r Serials rapt Chapel. BUI H. C 0-31-49 WEATHER Continued cloudy and warm. High yesterday 73.8, low. 39.2 THE TH I NG The thing that ain't is the thing that is. See story on page 4. """" tm!Ti '. "' "'T VOLUME LIX . Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N.'C. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1951 United Press NUMBER 94 ill Collins Appointed To Honor Council By John Sanders Bipartisan Board Meets Tomorrow To Fill Grad Seat Men's Honor Council Chairman Buddy Vaden yesterday an nounced the appointment by Stu dent Body President John San ders of James C. Collins to the vacant undergraduate seat on the Council. Sanders made the appointment following a recommendation by the Bipartisan Selection , Board set up to interview candidates for the two Council vacancies and make recommendations to the President. Collins is from Philadelphia, Pa., and will fill the seat left open by' Horace Stacy, former chairman of the Council who re signed recently to join the Air Force. One graduate seat still remains to be filled, however, and Vaden said the Bipartisan Board will meet again tomorrow to consider candidates for the position. So far, only one graduate stu dent has come before the group and Vaden said that the board felt that they should consider more candidates before making a final recommendation. Law School and Medical School students are not eligible for the position. ' Vaden issued a plea for -all in terested graduate students -, to come before the board for inter views. The only necessary quali fications are an understanding of the Honor and Campus Codes and a willingness to devote ample time to the Council. UNC Chosen To Recruit Teachers For the third time the Univer sity has been designated as a screening center for the Recruit ment Section of Overseas Affairs Branch, Civilian Personnel Di vision, to serve as one of two such centers in the South. The only other Southern center is at George Peabody College, Nashville, Tenn. The agency, through , which teachers are selected and assign ed to teaching positions in for eign countries, provides educa tion through high school for children of military personnel and civilian employees who are stationed in various parts of the world. Dean Guy B. Phillips of the School of Education said appli cation blanks and other detailed information may be obtained by writing to his office. Applicants will be interviewed here in Pea body Hall March 1 and 2, he said. There is no limit to the quota to be obtained here, Dean Phil lips said. Eleven teachers Were selected here" for this work a year ago and are now on duty. "The tentative request at this time calls for 303 teachers for the children in Germany", Dean Phillips said. "Of these 251 are for elementary grades, 46 for secondary school, , one librarian, twn Hnrmitnrv advisors, and three staff nurses." Robson Talk William Robson of the Lon don School of Economics will discus "Implications to Amer ica of the Tovm and Country Planning Movement in Brilian' at 4:30 p.m. today in the More head Faculty Lounge. The talk by Professor Rob son, who is visiting professor in the Department of Political Science, is being sponsored by the Department of City and Re gional Planning. Students Suspended By Honor Council For Violating Code Two students have recently been suspended from the Uni versity by the Men's Honor Coun cil for violation of the Honor Code, Council Chairman Buddy Vaden said yesterday. Both suspensions were made with the recommendation that leniency be shown in considera tion of their applications fqr re admission to the University. One was convicted for cheating in a Spanish 3-X course and the other for cheating in Music 41 Both' admitted their guilt before the Council. Two students were exonerated from charges that they violated the Campus Code when they took two coeds to the beach in the middle of the week and failed to return xthem to their dormitories by coed hours. Another student was put on probation for violating the Cam pus Code and acting in an un gentlemanly manner while intox icated. The Council also removed two students from probation for vio lations of the Campus and Honor Codes. Both had been on proba tion for a long period and were removed in order that they might enter the armed forces with v a clear record. School Board Flatly Denies Race Charge GREENSBORO, Feb. 13 (UP) Chapel Hill school of ficials were on record in Mid dle District Federal Court to day with a flat denial that Chapel Hill school facilities discriminate against Negro pu pils. School Superintendent C. Wm Davis and the Board of Trustees of Chapel Hill grad ed schools filed their state ment in answer to charges brought by Preston Weaver and other parents of Negro school children at Chapel Hill. "These defendants express ly deny that it is their custom and practice to deny to the plaintiffs and other Negro children . . . solely and wholly on account of race and color, education facilities and train ing comparable and equal to the educational training and facilities for white children similarly situated," the answer filed here said. Negro children make Up u about 45 per cent of Chapel Hill's public school enrollment. General Information Carolina Handbook Set For Release Next June The Carolina Handbook, a gen- j eral information booklet tor en tering students and all other stu dents, will be ready for sale in June, Editor Ken Barton an nounced yesterday. "We are working at top speed now and should be able to publish in time for the entering students registering for the summer quar ter,' 'he said. . Published through the auspices of the YMCA, the handbook con tains articles on all campus or-, ganizations, activities, and asso ciations, it- also terres as an in troductory handbook for ' all : en tering Carolinians for orientation -purposes;-; ;w' ",! Sacrifice Of Standards, Educators Say Tar Heels Agree On Latest Issue Of Acceleration RALEIGH, Feb. 13 () Tar Heel educators today agreed not to sacrifice scholastic and college standards in a possible speed-up program during the national emergency. The decision came at a confer ence on the question of accelerat ing high school and college pro grams to allow students to pro gress as far as possible before draft age. : The meeting, called by the state Department of Public In struction, was attended by some 75 representatives of colleges and universities, and city and county school superintendents. The group voted to set up a committee to study problems and possibilities of : a speed up pro gram and report back at a meet ing March 27. They also called for a commit tee to prepare and publish a spe cial bulletin dealing with how the draft will effect young students on the high school and college level. While looking with some favor on a proposed acceleration pro gram, the educators made it plain they do not plan any lowering of present standards. Two Students Poorbox MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 13 (UP)- Two young men, one a University of Miami student, were sentenced to 30 days today for robbing the poorbox at the Church of the Little Flower in suburban Coral Gables. The university student, James D. Stapleton, 26, and Guy D. Mc- Quaide, 22, a vocational school student, were arrested by police officer Hendy Till after he watched them pilfer the poorbox separetly. Mcyuaiae naa served part of a two-year sentence tor the same offense in the same church several years ago. Stapleton said he stole the mon ey because he was hungry. Mc Guaide said he took from the poorbox because he needed gaso line for his car. UN Forces Battle Crushing Chinese TOKYO, Wednesday, Feb. 14 &) United Nations troops in the mountains of central Korea today battled to stem a crush ing Red tide that sought to swamp U.S. 8th Army forces and This year's handbook will be about the same size as last year's, although Barton indicated it would be shorter because of the rise in printing costs. The hand book is similar, to Tarnation in size. Barton pointed out that more space would be devoted to the ROTC units and that there would be some minor changes in the student government section. Contributions from any organi zations that have not been cov ered adequately in the past will be accepted, he said. Managing Editor is Buddy Northart. Coordinator , of the freshman staff is Bill Brown. ' ::!:. EDWIN G. NOURSE Nourse Gives Weil Lecture On Economics Failure to realize that economic policy must, like any business, be run just like a well operated ma chine is the reason for the "threat ened breakdown in the spending taxing program now before Con gress," Dr. . Edwin G. Nourse, noted economist, author and lec turer, declared here last night. "This is also responsible for the price-wage-profit control problem being wrestled with by the Office of Defense Mobilization," he said. ! "The challenge which this situa tion presents to the economy, and the republic can hardly be over stated. To meet it imposes a mighty task upon our educational system quick and dramatic edu cation in the immediate emer gency, profound and continued education for the long future." ; Dr. Nourse, who was chairman of the Council of Economic Advi sers to President ,Truman .from 1946-49, delivered the first in the annual series of three Weil Lec tures on Citizenship in Hill Hall. His general subject is "Economic Science and Practical Policy," and his specific topic tonight dealt with economic forces and mecha nisms. President Gordon Gray of . the Consolidated University intro duced the speaker and Chancellor Robert B. House presided. The Weil Lectures were en dowed 37 years ago by the fami lies of Sol and Henry Weil of Goldsboro, and the first lecturer was the late President William Howard Taft. - Dr. Nourse said the "good ma chine tender is disciplined to the needs of his machine and cannot put his own comfort, Convenience, or gain above its operational re quirements. This is just as true in the economic world." cut off the Allies fighting around Seoul. Field dispatches indicated the main weight of the Chinese and North Korean counter-drive in the center was shifting westward. Chipyong, 35 miles east of Seoul, was surrounded and under at tack. The first Red blow, aimed at Hoengsong, had succeeded in driving U.N. forces from that mountain stronghold and forc ing them -brick down the road to Wonju, 50 miles southeast of Seoul. ........ Early this morning Chinese Communist forces surrounded Chipyong and were blasting away at this northernmost Allied positioA in central Korea with tanks and self-propelled guns. Mortar shells fell inside Chip- young at midnight, Associated Press War Correspondent John Randolph reported. The Communist defenders of Seoul fired back across the Han by day and night. They turned British tanks, captured Dy tne Chinese in their New Year's of fensive last month, against U.N., forces near Seoul. ' . 1 . A.P. Correspondent Jim BecH er said the Commuiiists buried the captured tanks in sand up Adminisfr iHTODOseo -.increase Sanders Meets Committee Wednesday Will Present Case Of Student Body To Assemblymen John Sanders, president of ; the student body, will confer with the Appropriations Com- ! mittee of the General Assem bly next Wednesday afternoon to discuss the proposed in creases in the tuition rates facing the Health Affairs Di vision of the University. Sanders said yesterday re presentatives of student govern ment and heads of each unit of the division will journey to the state capital with him to present the case of the student body in regards to the situation. He also said yesterday that mimeographing of facts pertain ing to the proposed increases has been completed and is now being distributed to the various units. Sanders recently issued an ur gent appeal to all students for a more v. vigorous letter writing campaign to their representatives in the General Assembly protes ting the proposed' increases.' 18-Year Vote Meets Defeat RALEIGH, Feb. 13 (UP) The Senate by a vote of 29 to 15 today defeated a proposed amendment to the North Carolina Constitu tion which would have permitted 18-year-olds to vote. The vote came after an argu ment of one hour and five min utes. "If a country able ot man can fight for his he should certainly be vote," Wills Hancock of Oxford said. To Stem Red Tide to their turrets and used their high velocity guns as artillery. The 5th Air Force claimed that new and secret search tactics permitted fighter-bomber pilots to find the answer to Communist camouflage. Mountain Meeting Tomorrow Is Last Day To Sign For Montreat Tomorrow will be the last day for registration for this year's Montreat Conference,- scheduled for this weekend. Forms will be available in the Y Lobby from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The conference is an annual event sponsored by the Young Christian Associations and is open to anyone at the University in terested in attending the retreat for worship, study, and recrea tion. v The meetings will be held Fri day through Sunday in Montreat. D. Bernard Anderson, professor at the Colgate-Rochester Theo logical Seminary,. will be featured anon '30 Days Grace Given Students In Draft Edict WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (JP) Selective Service laid down its formal rules today under which many thousands of college and high school students will have a chance to enlist in the service of their choice even after their school term ends next summer. A 30-day postponment of induction is provided for these stu dents. - Under law, inductions of students called up while they are in school are postponed automatically until the end of the school year. But at that time' they would be called immediately. The new policy provides that a student, even if he has been ordered for induction, will be allowed to apply for a 30-day holdup of his induction notice, stating his purpose to enlist. The post ponement would begin at the end of the school year. Then, at the end of the 30 days, his draft board would make a check. If the student had enlisted, his case would be closed. If he hadn't, he would be drafted. Selective Service officials said they feel the new policy will allow the student to devote his entire final month to his studies, instead of spending time scouting around recriuting Stations. House Discussions Continue Til June By Walt Dear Fraternity and dorm discussions on campus, religious, and educa tional subjects are being held for the remainder of this year, Jack Prince, chairman of the" Y Com munity Affairs program, an nounced yesterday. Everett dorm and Chi Phi fra ternity are leading off the pro gram with discussions this week. Both have a schedule featuring several prominent campus figures, speaking on topics ranging from "Mobilization" - to "Personal Faith." Among those speaking at Chi Phi during the next two months are Rev. Charles Jones, Rev. John Weidinger, Chancellor Robert B. House, and Rabbi Samuel Perl man. Ten fraternities have active plans for discussions and several more are making arrangements to have the talks, Tom Carroll, gen eral chairman of fraternity dis cussions, said. Bill Burkholder, chairman of discussions, reported that several dorms are' in the planning stages, but only Everett has scheduled speakers. Residents of Everett heard Dr. Arnold Nash Monday night on "For What Does a Uni versity Train a Man?" All dormitories and fraternities are invited to participate in the Y-sponsored program, Prince said. "We have a list of 24 out standing campus leaders who are willing to talk on religion, educa tion, politics, or practically any current subject of the day. The discussions are intended to stimu late interest among students and point out some of the solution's as the retreat's main speaker. He is a former member of the Re ligion Department here. Dr. Anderson will deliver four talks at the Conference, three of which will set the theme for in formal group discussions. "The Divine Foolishness of the Cross" will be the subject of his final sermon on Sunday. Other discussion leaders for the Conference include: Dr. William Poteat, Dr. Bernard Boyd, Mr. Maurice Kidder, Rev. J. C. Her ring, Mr; John Clayton, and Dr. Robert Mann. All are from the University.. ' .;- ;; Wool n of the problems facing us," he continued. Chairmen for the fraternity dis cussions are: Fred Coker, Chi Psi; Tom Alexander, DKE; Charles Myers, KA; Tom Carroll, Delta Psi; Dick Griswald, Kappa Sigma; John McKee, Lambda Chi; John Murchison, SAE; Bill Teague, Sigma Chi; Walt Urn stead, Sigma Nu; Adger Williams, SPE; Bill Hogshead, PiKA; Aaron Copeland, TEP; Harold Crowder, Zeta Psi. V. L'. James is dorm leader for Everett and Bill Burk holder is chairman of Steele. No Disloyals In Our Midst, Willis Soys RALEIGH, Feb. 13 P) Sen. Willis Smith (D-NC) last night told the state House of Representatives: "There are no disloyal per sons in our midst a situation which is not true in many other sections of the nation." Smith asserted that in North Carolina "We have the purest Anglo-Saxon blood." He ex plained later that "you don't have to be suspicious of our people. Everybody knows everybody. It's not like in big cities, where there are so many foreigners whose background you don't know." The state's junior senator is on a special Senate subcom mitee investigating subversive activities in government. In his brief talk to the rep resentatives, Smith recalled how he served in 1931 as speaker of the House during the longest Legislature session in history. Smith gave high praise to Sen. Clyde R. Hoey , North Carolina's senior senator, whom Smith described as "one of the great men of North Carolina and America" Rendezvous Shows Two Movies Today Movies for today's "Operation. Four O'clock" in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memorial will be "How A Bill Becomes A Law," and "Life in Sometown, U.S.A." Musical programs are heard on "Operation Four O'clock" during the week. . Students are urged to take advantage of this nevy fea ture of the Rendezvous Room, Figh'H i u i toon Raise To Make South Building 'Unhappy' President States Cash Must Come From Somewhere By Don Maynard President of the Consoli dated University Gordon Gray asserted yesterday that the administration would be "unhappy" if the proposed tuition increase for the Medi cal Affairs Division was ap proved, but implied that he would not fight the increase. "We would be delighted if the Legislature could make avail able the necessary funds to oper ate the University without a tui tion increase here," he stated, "but we are going to need addi tional funds from somewhere to run the Medical Affairs branch." The General Assembly has be fore it a budget which would in crease the tuition paid by students in the Medical School, the Phar macy School, the School of Pub lic Health and Dentistry. Opposition on this campus has arisen to the increase, and student officials are attempting to effort not only defeat of the bill, but a general lowering of tiution. Gray goes before the Joint Ap propriations Committee a week from today to present the Uni versity's budget. At that time. Gray said, he will be prepared to present current rates at all other medical school in the country and plans for tui tion increases, if any, by thcxs schools, if the Committee requests such a report. "We are not going to beat the bushes for a tuition increase," Gray declared, "but we are going to beat the bushes to get the ne cessary money somehow. Natur ally, we do not favor any increase in student fees." Gray is offering his budget re quest on the basis of an expected drop in enrollment in September amounting to one-third of the stu dent body now attending the Uni versity ,a figure below K.0Q0. It an appropriations increase over the last biennium's amount is not voted, or if tuition is not incresaed, the consequent loss in student receipts suffered this year and the increased facilities which the University will have to sup port will cause this institution to lose money, Gray explained. He said that if appropriations enough to cover the University's expenses were not earmarked for it, services and other expenses would have to be curtailed. It mfght be an inevitable re sult that salaries would have to be cut, he said. "That is the la want to happen t thing we would " he declared. Gray is awaiting reply from the 70-odd medical schools in the country on their tuition stands, and has also contacted most of all the schools in th country corresponding to thr remaining units of the Univer sity's Medical Affairs Division. Revisions? General College students who hare pre-registered for the spring term and would like to revise their green forms must see their advisers before Mon day. Green forms will be held up for those students who received two or more failing grades at mid 'terra. It will be necessary lor them to register on March 19. at id riot ?i id a!, le r- V: f r