Cfcapal IJUlt IU C MY UNCLE Introducing a new column ist, Jack Seism. lie says on page 2 that if Uncle Sam wants him, he knows Jack's address. WEATHER Tartly cloudy and much cold er. High yesterday 73. P., low 27.1; precipitation, 0.10 VOLUME LIX Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C, FRIDAY, , FEBRUARY 2, 1951 United Press NUMBER Bfi in .-.-.-x: ::-::: THE GUN IN J. B. COCHRAN'S hand is pointed al you. Ii de mands thai you be ai the play "The Second Man" being presented in the main lounge of Graham Memorial ionighi. Admission is free. Budget Unit Plans Hearings Tuesday The Budget Committee will begin open hearings on the 1951 52 budget Tuesday, Secretary-Treasurer Banks Talley an nounced yesterday. Talley reminded all organizations to fde copies of their pro posed budgets with the Commit- tee by Monday. Budgets must be I filed on time so that considera tions can -be fully met, he said. The Secretary-Treasurer, who serves as chairman of the Budget Conmittee, urged all student leg islators to attend the hearings so that they will be well-informed when the measure is brought up on the floor. The meetings are open to anyone who would like ti attend, nnd any constructive suggestions are welcome, Talley pointed out. . ' The executive branch of stu dent government is expected to lead off the hearings next Tues day when it presents their bud get requests for next year. Dean Weaver Will Address Junior Girls Dean Fred Weaver will speak on "Your place as Christian lead ers" at the second YWCA Junior Council meeting Monday night at 7 o'clock in the Monogram Club room. The series of programs has besn planned to give junior girls, in terested in working with the YWCA next year a full oppor tunity to become acquainted with the purposes and work of the Y. This year marks the fifth an nual Junior Council Orientation. In the past, it has proved an ex cellent way of determining who is interested in thev Y a spokes man said. Therefore it is import ant for such girls to attend- the programs regularly, as the can didates ior next year's officers are usually chosen on the basis of Council attendance and interest shown. Y Vice-president Jean. Bloom is Chairman of the Junior Coun cil. The next program will be ah informal discussion on "Our YWCA" k-d by Clay Currio and Ann Birmingham on Monday, Feb. 12. Completing the orienta tion series will be a talk by Rev. Samuel S. Wil"y, on Monday, Feb. 19. Duke Find DURHAM. Feb. 1(UP) Dr. PowelL Duke University libra rian, announced today that the library has recently acquired a rare 800-year-old manuscript of the four Biblictl gospels in Greek. Powell said ihe book was dis covered by Dr. Kenneth W. Clark, prof essor "of New Testa ment, who boughi it from a Greek collector in Alexandria, Egypt. , ,7 iii Coed Court Announces 3 Decisions Chairman Winifre'd Harriss yes terday announced several recent Women's Council decisions. In a case involving two coeds who were reported for Campus Code violations, one girl was ex onerated, while the other was giv en an official reprimand and in definite social probation. The Council decided she was directly responsible for the circumstances leading to both occasions of re turning to residences more than one hour late. . Another coed was found guilty of failing to sign out for an over night absence from her dormitory. She was given a sentence of three night of social probation for this Campus Code violation. Word To The Wise Hints Given n Reissue By Joan Palmer Does your date for next week end's Ray Anthony dances know the do's and don'ts of behavior at a Carolina dance? If you're not sure, a re-issue of "So You're Coming to a Carolina Dance" is what you've been look ing for. Published by the Germ an Club, in conjunction with the Order of the Grail and the Inter fraternity Council, the" booklet contains all you need to know to keep out of trouble with the Dance Committee and still have a good time. Written in the form of a letter from a coed to .an import, it .serves as a reminder to those who should be well acquainted with University rules, and as a guide to those visiting Carolina for the first time. Specifically mentioned in the pamphlet are University policies' regarding drinking, smoking on the dance floor, and chaperones. There is also a warning to the gii'ls don't be disappointed when your date doesn't provide flow ers. The men feel that their mon ey can be better spent elsewhere and the lack of a corsage doesn't mean a lack of regard for you. There is one particular remind er to the imports, regarding a state law that forbids your date from paying for your room, a mighty helpful hint to those who might forget to lay enough, aside Tennessee U. Asserts Right To Segregate Lawyers To Base Case On Proviso In Supreme Law KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Feb. 1 (UP) The University of Tennes see asserted its state constitution al rights today - to bar , Negroes from . its professional schools. Privately-hired attorneys for the University Board of Trustees, including Gov. Gordon Browning, and school officials filed an an swer to a Federal District Court suit whereby four Negroes seek to enter the University. In its nine-point petition, the University cited as its main de fense a provision of Tennessee's antiquated constitution requiring segregation at all educational levels. The trustees last Dec. 4 at Mem phis took this same position in rejecting the applications of six Negroes, including the four plaintiffs, who had applied for ad mission to the University's Law and Graduate Schools. The four' Negroes, all of Knox ville, then field suit under the 14 th amendment to the United States Constitution, alleging that they have been denied admission solely on the grounds of race and .ilor. Sidestepping the state attorney general, who has held that the University cannot forever bar Negroes from its professional schools, the University trustees retained a Nashville law firm to defend them. All trustees, Brown ing, University President C. E. Brehm and three other school officials, are defendants. The University, also alleged that the Negroes are not entitled to relief because steps have been taken to provide separately pro fessional education which they seek at the all-white university here. ' This obviously was a reference to a long-proposed plan to expand the state Agricultural and Indust rial School for Negroes at Nash ville to university level. To Imports Of Booklets for that purpose. Mentioned also are those taboos on leaving a dance, and restrictions on smok ing and refreshments on the dance floor. Dedicated To The Wounded In Korea Student, Mechanic, Professor Donate Blood, But More Volunteers Needed To Fill Quota By Don Maynard , They were all tliere yesterday the University student and his professor, the garage mechanic and the newsstand dealer stand ing in line to help the Red Cross me,et its 750-pint quota of blood to be shipped to wounded GI's in Korea. The Red Cross said it had near ly met its .Thursday quota, but that today was the big day. It said that students, townspeople and University staff members and anyone fit to give blood was needed. And they did not have to have reservations. - All that was necessary, if indi viduals did not have appoint ments, was to.come to Graham Memorial this morning beginning at 9 a.m. and wait their turn. Reservations were - not crowded UN Assem Peip mg Aggressor World Parliament Orders Red China To Cease Fire, Leaves Door To Peace : LAKE , SUCCESS, N. Y., Feb. 1 (UP) The United Nations General Assembly today voted final indictment of Communist China as an aggressor in Korea. The American-sponsored resolution was whisked through the world parliament by-a vote - of 44 to 7 (the five - nation Soviet bloc plus India and Burma). There were nine abstentions ' Afghanistan, Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Syria, Yemen and Yugoslavia. In its " key points, the resolu tion, one of the most far-reaching in UN history, does the fol lowing: 1. Finds that Peiping has "en gaged in aggression" by aiding tfie North Korean aggressors and sending its own troops against UN Forces. 2. Sets up aJ4-nation committee to launch an immediate study of additional punitive measures, such as sanctions, which the UN might take to meet Communist China's aggression. 3. Creates " a new three-man "good offices" team to press UN efforts to find a peaceful settle ment with Peiping. 4. Authorizes the sanctions com-? mittee to hold up any recommen dations if the mediation team "re ports satisfactory progress." 5. Calls on Mao Tze-Tungs's Re gime to cease-fire and pull its troops out of Korea. UN Regiment Fighting Out Of Red Trap? TOKYO," Friday, Feb. 2 (JP) A surrounded American - French regiment in central Korea fought desperately Thursday night to crack a ring of screaming Chinese attackers as bayonet - wielding United Nations troops on the western front stabbed ahead three miles in the Allied drive towards Seoul. The two-nation regiment was cut off yi the mountains L8 miles northwest of Wonju, near the juncture of the central and westr em fronts. It staved off two attacks by one regiment of Chinese that struck it from three sides Thursday morning. A second Red regiment joined the attackers in the after noon and blocked the Allied es cape route. The outnumbered American and French infantrymen battled the Reds with bayonets to keep from being overrun. : because not enough had volun-; teered their blood. A line which extended from one end of the Graham Memorial lobby to the other moved at the rate of approximately 40 persons an hour, or roughly, one donor left the donation room every min ute and a half. Dean R. II. Wettach, of the law school and chairman of the local Red Cross chapter, Kemp Clen denin of the General College, and Obie Davis of the Esso Service Station were in line, ready to donate a- pint of blood. As one student, an ex-GI, put it, "They tell me it takes some 20 minutes from the moment I walk in to register until my pint is do nated and I leave the building. "That's a fair enough swap, 20 minutes of my lifetime for a Ko My Cites Moon To Get Into Huddle With Planets ; Those who have a clear sky just after sunset Wednesday' can see in the southwest three planets and the moon closely grouped. ' This forecast, was made today by astonomers at the Morehead Planetarium, where the current showing is "Invasion from Mars." "For our State of Bethlehem show in 'December and the first week of January," Dr. Roy K. Marshall, director of the Plane tarium,, explained "our great in strument was set to show us the skies for the years just before the beginning of the Christian era.- "When we put the instrument forward almost 20 centuries to our own time," Dr. Marshall continued,- "we were, surprised to find an almost straight-line ar rangement of the planets Jupiter, Mars, and Venus, in the south western sky after sunset. When we checked up, we found that our instrument was correct and that only the bright twilight in nature had prevented our seeing it." The conditions for visibility have now improved, according to Dr. . Marshall, and Venus has emerged from 1 the glare of the sun. On February 7, the very slim crescent moon should be just above and to the right of the bril liant planet Venus, and the mod erately bright planet Mars should be very closely up to the right of the bright planet Jupiter, the two of them up to the left of the Moon and Venus, he said. "On the following evening, Feb. 8, the moon, a slightly fatter crescent," will stand up to the left of Jupiter and Mars," he add ed. "On the evening of Feb. 10, Venus will stand below and to the right of Jupiter, while on Feb. 11, Venus will be up to the left of Jupiter, having passed it at about 10 a.m. on Sunday. rean GI's life." ' ! The Red Cross Bloodmobile, held up by bad weather, didn't set up its facilities until 3 o'clock and didn't really get rolling un til four. But from that time until close to 9 o'clock last night, near ly 30 women volunteers regis tered donors, drew their blood and served coffee, cookies, fruit juice and milk at a canteen set up in the main lounge of GM. The first person to donate blood, Clendenin, a freshman from Greensboro, made, it through the line and the 10-15 minute pro cess of donating without a hitch. Clendenin was the first in line, but he was the fifth to leave the donation room. Another student, Al Johnson, a junior from Ashe ville, managed his pint more rap idly and was the first to leave. Selection Unit To Interview All Candidates Bipartisan Board To Fill Two Seats On Honor Council The Bipartisan Selection Board will interview candidates "for two vacant seats on the Men's Honor Council on Tuesday and Thurs day of next week in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. Graduate students will be elig ible to apply for the seat vacated by Jack Tripp, who resigned from the Men's Council two weeks ago to enter the Army. The other vacancy will be open to sophomore, junior, and senior men. The second vacancy occurred when Council Chairman Horace Stacy resigned to join the Air Force. Stacy's seat was a holdover position. The Bipartisan Board, made up of four representatives from the Student and University Parties, plus two members of the Men's Council, will hear applications from 2 until 6 o'clock on both Tuesday and Thursday. "Students applying for the va cant seats should understand the importance of the position and must be willing to devote a con siderable amount of time to their duties," Budy Vaden, chairman of the Men's Council, said. Y To Show Free Film The film "Les Miserables" will be shown in Memorial Hall Mon day night at 7 o'clock, sponsored jointly by the YMCA and Hillel Foundation. Charles Laughton stars as the arogant Javert and Frederick March as Jean Valjean in the movie which attacks a social sys tem that places law above jus tice, and personal property above human needs. Following the showing, an open discussion will be held. Admission to the movie is free: General Loses Pants Clark Landed In Africa From Sub, Foxed Nazis General Mark Wayne Clark, 54, who will speak here Tuesday night under the auspices of the Carolina Forum, made a dramatic landing in German-held North Africa during World War II. As Commanding General of 2nd In the canteen, sipping on a cup of coffeee prepared by volun teer Chapel Hill women Red Cross workers, Johnson declared he "felt fine." Asked if he was nervous before he went into the donors' room, he replied, "No. There's no reason to be, is there?" Johnson, a Navy veteran of 312 years service, declared that he had given blood before and explained, "I borrowed a couple of pints from the Red Cross sev eral years ago and now I'm giv ing it back." The female-male ratio when the Charlotte Red Cross unit, un der the direction of Dr. Inez , El rod, began operation, was nearly 50-50. And the first coed 'to do nate her blood was Alpha Delta Pi sorority member Lou Daniel (See DONORS, page 4) . , pnarmacy proresrs Proposed Increase In Rates For I uirio Student-Government Begins Campaign Against Hike In Medical Affairs Units i v. By Edd Davis The Pharmacy School student body went on record yes terday as unanimously opposed to an increase in the tuition rates of that school arid voted to cooperate completely with an extensive student government campaign against the pro posed increases for. the Medical Affairs division. Bob Collins, president of the pharmacy students, introduced ; John Sanders, president of the student body, who outlined th- Playmakers Begin Tour On Monday The Carolina Playmakers will leave the campus Monday, on a projected 12-day tour of the state to present Shakespeare's famous tragedy of love, "Romeo and Jul iet," in 12 towns. Traveling by chartered bus, this tour is under the manage ment of John W. Parker, bu siness manager of the Playmak ers, and is the 42nd such road company in Playmaker history. The famous drama group will perform in Nashville, Sanford, Warfenton, Murfreesboro, Salis bury, Chapel Hill, Meredith Col lege, Greenville,' Asheboro, Fay etteville, Bui'!ington, . and . end the trip at High Point February 17. The talented cast of 18, direct by Samuel Selden, chairman of the Department of Dramatic Art, is basically the same as that of he successful production of the play here last December. -Included are Anne Martin, Ch erokee, as Juliet; Donald Treat, Waterbury, Conn., as Romeo; Frederick Young, Monroe, La., as Mercutio; Robert Thomas, Ox ford; as Tybalt. The Playmakers plan a 43rd tour in March which will take them through several states, in cluding South Carolina, Tennes see, Alabama, Georgia and Misis sippi. Corps, Commander of the Ground Forces in the European Theater of Operations, and Deputy Commander-in-Chief, he laid the ground work for a vast organiza tional, housing and training pro gram in the British Isles. He played 4 leading part in planning the invasion of North Africa. Clark made a dramatic and haz ardous trip by plane and submar ine from London to French North Africa for a secret rendezvous with a group of French officers to arrange details of the proposed landings. It was on this mission that he lost his pants, an incident widely publicized at the time. He, flew from Gibraltar to Al giers on the day following the landings, Nov. 9, 1942. Clark took Admiral Jean Darlan, Cabinet Minister in the German-dominated French Government at Vichy and Commander-in-Chief of all French Forces, into custody. He commanded the 5th Army, which landed a division in Italy at Salerno, the first to invade Europe in World War II. On June 4, 1944, the 5th Army and the British 8th Army took Rome. Later Clark was elevated to command both these armies. He is now Chief of Army Field Forces, Fort Monroe, Va. His favorite , recreations are fishing and hiking. He has two children. proposed changes and the effects they would have on the students as a whole. The groups of more than 125 students also voted to hold a mass meeting with the other units of the Medical Affairs division to outline their fture plan of action. Dick Murphy, student attorney general, yesterday explained the position being taken by student government. Murphy said student govern ment hopes to have the backing of the entire student body on the issue at hand, even though the present situation does not direct ly affect them at this time. "It is time for the students of the University of North Carolina to be told exactly what is hap pening in Raleigh and how they will be affected," Murphy said. Murphy said yesterday several of the members of the Student Legislature drove to Raleigh Tuesday night to confer with members of the Advisory Budget Committee and assemblymen. - "Although ??vorp! mf-Tbr" "f the General Assembly said they knew nothing about any plans for a proposed increase, we were able to find others that were will ing to say that it is being con sidered. In fact, one of the mem bers invited us to his room where he showed us the actual printed suggestions of the entire agenda which will be submitted to the assembly by the Advisory Budget Committee," one student spokes man said. "We want to get underway an intensive drive to show the legis lative body in Raleigh that we are completely against this pro posed increase," Murphy said. The student government speak ers pointed out the fact that Governor Kerr Scott previously had released a statement to the effect that the tuition rates at the University would be lowered when possible. "On the basis of that statement alone," one spokesman said, "we feel that the policy should be a general lowering of the tuition rates instead of an increase in any or all divisions of the Uni versity." Murphy said yesterday that his office has facts and figures show ing the level to which the pro posed raise is being considered by the legislative body in Raleigh. "The state constitution specif ically says that the tuition co.-ts of the University will not be pro hibitive to students obtaining the rights and privileges of an educa tion," Murphy said. "If the costs are increased at all, we think that many students will be deprived of an education," he added. The complete text of the Stu dent Legislature resolution on the proposed tuition raise follows: WHEREAS: Tuition was clrnstioallv raised in 1049 hv legislative action: ;u;l. WHEREAS: This action was ;uk-n as an emergency measure with he expressed intention that as soon is conditions would permit, the .uition rates should revert to Ine !;'!! levels: and. WHEREAS: The students of the Uni versity of North Carolina have twice (See TUITION, page 4) Hobo Party All persons who have ihe ten dencies of a bum are asked to make it official and attend a hobo party at ihe Episcopal Parish House ai 8:30 ionighi. Prizes will be awarded io ihe most authentic costume. There is no admission fee, and inter esting entertainment and free refreshments will be offered. lit li ti - v.l x! vl at. V' r- ef l- tu e d V

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