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7 UNC Library Serials Dspt I 1 CVAA - p yOLUME LX CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1951 NUMBER 53 ace: ;:5:i Bill, !!. C. . .. ... - - - v 0 ivy jr "V. -in Bfy W Sodiums ".A term . . fk I , - PoIicIesCoyld Leao SOU I 10 Fi tr To N wC Water "She use of sodium fluoride in the Chpel Hill water supply was unanimously endorsed by the Board of Aldermen Monday night- It can not be used in the water "until the University, which owns the water supply, agrees to per mit its use. Mr. Teague, Univer sity official, said the matter .would be given due consideration by the University and it would follow the direction of .the public health officers. One part of sodium fluoride will be used to one million parts of water. According to Dr. Brauer, dean of the School of Denistry, and his staff, this com bination will reduce the number of caries by approximately 40 per cent. Chesi Funds N earing Goal Approximately $11,100 of the j Chapel Hill Community Chest's ogal of $14,500 has been raised, it! was reported today by Judge L. J. Phipps, campaign chairman. Last year, the goal of $13,500 was exceeded by $700 - The $14,500 to be raised this year will be distributed as fol- the William Neal Reynolds Coli lows: Boy Scouts, $1,700; Girl seum at State College. World Scouts, $750; Recreation Center famous skating stars Donna At (white), $4,025; Negro Commun- wood and Bobby Specht will be ity Center, $4,025; Day Nursery, featured in leading roles in the $2,600; Mary Bayley Pratt Chil- performance slated to run a full ren's Library, $1,000; Humane week beginning next Tuesday at Societv. $200: and camnaien ex- penses, $200. - . Everybody missed by the can vassers is asked to make his con tribution as soon as possible. Checks should be made payable to Chapel Hill Community . Chest and mailed to Judge Phipps. Core Commission Set Up To Advance Med Program By Vaxdy iMorth Carolina needed an agency to administer the spend ing of vast sums for its better health program and the N. C. Medical Care Commission was created by the Legislature in 1945 to handle the job. Designed to carry out the hos pital needs as outlined by the Poe Commission, the State hospital program, of which the Care Com mission was in charge, became fact instead of a mass of plans. Deficiencies pointed out by the State and National Commission of Hospital Care were stricken from the record. The program -called for the alleviation of the bed shortage, i poor physical conditions of exist ing hospital plants or replace ment with new ones, and cor rection of the maldistribution of hospitals especially with respect to rural areas. A 20 rn 'jor group, the Medi cal Care C : " aission was created 1 :&:-::: Seated in his prison office, Soviet State Prosecutor Ivanoff, por- Urayed by Larry Peerce, consults bv Robert Thomas, formulating political prisoner, N. S. Rubashov. Playmaker's production of "Darkness At Noon which opened last night before an enthusiastic, capacity crowd at the Playmaker Theater. Tickets may still be purchased for the five remaining per formances at Swain Hall, or Ledbetter-Pickard's. Ice Capades Announcement of the presenta tion of the bie ice show. "Ice Cades of 1952 featuring Walt Disney's "Cinderella", was made today by W. Z. Betts, director of the Coliseum m Kaieign. Among the ten colorful produc tions scheduled on the program will be "Cinderella", the fourth story to be performed on ice by Producer John Harris troupe Previous ice shows at the Colise um have featured "Snow White BuckaUw prior to the establishment of sep arate boards for State-owned mental, tuberculosis, orthopedic, and cerebral palsy hospitals. Since the Legislature makes direct ap propriations to all State-owned JiosDitals for building, the Meai cal Center here at Chapel Hill is likewise independent of the Commission as are all other State owned hospitals. The Commission applied seme federal funds to seven State-owned tuberculosis hospitals, one of which is being built here. Also it has applied all its available funds to local or county, and health center pro jects. Roughly $50,000,000 has been administered by the Commission in hospital construction on 102 approved projects. Of this sum. Federal funds have approximated $20,000,000; State funds $11,000,- 000; and local funds $19,000,000 The Federal funds are granted under provisions of the Hill-Bur (See HEALTH, Page 4) with his colleague, Gletkin, played new plans lortne lonure oi meir The scene is from the Carolina In Raleigh and the Seven Dwarfs", "The Student Prince", and "The Toy Shop". In keeping' with the holi day spirit, there will be an ap propriate number entitled "Jingle Bells". Included on the star-studded roster of performers will be 150 top-notch skaters. Comic.acts will feature. Joe Jackson, a clown on ice, and two newcomers, a couple of poker-faced Australians known as the Maxwells. Tickets can now be purchased at the Coliseum Box Office on the State College campus and at Lanier-Womble in downtown Raleigh. Miami U n s versify Bans Hell Week fSreciHl to The Daily Tar Heel) Coral Gables, Fla. The Uni versity of Miami banned hazing from its campus here this week The action was taken by the interfraternity council here. The group represented 25 fra ternities and substituted Help Week for 'Hell Week'. The action was brought about because of ;a tragedy which oc curred last spring during 'Hell Week', Two youths were killed as an indirect action of hazing. They lay down on a road and went to sleep after being taken 40 miles from Miami. A truck ran over them and fatally injured them. A Mystery The painting of the UNC Bell Tower last Friday night and the capture of the Victory Bell by either Duke or Carolina students brought forth many comments from the student bodies of both campuses. Henry Bowers said in a letter , (See MYSTERY, Page 4) Continuation of the present may lead to World War II and the nation, Senator Robert A. Presidential aspirant, declared, the annual series of three Weil President Truman, (as well as regards "war much too lightly" regard it as an instrument of national policy to accomplish various other purposes than the preservation of liberty," the Senator from Ohio asserted before a near capacity crowd in Memorial hall. t To Appear On TV CSpeciad to The Daily Tar Heel) 1 Greensboro-Senator Taft, GOP candidate for President,- will take time ' out from his schedule ;of Weil -Lectures- to - appear" on WFMY-TV here, in a television forum with noted Tar Heels. The broadcast will be from 4 ;o 4:30 pan. tomorrow, Ben Greer, WFMY-TV news editor, will guide the interview-discussion group. : Appearing . with Sen. Taft will be Miles. Wolff, executive editor of the Greensboro Daily News, Floyd Hendley, managing editor of The Greenboro Record, Mrs. Harriet Pressly, woman's editor of WPTF, R. Flake Shaw, exec utive vice-president of the N. C. Farm Bureau and a member of the Greensboro Ministerial Asso ciation. HEY YOU!! You, that is, who are members of the senior class of 1952. How do you like the sound of an af ternoon concert given by. one of the nation's top name bands out on the campus green, a . dance with music furnished by same, an all-day picnic with free food galore, late permission for you senior coeds to attend a movi shown exclusively for your class? Not such bad ideas, eh? But the situation surrounding the possibilities of realizing these activities is pretty glum, at pres ent, that is. You can do something to help. Under the supervision of Sen ior, Class President Archie Myatt, committees have been set up to organize calss activities for the year. Here is Where you come in. Who? You. When? Now Where? On any of the following committees. Why? In order that the class of '52 may begin plan ning for these activities rig"ht away. "To have more unity, we need more class spirit. To get more class spirit, we will have to have the complete cooperation of each member of the senior class," said President Myatt. The committees and their chairmen are Planning Commit tee, Bob Evans; Publicity Com mittee, Anne Gowan; Social Com mittee, Mary Nell Boddie; Com plaint - Board, : Bob Creed, and Senior. Alumni Committee, Al House. If you are interested in helping your class and working on one of these committees, contact the above chairmen or one of the senior class officers. onvncr: ii aiT United States foreign policy the economic bankruptcy of raft, announced Republican here last night in the lirst of lectures on Citizenship. the late President Roosevelt J and has been "too willing to While agreeing basically wiU& the Truman administration that the Communist threat to this na tion calls for emergency measures sufficient to contain the. Red men ace, Tart said toat the. united States is .spreading its strength too far over the world. . Throughout his lecture, Senator Taft stressed his belief .that "our basic foreign polity should be based " on the two principles of maintaining the Jiberty and peace of the American people. "The exact martner of carrying out that policy will always b open to serious differences of .opinion, but its success rests pri- manly on the sincerity of the lead ers of our nation in putting liberty and peace ahead of every personal interest, every personal prejudice, every political purpose and every indefinite purpose of bossing or improving the world.' : He listed several methods "to be pursued to maintain the liberty and peace 6 the people of tha United States. "There, is no doubt that the most important policies are those of diplomacy and conciliation in. -dealing with other nations from day to day i . The maintenance of peace depends more than any thing else on the skill with which hose policies are conducted. That skill can result only from the wis dom of those in control of our foreign, policy, " from - their . fair treatment of other nations and from their good judgment as to the manner of dealing with dis putes which may arise. , "The day to day decisions of our State Department are of vital im portance, and I, at least, have lost all confidence today in the wis dom and judgment of those in charge of our ; present State De partment," the greying bespec tacled Senator: declared. He: re ceived scattered, but" loud, ap plause from his audience at this point.: ; - "Our traditional policy of neu trality . and non-interference (em bodied in the Monroe Doctrine and never isolationism.) is still aa effective means of maintaining peace. We should certainly keep, out of the internal affairs of any other country." , - Senator Taft said that the de parture from our historical policy in the Atlantic Pact (which he voted against) "can only be justi fied by the tremendous threat of Soviet Russia . . . I personally feel that the Atlantic Pact and the arming of countries within easy reaeh of Russia is, to some extet, an incitement to war." In making future commitments he said, "we should carefully con sider the various dangers involv ed in specific agreements witk specific countries and limit our definite obligations so that we (See TAFT, Page
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