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V
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1951 :
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PAGE THREE
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1 U. S. To Fight
1 On, Asks Help
iu veri war
Austin Says Reds
Should Be Shown
iv Venture Futile
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BIT
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Clearance To Begin Jan. 75
For New Highway To Durham
i 1
LAKE SUCCESS, Jan. 3 (IP)
The U.N. Cease-Fire Commit
tee today acknowledged failure
in its efforts to stop the fighting
in Korea.
U.S. Delegate Warren R. Aus
tin promptly said American
troops will fight on against ag
gression in Korea and urged the
free world to stand together in
the hope of averting a world war.
Sir Benegal N. Rau of India
told the 60-nation Political Com
mittee of the General Assembly
that the three-man cease fire
group was not able to find a sat
isfactory arrangement to stop the
fighting. He said the group had
I'no recommendations now, but in
sisted that "every honorable av
enue should be explored to main-
I tain peace."
"If by mischance there should
be a third World War," Rau said,
'"then history would record that
-the United Nations had done
everything humanly possible to
avert it."
Austin called on the U.N. to
show the Chinese Reds how bad
their Korean venture is bound to !
prove for them, saying in that
way "we can hope to avert the
tragic consequences of an ex-
fi tension or a continuation of the
A conflict."
j'l "In the view of my govern-
ti ment. aggression must De resist-
vi " Austin said "thprp ran bp nn
SlanDeasement. Thp United Nations
t 1
)is engaged in its peace-making
f 'functions in the use of such force
Las has been used and will con
tinue to be used. The people of
the free world, acting through the
'iTnitH Natinri5 must riprirlp how
! tlxe charter can best be upheld."
Voicing American determina-
tion to continue fighting against
aggression, Austin said:
"If hostilities continue, our
M troops will fight on in Korea.
'Axilla io m jvt yuiji nun uuuti
ft 'standing of the responsibilities
jfj laid on all members by the res
olutions of the Security Council
and of the General Assembly."
Clearing of the right of way,
first step toward .the new
$500,000 Durham-Chapel "Hill
highway which will be about
three miles shorter than the
route now in use, is expected
to start about Jan. 15.
A. B. Burton, Lynchburg,
Va., who ' has the contract for
the grading of the new road,
yesterday said his men and
equipment will be ready to
begin about the middle of this
month. After the clearing, ac
tual grading will begin, Bur
ton said,
Also, a proposal has been
made that would nearly dou
ble the scheduled right of way
width of 260 feet.
The proposal, by several in
terested townspeople, calls for
extension to 500 feet "so that
it will be. a real parkway, free
not only . from billboards but
from unsightly structures of
every sort."
Yesterday in Durham, a joint
committee of citizens from
there 'and Chapel Hill was
named to put the proposals up
to the State Commission.
Grady Pritchard, a local Ki
wanian, and J. L. Crumpton
of Durham were designated as
joint chairmen to arrange a
conference "with Dr. Henry ' A.
Jordan, Commission chairman;
James A. Barnwell, division
commissioner, and the . high
way attorney. They would de
termine the legislation re
quired to restrict usage of the
new boulevard.
The group will ask the state
authorities to prepare a proper
bill to either set up a joint
zoning commission for Dur
ham and Orange Counties or to
grant the Highway Commis
sion authority to zone the
property adjoining the right
of way. . '
The committees named in
clude besides the two chair
men: from here, President
Gordon Gray, Dr. R. J. M.
Hobbs, W. D. Carmichael, Jr.,
Louis Graves, and Representa
tive John W. Umstead.
Pritchard also will name a
garden club member from
Chapel Hill. The Durham
County and Chapel Hill zon
ing commissions will be asked
to each name a representative.
0 N C's Sixth Sorority
To Be Set Up In Spring
(Continued from page 1 )
sorority, founded at Longwood
College in Farmville, Va., has
now reached 29,778, according to
National President Elizabeth Win
ston Lanier of Petersburg, Va. r
Alumnae of Kappa Delta now
living in Chapel Hill include Mrs.
W. D. Carmichael, Jr., Mrs. Wil
liam Wells, Mrs. Taul White, Mrs.
K. C. Frazer, Mrs. M. B. Garret,
Miss Margaret Little and Dr.
Charlotte McLeod.
It was not said whether the
colony would be given advance
rushing privileges as was done
in the case of Theta Chi frater
nity in the fall of 1949, when that
organization was allowed to rush
one week prior to the formal
rush period.
-Strike-
(Continued from page 1)
called for the dorm to be ready
for operation by next falL How
ever, he said, this seems unlikely
in view of the present stoppages.
Woods said any union man who
crosses the picket line here will
be fined $50. .
A Durham contractor, William
Muirhead, recently has said: "The
next move is up to the bricklayers."
Draft Hits The Bottom
(Continued from page 1)
mpn from the available pool to
-t L V . i- At- 1 -.4 . .
ti account ioi me nuii-vcieicui mu-
dents. Most of these are unavail
i j'able for immediate draft because
t 6f the law, which provides a
"postponement of induction" un
the end of the school term. The
i 'rest, older students who have
';Used up their year of postpone
;!iment, are continuing their train-
f i"mg under a regulation which per
lmits students to stay in school
lJas long as they remain in the
Around 600,000 more young
nen are outside the draft law by
virtue of having enlisted in the
'armed forces or in the reserves,
National Guard, or Reserve Offi
cers Training Corps.
Some 200,000 other draft-liable
men have been deferred because
they have been adjudged essen
tial to their jobs in industry or
agriculture.
Then there are exemptions or
deferments for 40,000 divinity stu
dents and ministers, for 11,000
conscientious objectors, for 5,000
aliens, and for a small number
of sole surviving sons, whose
brothers were killed serving in
the armed forces.
Selective Service experience
indicates that out of the remain
ing available men, 800,000 are the
maximum that can be expected
No comment was given by Dean
Carmichael for the prospects of a
seventh sorority, although she did
remark that it was up to the wo
men students and "the amount of
interest they showed" in the con
sideration of a seventh.
The first sorority to arrive on
campus was Chi Omega, whose
charter is dated Jan. 20, 1923. Chi
O was closely followed by Pi Beta
Phi, whose charter is dated Sept.
28 of the same year, according to
the presidents of both sororities.
Solons To Consider
Car Inspection Law
RALEIGH, Jan. 3 (Legis
lation for a return to compulsory
mechanical inspection of motor
vehicles is being readied for sub
mission to the Legislature.
This was reported today by
L. C. Rosser, State Motor Vehicles
Commissioner.
to be put in uniform.
First group likely to lose its
deferment status is the portion of
the 900,000 non-veteran students.
.Analysis of the student group in
dicates that of these around 300,
000 are either fathers or have de
pendents. Of. the remaining 600,
000, around 50 per cent are likely
to be deferred for continued edu
cation and training under any one
of a dozen proposals for dealing
with this thorny problem.
Early loss of deferment status
also faces draft-age men who
have dependents, other than fa
thers. There's hardly any senti
ment at the moment for the
drafting of fathers an action
carried out with the greatest re
luctance by the local draft
boards during World War II.
Veterans are not likely to be
drafted, if only on the basis of
political expediency, while there
are non-veterans around.
-The Pentagon planners have
thus far held out firmly for a top
draft age of 25, and have been
backed on this point by the Ad
ministration. There's considerable
pressure to lower the draft age
to 18.
NEW YEAR'S SALE
LARGE GROUP HAMMONTON PARK SUITS Reduced from
. $66.50 to , -- $46.95
GROUP SKIPPER BLUE FLANNEL SUITS Reduced to 36.95
GROUP DOESKIN SUITS BY HAMMONTON PARK Reduced from
$58.95 to : -- : 46.95
GROUP CASHMERE-SHETLAND BLEND SPORT COATS Reduced
from $42.50 to ... ... v - : - 29.95
SOME TWEED SPORT COATS Reduced from $31.95 to..: 21.99
THREE HAMMONDTON PARK SUITS Reduced from $62.50 to 39.95
SIZEABLE GROUP TWEED SUITS Reduced from $56.95 to, 39.95
SINGLE PLY NUKNIT CASHMERE SWEATERS Reduced to 15.99
LARGE GROUP FLANNEL SLACKS. Light Gray. Bankers Gray.
SkiDper Blue. Reduced from $12.50 lo....... ..: 8.99
GROUP DOESKIN COVERT SLACKS Reduced from $14.95 to 10.99
GROUP STRIPED REPP TIES Reduced to .99
COTTON ARGYLES, Regularly $1.50. Reduced to... .99
BASS BLACK & WHITE SADDLE SHOES Reduced to 7.99
(Present retail price $13.95)
WHITE BUCK SHOES Reduced to 7.99 (Replaceable at $12.95)
IMPORTED BUCKSKIN SHOES Reduced to....... 9.99 ($15.95 value)
LONG SLEEVE SHETLAND SWEATERS. Made in Scotland. Re-
duced from $16.95 to : - 9-95
MANY OTHER SAVINGS TOO NUMEROUS TO
ITEMIZE
Bills Mailed Home at Your Request
MILTON'S CLOTHING CUPBOARD
Across from Farmers Dairy One Block Beyond Bus Station
Accountants
Name James;
Is Prof Here
Special to The Daily Tar Heel
NEW YORK, Jan. 3 Robert
Minor James, assistant professor
of accounting at the University of
North Carolina, has been elected
a member of the American Insti
tute of 'Accountants, national pro
fessional society of CPA's.
He joined the North Carolina
faculty last September after
teaching at the University of
Illinois.
Professor James, who was born
in Milwaukee, received a B.S. de
gree from the University of Illi
nois in 1943, and the M.S. degree
from the same university in 1948.
He holds a CPA certificate
from the state of Illinois, ob
tained by written examination,
and is a member of the American
Accounting Association.
Newman And
Alden Slate
Joint Concert
Recital Will Be First
Joint Performance
By 2' Teachers Here
In their first joint recital at
the University, Edgar Alden, vio
linist, and William S. Newman,
pianist, will play music for violin
and piano at Hill Hall at 8:30
Friday night. Both men have been
on the Music Department facul
ty since 1946.
Their program will include the
Sonata in B Minor by Bach, Son
ata Opus No. 3 by Beethoven, and
Sonata in H Major Opus 100 by
Brahms.
Alden, who did his principal
training at Oberlin Conservatory
of Music, has appeared often in
the Southeast in solos with or
chestra and in chamber music
recitals. For several years he di
rected the Raleigh Chamber Mu
sic Guild and taught at Meredith
College.
After four years in the Signal
Corps, some of which was spent
in India, he came to the Univers
ity to instruct and to complete
his doctorate in Musicology.
Dr. Newman came here after
nearly four years of service in the
Army Air Force intelligence. He
has given annual recitals here
and made annual tours in. the
North and Midwest.
On Feb. 21, he will' present the
second of a series of three Uni
versity of North Carolina Lec
tures in the Humanities. In April
he will give a series of 10 con
certs and lectures in Pennsyl
vania, West Virginia, and Ken
tucky, followed by a solo recital
here.
;The concert is free and the pub
lic is invited to attend.
Roth Is Made Executive
Of National Fraternity
Bill Roth, graduate student
from Oteen, was elected to the
National Executive Board of Al
pha Phi Omega, national' service
fraternity, at the fraternity's na
tional convention in Des Moines,
Iowa, last Friday.
More than' 500 delagates from
the 227 chapters attend the bien
nial convention.
Rho Chapter of Alpha Phi
Omega was installed here in 1930
as the 17th chapter of the fratern
ity. Roth was president of this
chapter when it was reactivated
in 1948. He is also delagata of the
Order of the Holy Grail and a
member of the Order of the Gold
en Fleece.
Bob Poole, chapter president,
and Thornton Long, community
projects chairman, were also dele
gates to the . convention. Poole
received an achievement award
on behalf of Rho chapter for the
excellent record of the local chapter.
HERE'S THE WAY TO
Fancy California
LETTUCE hd. 15c
Large -
ORANGES doz. 29c
Carolina No. 1
SWEET POTATOES 5 lbs. 33c
Table Dressed
FRYERS lb. 44c
BACON lb. 63c
Lulers and Smithfield
SAUSAGES lb. 49c
Bone-in
CHUCK ROAST lb. 69c
End-Cut
PORK ROAST lb. 49c
End-Cut "
PORK CHOPS lb- 55c
No. 1 can 57c
WESSON OIL ...... pt. 37c; qt. 73c
Sea North
SALMON
Chocolate-Covered
CHERRIES :.l-lb. box 49c
Peter Pan
PEANUT BUTTER ..12-oz. jar 35c
Carton
CIGARETTES
TIDE L large
buZ ,.... large
DREFT large
IVORY SOAP med. 3 for
CAMAY SOAP mod. 3 for
$1.50
32c
32c
32c
29c
29c
FOWLER'S Store
s s y y7
V
14
20Sok
SIX DAYS ONLY JANUARY 2nd to 8th
Annual Beauty Preparation Sale . . - your
opportunity to buy these famous beauty
preparations at great savings. Though
your favorites may not be listed, we"nav&
; them, and will be happy, to fill your order
at 20 off.
Every Frances Denney Preparation 20 off
Bow o porfa listing
IEEP DOWN CLEANSING CREAM
1.50 Sal 1.20
2.50 2.00
4.00 3.20
CLEANSING CREAM
1.50 Sal 1.20
' 2.50 2.00
4.00 3.20
MILD CLEANSING CREAM
1.50 Sal 1.20
2.50 2.00
4.00 3.20
MILD SKIN LOTION
1.50 Sal 1.20
2.75 2.20
4.50 3.60
OILS OF THE WILDERNESS
for the Hands 2.00 Sal 1.60
Beauty Balm 2.00 Safe 1.60
NECK t CONTOUR BLEND
3.50 Sal 2.80
5.00 . 4.00
8.50 6.80
SPECIAL ASTRINGENT
2.25 Sal 1.80
4.00 3.20
SATINY P0UDRE
f2.00 Sal 1.60
i 3.00 2.40
OILS OF THE WILDERNESS
3.50 Sal 2.80
5.00 4.00
(Liquid) 3.50 2.80
EYE CREAM
2.50 Sal 2.00
4.50 3.60
8.00 6.40
OIL BLEND
2.00 Sal 1.60
3.50 2.80
5.50 4.40
SKIN CREAM
1.50 Sal 1.20
2.50 2.00
4.00- 3.20
' CLEANSING MEAL
1.50 So 1.20
2.50 2.00
MAGIC SONG
CREAM DEODORANT
1.25 Sal 1.00
2.00 1.60
TEXTURE TINT
V5.00 Sal 4.00
OVER-TONE CAKE MAKE-UP
2.00 Safe 1.60
UNDER-T0NE
1.50 Sal 1.20
2.5C 2.00
r LIPSTICK
1.50 Sal 1.20
ROUGE, CREME t COMPACT
1.50 Sal 1.20
MAGIC SONG
COLOGNE DEODORANT
1.25 Sal 1.00
2.00 1.60
i
AW price Ft&W tX
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