second Speaker to Campus Former French Premier To Discuss Franco-American Relations Tonight Former Premier of France, Camille Chautemps, will discuss "Franco-American Relations" dent body tonight at 8:30 in Hill Hall under the auspices of the International Relations club. j j i . . i onautemps is the second speaker on international affairs sponsored by the IRC. M. Chautemps is motoring down from Washington and is expected to arrive in time for a banquet set for 6:30 at the Caro lina Inn. Chautemps' speech is timed with the arrival of Leon Blum in Washington as the new French Ambassador to the Unit ed States. M. Chautemps was in conference with Leon Blum in Washington shortly after Blum's arrival in this country two weeks ago, and it is believed that Chautemps' address is di rectly concerned with the pro gram of French foreign policy (toward the United States) now facing its critical test in Wash ington. M. Chautemps was born in Paris on Feb. 1, 1885. He at tended the University .of Paris and graduated at the age of 19 with the degree of Doctor of Law. Chautemps presently was admitted to the bar of the Court of Appeals of Paris, and took part in a great number of im portant law cases with a great deal of success. Chautemps rose to dizzy j Wynn Returns to University To Direct Communications Distribution Library To Be Enlarged; Various Media to Include FM Transmitter Prof. Earl Wynn, who before the war was a member of the Caro lina Playmakers staff and who has recently been discharged as a lieutenant from the Navy, has returned to the University to take up his new duties as Director of Center. The Communication Center, f which was approved last Septem ber by the board of trustees, will begin operation immediately. Described as a far-reaching ser vice in education for the people nf North Carolina, the center plans to carry out its program through all media of communica tions, including a frequency modulation transmitter and stu dio connected with a network of stations in other colleges and public schools throughout the state. The present distribution li brary of motion pictures, film strips, charts, slides and illustra tions will be greatly enlarged. A motion picture and slide film production unit will be organized to produce new educational and documentary films. Plans are also being made for an experimental television sta tion and other experiments in new techniques of communica tion, Professor Wynn said. "The purpose of the Communi cation Center is ta provide a ser vice for extending the teaching and training of all departments of the consolidated University when he appears before the stu heisrhts in. the turbulence of French politics. He was suc cessively Representative, Sena tor, Minister of the Interior, Minister of State, three times Vice-President, four times Prime Minister, and three times Pre mier. Chautemps arrived in Amer ica shortly before the outbreak of World War II, and during the war he actively supported France's struggle for liberty. His family suffered many sacri fices for France in the two wars. He lost three brothers in World War I, and the fourth and last one, already mutilated in the first war, was arrested by the Germans in 1942 and thrown in to the horror camp of Bergan Belsen where he died. Chau temps' son-in-law, a Colonel in the French Forces of the Inter ior, was captured and shot by the Germans. Chautemps' two sons escaped from France after the American landing in North Africa, and, after being taken into a concentration camp in Spain from which they escaped, took their place in . the Free French Army and fought to the end with their American com rades. the University's Communication beyond the limits of Chapel Hill, Raleigh and Greensboro ; to pro vide current materials and to produce new materials which will assist teachers at the University and throughout the State; and to train interested students in both the technical and creative use of the various media of com munication," Chancellor Robert B. House said today. "The pur pose is not to change or supplant, but to extend and assist." Professor Wynn has produced and written motion pictures for the Army and Navy for the last four years. Twenty months of his service with the Navy were spent in Hollywood at several of the major motion picture stu dios, and, during his spare time in Hollywood, he worked in radio and television at the studios of the Columbia Broadcasting Sys tem and the National Broadcast ing Company. Men's Glee Club Tryouts Tryouts for the Men's- Glee Club will be held from 2-4 this afternoon and Thursday after noon in Room 8, Hill Hall. Doubtful Students Advised to Check With Instructors Student grade reports for the winter quarter will not be ready before Friday, and any student who thinks he might have failed a course should see his instructor at once, announces Edwin S. Lanier, Central Records direc tor. The final grades reports for about 75 courses have not been received at the Central Records Office, Mr. Lanier said, and un til all reports have been received the grade reports cannot be com pleted. If a student fails a course, he should see his General College adviser or his Dean without further delay about a revision of his registration for the spring quarter, said Mr. Lanier. t Vets Play Hosts To Mclver Dorm In Social Tonight A showing of Carolina sports movies last night initiated a week of social festivities for the Uni versity veterans. Tonight the vets will play host to the girls of Mclver dormitory. Highlight ing the evening will be a special program of entertainment, in troductions to the girls, dancing and refreshments. The schedule for the re mainder of the week follows: Wednesday, open house for Smith dormitory girls and town girls at 7:45 p. m. at the club house; Thursday, supper forum at 6 p. m., followed by a smoker for all new students at 7:30 in Lenoir Hall; Friday, dance at the Navy armory from 9 p. m. till 1a.m. Tickets for the dance will be limited and may be bought in ad vance at the Y. Seminar Tomorrow Hears Huntington Professor Ellsworth Hunting ton of Yale University will hold an miormai seminar in room 407 -Alumni building on Wed nesday at 8:30 p. m. under the sponsorship of the Institute for Research in Social Science and the department of sociology. It is expected that Dr. Hunt ington will defend the thesis of his latest volume, "Mainsprings of Civilization." Dr. Huntington is well known for his teaching, research and writing in the field of geography. One of his special interests has been the relationship between climate and civilization. Bleight to Assume Duties asWGA Head Fran Bleight will assume the duties of the president of the Woman's Government Associa tion until the installation of Fran Golden, the newly elected president. Ruth Duncan had to eave school due to the illness of her mother. . . Plans are being made for the orientation of approximately thirty new coeds enrolled this term, Miss Bleight announced. Carolina Quint Faces Strong Oklahoma Five Western Champions, Oklahoma Aggies Heavily Favored Over North Carolina By Carroll Poplin New York, March 26. The University of North Carolina's White Phantoms, who polished off New York University and Ohio State for the Eastern NCAA championship, will entertain the Western division winners from Oklahoma A & M for the NCAA cage title in Madison Square Garden tonight in the feature attrac tion of a double-header. Free Movie Tonight At Carolina Theatre For New Students All new students will be ad mitted free to the movie thea tre tonight at 8 :30 at the Caro lina Theatre, Charlie Vance, president of the student body, announced. Tickets will be distributed to all new students attending student government meeting tonight at 7:15 in Gerrard Hall, when Chancellor R. B. House will speak. Phantoms to Appear On Fred Waring Show Carolina's White Phantoms, winners of the eastern NCAA cage title, will appear this morn ing on Fred Waring's coast-to- coast broadcast over the Na tional Broadcasting Company. Coach Ben Carnevale will be another guest of the popular maestro when the program is aired at 11 o'clock. 'Hark the Sound' will be fea tured by the Waring orchestra and glee club as a highlight of the program. Rita Adams Pinned Eddie Allen, PiKA, has pinned Rita Adams of Atlanta, Georgia. Administration Poses Plan For Dining Room in Union A definite possibility of relief in the near future from the long eating lines in Chapel Hill loomed on the campus with the recent announcement of South Building administrators that the Univer sity might open the Graham Memorial Grill as a student dining room, if sufficient interest were shown in the project. In reply to a query by the stu-f" dent union board of directors, administration officials stated, "The University is investigating the possibility and necessity of opening up a Grill Dining Room in the section of the student union formerly occupied by the Graham Memorial Grill, and at present known as the Candle light Room." "We would like to know how many students would definitely pledge to eat in this new dining hall three meals per day, i it is opened." The establishment would be run on a regular boarding house plan and would serve between two and three hundred students per meal. Meals in the dining hall would cost somewhat less than in cafeterias due to the streamlined mode of serving. Fees would be paid in advance on i -a 1 11 a quarterly basis ana an mem bers of the dining hall would be required to eat all meals there. Dr. E. McG. Hedgpeth, Uni versity infirmary head sug gested that co-eds be primarily encouraged to eat in the proposed The Tar Heels have been showing a brand of basketball that has hardly been equalled in these parts in the past decade. The ' Carnevalemen hit their stride against NYU in the open ing tussle last Thursday night and came out victorious 57-49 after being classed as a seven point underdog. A scrappy and fighting crew of Buckeyes of Ohio. State came back from an unimpressive Athletic Director Coach Bob Fetzer stated last night that the game will be broadcast di rect from Madison Square Garden via direct leased tele phone wire to Memorial Hall, beginning at 9:30 this eve ning. showing against Harvard Thurs day night and almost turned the tables on the favored White Phantoms, until Bob Paxton, a lanky jumping-jack from Spo kane, Washington, uncocked his right arm for one of his famous one-handed push shots in the dwindling seconds of the fracas to knot the count 54-54 and send the game in overtime. The Tar Heels went on to win 60-57 in one of the Garden's most thrill- See PHANTOMS, page U dining hall due to the large num ber of cases of dietary deficien cies found in women students due to improper eating. To determine the interest in the project the enclosed form will be run in today's and to morrow's Daily Tar Heel. Stu dents desiring to eat in the din ing hall, if it is opened, are ask ed to fill out the form below, and drop it in the box in the Y lobby. The poll today is for coeds only. Men students and faculty may sign up on a similar ballot to be run in Wednesday's paper. WOMEN STUDENTS ONLY I would like to eat in the proposed Graham Memorial Grill Dining Room, in accord ance with the plan under which it will be operated. Name Address
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 26, 1946, edition 1
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