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UNO Council
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House Speaks
Rosenau Dies
UVA Sponsors Royall
Hans To Meet
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Twice Yearly
Soviet Ambassador
Breaks UN Boycott -
New York, April 9 Soviet
ambassador Andrei Gromyko
has broken his boycott of the
United Nations "Security Council
Session by returning to his first
meeting in 13 days. Gromyko
was the big attraction at the
meeting today, for outstanding
bobby soxer idol Frank Sinatra
sat almost unnoticed in the
audience.
The United Nations Security
Council has unanimously adopt
ed a proposal by Soviet ambas
sador Gromyko to hold two
special meetings a year. Foreign
Ministers of the members would
be expected to attend the special
sessions. Regular meetings must
be held at least every 14 days.
Iranian ambassador Hessein
Ala was not present at this af ter
non's U-N council meeting for
the first time in two weeks. Ala
had planned to return to Wash
ington today, but postponed his
departure for several days in
the event the council wants to
recall him.
For the first time since the
United Nations , Council sessions
began in this country, Secretary
General Trygve Lie was not in
his seat this afternoon. Assistant
Secretary General Sobolev of
Russia represented the secretar
iat.
Strike Threatened
By Sugar Refiners
Washington, April 9 C.I.O.
and A.F. of L. leaders say work
ers refining 70 per cent of the
nation's sugar will strike at mid
night Saturday. The union heads
say the refining companies have
refused to be bound in advance
by the findings of a new govern
ment fact-finding board which
is studying their dispute.
Mexican Ambassador
Sent to Argentina
The White House, April 9
President Truman announces
that he is shifting the American
ambassador to Mexico George
Messersmith to the hot ambas
sadorial post in Argentina. And
he has nominated William Paw
ley the ambassador to Peru
for the embassy in Brazil. Joseph
Flock of Pennsylvania has been
named ambassador to Bolivia.
Russian Spy Ca,se
To Be Prosecuted
Washington, April 9 Attor
ney General Tom Clark says the
government will go ahead with
plans to prosecute the Russian
Naval Lieutenant arrested in
Portland, Oregon, on March
26th, as a spy. The State Depart
ment has received a note from
the Soviet Government asking
release of the officer Lieuten
ant Nicoli Redin. But Clark says
the case probably already is be
fore a grand jury.
Legislative Groups
To Continue Draft
Washington, April 9 The
Senate and House Military Af
fairs Committees have turned
down proposals to stop induc
tions May 15th. The Committees
indicate they will give the Army
and Navy a measure more in line
with their request for a year's
extension of the draft.
General Motors Plans
New, Light Chevrolet
Detroit. Auril 9 The Chevro-
7
let Division of General Motors is
mnlra a now licrnt
. ' See NEWS BRIEFS Page, U
VOLUME LIV
Br. Rosenau, ' Public
Undersecretary of War Roy all
To Make Speech Mere Tuesday
Veterans Club
Sponsors Talk
By Alumnus
Speech to Be Aired
Over Station WPTF
The honorable Kenneth C.
Royall, Undersecretary of War,
and UNC alumnus, class of 1914,
will speak in Memorial hall next
Tuesday night, under the aus
pices of the University . Veterans
Association, announced Blount
Stewart, UVA president. The
speech will be broadcast over
station WPTF and possibly over
a nationwide NBC hookup.
Undersecretary Royall was de
signated by5 President Roosevelt
to defend the Nazi saboteurs in
their 1942 trial in Washington.
He also spent one term in the
N. C. senate and is past president
of the N. C. Bar Association.
He has practiced law in Ral
eigh and Goldsboro and has been
associated with at least 6 of
North Carolina's congressmen,
' t..i r
xtepresemauves .ourgui, Kjwicy, -
Clark, Folger, and Kerr.
President Truman nominated
Royall, then a Brigadier General
in the army, as Undersecretary
of War to succeed Robert P.
Patterson, who was elevated to
secretary when Henry L. Stim
son resigned.
-
Romantic Burglar
Makes Love While
He Steals Silver
Charleston, South Carolina
(UP) Police here have been
ordered to double their efforts to
catch a thief who steals kisses
along with silverware.
The amorous burglar has a set
routine. He enters a house at
night, unscrews all the light
bulbs and pockets everything he
can find then he looks for the
lady of the house and steals a
kiss.
The technique is always the
same but so far police haven't
been able to trap him.
On one recent night escapade
the burglar was almost trapped
when he leaned over to kiss a
woirfan whose husband was
lying next to her.
- She woke up immediately, and
screamed. "I knew it wasn't my
husband," she told police.
And she explained "I make
him shave every night. The man
who kissed me had a moustache."
Lenoir Hall to Close
Partially This Weekend
The main dining room of Le
noir Hall will be closed to stu
dents for lunch and supper on
Friday and Saturday to take care
of the visitors on campus for the
Sesquicentennial celebration. The
small dining room will be open
to students, and the Pine room
will . serve the overflow crowd
with a set meal for 50 cents.
-THE ONLY
CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1946
Chancellor R. B. House
House Speaks
Here Tonight
Addresses Members
Of Asheville Club
The first meeting of the new
Asheville-at-Carolina Club will
be held tonight at 8 :00 P.M. at
Gerrard Hall. All persons from
Asheville and surrounding towns
are urged to attend. The club
is being reorganized to keep
Asheville people in contact with
one another on the Carolina cam-
pus. The i function of the club is
purely "social, and there afe-al-
ready plans abroad for dances,
parties, and picnics both here
and in Asheville.
Chancellor House will speak,
and Mr. W. H. Plemmons, for
mer principal of Lee H. Edwards
High School in Asheville, and
well known by all Carolina stu
dents, will be there to wish the
new club well. Margaret Jean
Taylor, publicity chairman for
the re-organization, said.
"This meeting will be a very
important one, as the frame
work for the new organization
will be planned, officers will be
elected, and dates for ensuing
meetings will be set. Due to the
large number of Asheville stu
dents at Carolina and the en
thusiasm expressed by those who
have been contacted thus far,
this organization should be an
even bigger and better club than
its predecessors."
See HOUSE Page U
Housing Survey
By Townspeople
Begins Today
Today in Chapel Hill and
Carrboro the Citizens' Housing
committee begins a canvass of
all houses in an effort to find
rooms for students.
The committee, organized last
week after a suggestion from the
Ministerial Council, has formu
lated its plans and will make
the survey by telephone and per
sonal visits. Cooperation by all
citizens has been requested by
C. L. Shepherd, publicity chair
man of the committee.
It is. hoped that rooms un
covered by the survey will some
what ease the housing situa
tion. With record enrollment
just announced by the Universi
ty, and the uncertainty , of the
building situation, the prospects
for adequate housing are very
dim.
COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST-
Health School Head,
Legislature
Reverses Stand
Oh Journals
PU Approval Needed
For Managing Editors
The Student Legislature last
night reversed its previous deci
sion, and approved a motion by
Jack Lackey to amend the meth
ed of selecting the staffs of the
various publications. The motion
as -passed provides for the ap
pointment of the managing edi
tors, business managers and cir
culation managers by the edi
tors with the approval of the
Publications Board.
Editors
On successive motions by
Mavis Mann, Jack Hester and
Doug Hunt, the Legislature ap
proved election of the editor of
the Daily Tar Heel at large, with
the qualification that he must
have worked on the paper at
least six months. Editors of the
Yackety Yack and the Carolina
Mag, it was decided, . will be
elected as was originally pro
posed in the constitution. This
method provides for nominations
to come from the staff of the
publication, the' " Publications
Board and a special committee
of the Student Legislature, with
the student body electing one of
these candidates.
DTH Opinions
A large delegation from The
Daily Tar Heel attended last
night's session to express their
See LEGISLATURE, page 4.
Gromyko and Sinatra
Share UNO Spotlight
New York, Apr. 9 (UP)
Soviet ambassador Gromyko had
to share the limelight at the U-N
Council session today.
He had to share it with Frank
Sinatra, the crooner.
Sinatra attended today's ses
sion, but there were no bobby
soxers and little fanfare.
Sinatra .said he was an ob
server for the National Confer
ence of Christians and Jews.
"Even a crooner," said the
crooner, "can be interested in
world peace if he wants.
Trailer Camp for Students
Will Be Ready in Ten Days
Approximately 10 more days
will be required to complete con
struction of facilities for the
trailer, camp located on the old
high school grounds on Pitts
boro road, which is to be used
by married veteran students.
The ground now being cleared
will provide space .for over 40
trailers, and around 20 more
could be placed among the trees
around the main camp ground,
it was learned in South Build
ing today.
Nearing completion now is a
bath house with separate sec
tions for men and women. This
will contain toilet facilities,
UNITED PRESS
Was Foremost Authority
On Preventive Medicine
Funeral Arrangements Await Arrival
Of Relatives; Lived Here Since 1935
Dr. Milton Joseph Rosenau, world-renowned authority in pub
lic health and director since 1935 of the University School of Pub
lic Health, which serves as a training center for the whole South
east, died at his home here yesterday morning at 1:15 o'clock
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Dr. Milton J. Rosenau
Di Senate Debates
Grade Standards
In Session Tonight
Tonight the Dialectic Senate's
discussion bill is: "Resolved
that the Dialectic Senate go on
record as favoring a required
average of "C" for every stu
dent who desires to remain at
the University".
The campus is welcome to all
Dialectic senate discussions
which take place at 9 o'clock
every Wednesday night in the
Di Hall on the third floor of New
West.
Last week the senate passed
a bill stating: "that all Senators
must bring at least one visitor
to every meeting". Tom Eller,
chairman of the publicity and
membership committees, has
called for a committee meeting
tonight at 8:30 o'clock in the
DiHall.
All Fraternity Heads
Meet with HPB Today
An important meeting of
all fraternity presidents and
house managers with the
House Privileges Board - will
be held at 5 o'clock this after
noon in the Grail room of
Graham Memorial, Art Adams,
chairman of the HPB, an
nounced. showers, lavatories and wash
tubs. It will have steam heat.
Outside each trailer will be lo
cated individual water faucets,
from which occupants can run
hoses into their trailers.
Privilege of putting trailers
on the grounds will be on a first
come, first served basis. There
are at present around ten trail
ers located outside Alexander
hall which are awaiting com
pletion of the camp on Pittsboro
road. Applications for space
should be made at the oflice of Di
rector of Housing James Wads
worth, 204 South Building.
NUMBER 49
Dies Here
following a serious heart illness
for the last several weeks. He
was 77 last January 1.
Long regarded in many circles
as the foremost authority on
preventive medicine, disinfec
tants, hygiene and the science on
public health, Dr. Rosenau
founded at Harvard University
in 1909 the first School of Pub
lic Health in the world which ho
headed until 1935. During the
same period he also directed pub
lic health schools at the Massa
chusetts Institute of Technology
and at Lowell Institute.
Started School Here
He organized in 1935 at the
University its first public health
school which has become the
government-sponsored training
center, for the Southeast.
He served as president of the
American Public Health Asso
ciation in 1944.
Funeral Pending
No funeral arrangements have
been made pending the arrival
here of close relatives from Bos
ton and Philadelphia and advice
from doctors regarding the con
dition of Mrs. Rosenau who
underwent an operation in New
York yesterday. The body will
be cremated and it is probable
that .funeral services will be de
ferred. In addition to his wife, the
former Miss Maude H. Tenner of
New York, whom he married in
1934, Dr. Rosenau is survived
by a son and daughter by his
first wife, Milton J. Rosenau,
Jr., of Framingham, Mass., and
Mrs. Max Ilfeld of Taos, New
Mexico; a brother, Simon Rose
nau, and a sister, Mrs. Perry
Frankel, both of Philadelphia,
and five grandchildren.
Dr. Rosenau received his M.D.
degree from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1889 . and did
post-graduate work in Berlin,
Paris and Vienna. He was award
ed an honorary degree from Har
vard University in 1914.
He entered the United States
Public Health Service, then the
Marine Hospital Service in 1890
at the age of 30 and was made
assistant surgeon general and
director of the Public Health
Laboratories in Washington
See ROSENAU Page U
Vets Play Host
To Kenan Tonight
The University Veterans As
sociation will entertain the girls
from Kenan Dormitory tonight
with an open house from 7:45
to 11:00 p.m. at the Vets club
house. All veterans have been in
vited to attend and refresh
ments will be served. A group of
the association's members will
be on hand at Kenan at 7:30
p.m. to escort the girls to the
party.
Entertainment will include
Rex Coston, vocalist, Lyn Leon
ard, monologue, and MolTet Sher
rard, vocalist.