Local Food Store -CEmaed
ram s
77
r . Special to Thi Daily Tar IIcix
RALEIGH, April 11 Fowler
Food stores of Chapel Hill and
Durham have been charged-with
selling 20,000 pounds ot ungraded
veal and failing to keep required
records. .
' Federal Judge Johnson J. Hayes
yesterday ordered the stores to
show in Federal court why
they should not be restrained from J
'
VOLUME LX
CHAPEL
Nash
Dr. Arnold Nash chairman of
the religion department, who has
just returned from a conference
in Europe, will deliver a series of
Sisters Drop
Big Brother
Tradition
A pair of coeds whose brot
hers were old-time campus poli
ticoes failed to carry on in
Wednesday's election.
Dot Lowenstein(SP) was de
feated for her bid to -the Leg-
isiamre irora me kyuiucijs
t.Dorm district. She lost by nine
votes. Her brother Al, now in
Yale Law school, was a familiar
sight on the campus political
scene in the post-war years
through 1949, and an SP wheel
horse. Ann Mackie (SP) lost on the
ticket which once put her
brother into' office as president.
She lost by 10 votes for the
six-month seat from Women's
Town district. Brother Bill was,
president in 1949
J" .... ,.. ITS I
University Corid ucfing Study
On Education Problems
UNC is one of 11 colleges and
universities in the nation select
ed to participate in a survey this
month of students present edu
cational problems, vocational
plans and views, and other im
portant topics of the day, Chan
cellor Robert B. House announced
today. -
Another important objective of
the survey is to assess the im
pact of the present emergency
upon such attitudes and objec
tives, Chancellor House said
The study,, which is sponsored
by the Carnegie Corporation of
New York, is expected to pro
duce a better understanding of
student attitudes and goals.
Chancellor House said that he
believes the study will provide
Sutramcrlin Wed '
Sam Summerlin; University
graduate who is now an Asso
ciated Press correspondent in
Korea, was married Thursday
in ceremonies in Tokyo,
His bride was Miss , Cynthia
Cyr, civilian-employee Vpf lho
Army stationed di Ilexes' " .
Unqmded eal.
iurtner . business.
' a
Director James F. Latham of
the '.Office of Price Stabilization
said Judge Hayes order was re
turnable in Greensboro FSderal
Court on April 18.
Latham said agents visited the
stores on March 20. Co-owner Ro
bert Fowler, Latham said, told
agents "that he bought veal in
that area and paid for it by check
'J. :i1
HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1952 NUMBER 145
Gov
Roli'o.ioo
four lectures on the Ecumenical
Movement beginning Monday.
The lectures will be delivered
on successive Monday evenings
at 8:30 o'clock in Gerrard hall
In his first talk Nash will speak
on "The Birth of the Ecumenical
Movement."
The series is being sponsored
by the Inter-faith council, a group
composed of student representa
tives from each of the major re
ligious groups here. Chief pur
pose of the council is "The. deep
ening and strengthening of per
sonal religious living through in
sight and understanding of one's
religious faith."
In the lectures Dr. Nash will
discuss, among other questions,
the relevance of the Ecumenical
Movement to religious life in
America; the Church in the strug
gle between the East and West;
recent movements of thought in
Roman Catholicism and Eastern
Orthodoxy; and the growing in
fluence of laymen and women
within the councils of the -Ecumenical
Movement. r
Nash recently attended a ecu
menical conference in Switzer
land on the relations among theo
logy, psychiatry, and psychology
Since 1934, when he began his
educators with valuable, informa
tion for assessing present accom
plishments and planning future
developments.
Other schools participating in
the survey are .Cornell, Fiske,
Harvard, Wayne, Wesleyan and!
Yale Universities, Dartmouth Col
lege, and the Universities of
Michigan, .Texas and' California
i at Los Angeles. Different types
of 'institutions were chosen to
provide a wide range of attitudes.
it was pointed out.
The Cornell Social Science
Center is coordinating the pro
ject. '
Chancellor House said' that this
survey "should not be confused
with the study which Dean Fred
Weaver will initiate in the three
units of the Consolidated Uni
versity next fall, although the
present inquiry should provide
much helpful information for the
broader study.""
A questionnaire is being ad
ministered to a representative
sample of the undergraduate stu
dent ; body. The Institute for-; Re
search in Social Science 'is! taft-
in care of all arrangements with
&c&' Drzliel O. Price . in charge. ;
and sold it to his customers with
out the same having been graded
or grade marked, and that he had
not kept any records of trans
actions except his check stub." ....
In Chanel Hill, the manager 'ot
FoWler's West Franklin street
store told The Daily Tar Heel that
he knew nothing about it, "only
what I've read in the papers."
i
association with the World Stu
dent Christian Federation, he has
been active in the ecumenical
movement. In 1937 he was vice-
chairman of the" youth section of
the Oxford Conference on
'Church, Community and State."
Easter Egg Hunt
Fifty happy orphans spent a
sunny Good Friday afternoon
yesterday searching the front
lawn of the Monogram club
for nests of multi-colored Easter
Eggs. :
The boys of the Monogram
club, together with Pi Beta Phi
sorority sisters, entertained
youngsters ranging in age from
six to nine' from the Methodist
orphanage in Raleigh. After an,
hour hunt among the rocks,
-trees, and bushes facing Battle
park, the youthful searchers
and their hosts headed for the
Monogram clubroom for xe
jEreshments and prizes.'
uts
For New Play
Tryouts for "House Holds," the
final full-length student produc
tion of the Playmakers season,
will be held at the Playmakers
Theatre this afternoon at 4
o'clock. , Everyone is eligible to
audition.
"House Holds" is written by
Gene Graves, a graduate student
from San Diego, Cal., and is sche
duled for two performances on
May .l and 2. It is a serious study
oi domestic problems witmn a
certain household, arid will be
directed by Elmer Oettinger, Wil
son.
There are many fine roles for
both men and women, and now is
the time for all those who have
been intending to take part in
Playmaker productions to actual
ly do so." The play is unusually
well "written, "the director is a
man of wide experience, and so
the cast members will shine in
the best possible light. "
Math Talk Set
Bertram M. Drucker an Oak
Ridg0 Institute of Nuclear Stud
ies fellow, will speak to the Math
ematics Seminar at 4 p.m. next
Wednesday in . Phillips hall.
His sub j ect will be "Numerical
Integration with reference to
high - speed digital computers."
: Mr. Drucker is l a former in
structor in mathematich, psychol
ogical statistics, and social sta
tistics in the' University. ' : " '. '
a
I ryo
Set
-Chapel Hill r
Coed1cJvisers:
For
A partial list of coeds who will
advice next fall's new coed crop-
some zoo to 300 was Teieasea
yesterday by Saralyn Bonowitz,
Women's orientation chairman.
Named to head the advisers was
Dee Kline, . Macomb, 111. Miss
Kline called a meeting for the
new advisers Monday at 7:30 p.m.
in the Alderman dormitory par
lors. In keeping with this year's
orientation program, all advisers
will live in their respective dorms
during fall quarters, Miss Bono
witz said. This is the first year.it
has been . required.
Miss Bonowitz said Smith and
Carr dormitories will be for
undergraduates only next year.
Each houses approximately 120
students. Miss Bonowitz compli
mented the Legislature for its sup
port of the orientation program.
Thursday night, the Solons voted
women's " orientation $250 for the
coed ball and $400 for the pro
gram's worlf in general.
The advisers as chosen by. the
selection committee are Mary
Ann Ader, Betty Ahern, Barbara
Braxton, Dee Breslow, Mary Lilla
Browne, Susan Bullock, Sue Bur-
ress, Margaret Davis, Nancy
Evans, Delores Funai, Mary Ann
Glod, Virginia Hall, Donna Hauck,
Mack Haywood, Katherine
Holmes, Ramelle Hylton, Gwenlyn
Huss, Gloria Huss, Joan Jacobi,
Not Same
-The "Restrepo, Ovidio" of Col
ombia, South America, fined for
drunk driving here, is a State
college" freshman and is not to
be confused with a coed on cam
pus with part of the same name.
In fact," a check with State col
lege authorities last night revealed
it's not "Restrepo Ovidio," but
T. O. Restrepo. Restropo was as
sessed $100 and court costs .in
Tuesday's session of Chapel Hill
Recorder's court.
ED III
B y G h a i r sn 3 n B
Pol gar Show is Described As
Hilarious, New, Unusual'
By Walt Ernst
Dr. Franz J. Polgar can indeed
be called an originator and pion
eer in the field of entertainment.
He has created a new and unus
ual form of amusement by using
such intriguing mental phenom
ena as memory, hypnosis, and
mind-reading as s the basis for all
his programs." For the first time
irThis career he has brought his
show, "Miracles of the Mind", to
the American public. And a de
lighted and bemused audience it
it! -? ' . ;.
Too often these mental phen
omena have been misunderstood
and abused, have fallen easy prey
to charlatans. Through his hilari
ous demonstrations of the sub
jects of mind reading, hynosis,
and memory, Polgar not only giv
es Uhis audience a genuine fun
fest and an unforgetable evening
of real merriment, but enlightens
and informs at one and the same
time. . .
Polgar appears minus a leg
endary turban and glass bowl,
and she practically welcomes the
'Tm from Missouri" reaction of
so many of his audiences. And yet
he! has no difficulty ; getting vol-
untesrs,; for his various shows,
Everybody is anxious ltd be in the
snow, -eager; to; -watch at close
range' what at first seems - like
c.
Lis
rr
rien?aTio
onowifz
Paula Jones, Toni Kelley. i
Jane Knottmeier, Joan Kurash,
Jody Levey, Dot Lowenstein, Bar
bara Mathews, Joan Membery,
Eugenia McCray, Martha Mc-
Guirk, Janet Merritt, Ann Miller,
Mary Mitchell, Carolyn Murray,
Nan .Reese, Barbara Reed, Nancy
Ripple, Linda Shults, Martha Ann
Smith, Linda Smith, Jane Ann
Sneed, Geraldine Snider, Sally
Trowbridge. Barbara Tuttle, Cay
Youngs, Dixie Whiteley, Sue Wil-
kins, and Rachel Williams.
The selection committee was
composed of nine members. They
were Dean Wettach, Betty Denny
arid Marcie Harrer of the Dean's
office, Gay Currie, Pellen Speck,
last year's chairman of advisers,
Peggy Brown, Joyce Evans, Dickie
Denis, Adair Beasley and Babs
Wooten.
The remainder of the advisers
will be named shortly, Miss Bono
witz stated. The advisers for men
will be chosen after a male orien
tation chairman has been named
by president-elect Ham Horton,
Hansel's "Messiah," parts two
and three, will be sung, by the
choir of the Presbyterian church
on Easter monday in Hill hall at
8:30 p. m. The choir will be as
sisted by an instrumental en
semble of strings, harpsichord and
organ. ' ..
Soloists will be Margaret Stan
back, soprano; May Marshbands,
contralto; . William Wriitesides,
tenor; and Edgar vom Lehn, bari
tone. Thomas Nichols is the di
rector. This is perhaps the-first uncut
performance of these portions of
the Messiah to be presented in the
Chapel Hill area.
blatant trickery planters in the
audience, signals to accomplices
are some of the comments that
only too often come up from the
floor.
Polgar very good naturedly and
with not a little bit of humor
starts the show, and from that
point the subjects and spectators
soon find themselves basking in
an atmosphere of real cheer, mer
riment, and wonder. Polgar has
just as good a time!
He will be here next Tuesday
at 8 p.m. for a Memorial hall ap
pearance under the sponsorship
of the Student Entertainment
Committee.
KD's Took Trophy
Hell hath no fury like a sorority
ignored. , ,
The Daily Tar Heel , gave the
erroenous impression in a head
line yesterday that the Chi Omega
sorority had won the 1 Sigma' Chi
derby. We meant simply what we
said: "Chi O Wins Derby Crown,"
i.e., miss lvioaern venus. ,
However, we red-facedly note
that Kappa Delta sorority won
tne derby itself by capturing, the
largest total of points. .The KD's
inus-'toojc tne large trophy. ; ,
Herewith, .our apologies. '
Choir To Sing
Messiah farts