0 II C LIBRARY SEHIALS DEPT. CHAPEL HILL, II. WEAThTER N E WS Continued mild to day with 75 high. Yes terday's high, 70; low, 47. Your church and its activities. See page 4. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 11 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY Rocket Trip To Mars Via Planetarium A new adventure in space tra el, "By Rocket to Mars," will open at Morehead Planetarium Tuesday night at 8:30. The new production takes vis .itors on a simulated journey of nearly 100 million miles to the most mysterious of all known planets, Mars. "Flights will leave the Plane tarium at 8:30 every evening 'and in the afternoons on Saturdays at 3 o'clock and 4 o'clock, and on Sundays at 2 o'clock,. 3 p.m. and 4 o'clock through November 10," Manager A. Jenzano said yester day. "Advance passenger reserva tions for all flights are availa ble," Jenzano said. "The passen ger rates will be 50 cents for adults and 18 cents for children to 12 years of age." Tomorrow night, the fina! showing of "Flying Saucers" will be given. The presentation also will be presented this afternoon at 2 o'clock, 3 p.m., 4 o'clock and 8:30 p.m. Tvo Students Win Honors In Selling Two Carolina students have re ceived bonus checks for success fully completing Vick Chemical Company's first 12-week summer sales program for college under graduates. They are David C. Ed ens of Lumberton and James G Lindley of Greensboro. Edens and ..Linclleyang with nine other participants, :were se lected from a group of more than 200 students representing 12 east ern and southern schools. The young men spent the first week attending meetings in Rich mond where they underwent an accelerated indoctrination pro gram that included company op erating procedures. They spent the following 11 weeks on the road, learning sales techniques by selling. During the 12-week program the undergraduates, three sophomores and eight juniors, received a straight salary, commission and full expense account. They ob tained their jobs through the Placement'" Service, 207: South Building. . ' Newman And AldenToGive Recital Series William S. Newman, pisnist, and Edgar Alden, violinist, mem bers of the facultv of the Uni versity Music Department, will give a recital at Meredith Col lege in Raleigh Tuesday, October 21, as one of a series between October 15 and November 3tt Their appearances will be she duled in various parts of the State under the sponsorship of the Music Department and the TJhi versity Extension Division. Professors Newman and Allen will present a program including Sonata in E flat Major by Ko zart, Sonata in G Major, Opus ' 78, Brahms; and Sonata No. 3, Eohuslav Martinu. I Professor Newman is author if "The Pianist's Problems," 'Key board Sonatas by the Sois o! Bach." "Understanding Music," and a number of other publica tions. ' Wednesday Wednesday is ihe las! day for sophomores io have their pictures taken for the Yackety Yack. There is no charge anl Ihe sitting lakes only a few milules. Boys should wear coats, ties and wXile shirts, and J girls should wear while blouses. Pic-lure-srapping resumes tomor row ia the basement of Gra ham Memorial. The hours are from 2 pan. until 9 o'clock.: Li: if w- I :r 1 . " . Jr EVERYBODY RAISED WHOPEE IN HOLLYWOOD when ex-actress Marion Davies threw a hilarious party in her Beverly Hills home for -Johnny ("Cry") Ray. Some 1.000 attended the party, considered one of the largest ever thrown in extravagant Hollywood. Miss Davies, who had never meet the howling Johnny until the party, spent approximately $30,000 on the fabu lous affair, she said. In the picture at left, TV actress Rowena McNamara pours champaign from her shoe a few minutes before she fell into a pool and was rescued by a newman. At right, Broadway actress Joan Diener cools her feet in a pool. Why. Miss Davies was asked, did she want such a party? "I wanted to have some more fun before I die." NEA Telephoto. SUAB Names Committees, Sets Meets The Student Union Activities ! Board held its second meeting of the year Thursday afternoon in the Roland Parker Lounge. All interested students were acquainted with the various cam pus committees and their func tions. Ken Penegar, president, opened the meeting with a brief history of SUAB. Director of the union, Bill Roth, then enumerated the committees and their specific duties. The co-ordinating committee is composed of the presidents of heads of -each important -organization on campus. Working with them is the calendar committee, Harry Phillips, chairman, which schedules activities and eliminates conflicts. The student-faculty committee, Mary Brown, chair man, arranges teas and other get togethers to encourage better re lations between students and faculty. For publicizing SUAB activi ties is the public relations com mittee, Anita Anderson, chair man. Any tournaments, such as bridge, chess, and the liKe in which students wish to participate, are arranged by the tournament committee, Don Geiger, chair man. . The film committee, Jody Le vey, chairman, is a new committee which will sponsor the showing of outstanding foreign films on cam pus. The forum committee, Henry Lowet, chairman, has the pur pose of selecting professors to lead discussions on various to pics of interest. The office committee, Joel Fleishman and Joyce Doughty, co-chairmen, takes care of the business end of SUAB. The re ception committee, Wanda Phil pott, chairman, helps with such entertainment as the Chancellor's reception and those held for vi siting dignitaries. The special ser vices committee, Ann Bell, chair man, handles miscellaneous de tails. At the suggestion of a group of frrnti hovs who wished to learn to dance,, the dance com mittee was initiated. This group will meet with an instructor on Thursday afternoon at 6 o clock The display committee takes care nf pxhibitions. and the outings committee plans organized trips for interested parties. Roth stressed the fact that these are student-created, student-executed activities, open to everyone. The new members were asked to fill out committee preierente questionaires and to have a brief meeting with the commmee ui. their choice. As a result oi ine Thursday's meeting, the following committee appointments were made: , Calendar: Dottie Law, and Nancy Murray; Dance, Dan Luke, Tom Watts, Lane Buckley and Bernie Hileman; Special Ser vices, Anne BelL Bill Warwick, Robert Quinn and John White; phi, Relations, Anita Anderson, Dottie Law and Henry Cheney; See SUAB, page ) i W.W..rnJ fan-TNl.l, r. -.HM l.lnnn.i. WSSF's Leon Marion To Speak Here Today Leon Marion, a traveling speak- er f or the World Student Service Fund, will be on campus for sev eral days beginning today to dis cuss WSSF with Carolina stu dents. This afternoon from 3 until 4:30 he will meet with the local WSSF at the Y. Attention is called to the time change of the meeting which originally had been set for 1:30. Immediately after this meeting at the Y, Marion will go arid speak to the Cosmopolitan Club. . At 6 p.m. he will speak to a campus church group. Tomorrow night he will make a brief talk to the Freshman Friend ship Council at its meeting in Lenoir Hall. At 7:30 tomorrow, he will address the YMCA Cabinet Something New In Education Year Of College Might Cost Fifty Dollars By State Plan The next state Legislature may be asked to expand North Carolina's public school system by establishing community col leges to give two years of train ing beyond high school. A 22 member committee, headed by Dr. Allan S. Hurl burt of Chapel Hill already has turned blueprints over to the State Board of Education. The board is expected to decide soon whether to ask the Legislature to activate the plan. The community colleges would be equal to junior col leges, but would serve the en tire community. They would offer two years of preparatory work for college or professional training, vocational and tech nical "terminal courses" to fit Club To Hear Dr. R. A. Pratt The Philogical Club will meet in the Faculty Lounge of the Morehead Building Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Prof. Robert A. Pratt of the English Department will deliver a paper entitled "The Antifemin- ist : Tradition Dramatized by Chaucer." Professor Pratt, who holds a Ph.D. from Yale, was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1946-47 to do research work on the; learning of Chaucer. Before joining the English Department here in September of , 1951, he taught at the University of Roch ester and at Queens College in New York. He has published msw articles on Chaucer and medieval education. The Philological Club officers for this year are B. L. Ullman president: F. E. Coenen, vice- presidentr E. H. Hartsell, secre tary and J. R. Gaskin, treasurer meeting. Tuesday, Marion will speak at the YMCA's world understanding supper forum. His topic will be "Student Relief Needs Around the World." At 8:30 that night he will speak to a general meeting of the YMCA following Y committee meetings. Marion served 32 months in the Naw in World War II, 23 of which were spent in submarine service. During the Russian blockade of Berlin in the summer of 1948, Marion with eight other students made up the tsily American-stu dent group allowed to fly to the blockaded city. In Berlin the team worked with , groups in work camps, retreats and conferences. high school graduates for im mediate employment, adult edu cation programs, and training for persons already employed. The colleges would be tuition-free as nearly as possible not more than $40 a year in order to remove the economic barriers which stand between many high school graduates and further schooling, the com mittee said. The committee emphatically was decided that "local con trol is essential to the main tenance of local interest, and the shaping of the curriculum to local needs." After a thorough study, the committee estimated - that a 1 Vi- .i . if I 5, - K X- C'A V' v i 5" s v '-V '"' IKE. SAID WHISTLE-STOP Harry, was jusl telling a "damn lie" when he talked of hefly cuts in income tax. The President is shown during a speech in Washington stale when he cui loose at the GOP nominee. Truman spoke before some 5,000 people at this slop before continuing on into California. Democratic Senator Warren C. Magnuson applauds jubilantly in the photo at right. NEA Telephoto. No Later Possibility OfNewTilt For Dec. 6 Carolina may schedule a foot ball game for December 6 to re place the canceled UNC-NC State game, officials said yesterday. Efforts are being made toward this goal with several schools be ing considered for the replace ment. Names of these schools are not yet available for publication. By a Southern Conference rul ing against post-season games, the weekend of the sixth is the latest dateon which a conference member may play. Following a conference partici pated in by several administrative officials, including President Gor don Gray, Chancellor Robert House and athletic officials. Chan cellor House issued the following statement: "In response to numerous in quiries from throughout the state, I think it desirable to describe the football situation as we see it. "We are deeply concerned about our obligation to the thousands of citizens who have already pur chased tickets for the game with State College, which we were forced to cancel. We are, there fore, exploring every possibility for ticket holders to use their tickets, if they so desire, at a game which might be scheduled on December 6. "It is impossible at this time to know what arrangements can be made. "If a replacement game is not scheduled, ticket holders will be entitled to refunds. We have had many suggestions from through out the state that unredeemed proceeds from the sale- of tiekets be used in the fight against polio. Should ticket holders wish to participate in this way, we would take every step to cooperate." minimum of $400 for each stu dent in average daily attend ance should be available for operational costs. It recom mended that the student him self should pay not more than $50 per year, with state and local governments chipping in the remainder $175 each per student. The remaining costs would have to be obtained in the form of taxes on local sources. The committee studied the Goldsboro area as a typical sec tion where a community col lege might be established. How ever, it suggested no specific sites for colleges. 4 A i - P7 Enrollment For Start . Student Drop From Last Fall Is 551; Coed Total Down From 942 To 887 University enrollment for the fall quarter is at the lowest point in recent years 5,352 according to figures released yesterday by the Central Records Office. This indicates a drop of 551 from last fall's 5,803 total. The largest number of students are en- rolled in the General College. This figure is set at 2,165. Coed enrollment is down to 887 from last fall's female population of 942. , A grand total of 5,474 was sub mitted to the Chancellor's office. However, this represents the num ber of students registered for school and does not include 122 cancellations. A healthy 4,222 or over four out of five students this fall are North Carolina residents. Next state in quantity of representation is Vir ginia with 155. Sixty-eight inter national students are enrolled. Male GI Bill veterans number 630. There are 28 female veterans on the Bill. Reports Due SP Tomorrow On Two Items The Student Party will meet tomorrow night at 8:30 in the Ro land Parker lounges of Graham Memorial. The agenda includes two re ports. Floor leader Julian Mason will give a report on the Legis lature, and Ken Barton, SP chair man,-rwill report on-the National Student Association Congress held this summer at Bloomington, Ind. Although actual nominations will not be made until the fol lowing week, forthcoming elec tions will be discussed. A repre sentative for Dorm Men's II wil be .elected to fill the unexpired term of Jim Rollins. A short dis cussion period and refreshments will follow the business meeting. Tom Neal Jr. Nameci Editor By Inter-Faith Tom Neal Jr. of Greensboro unanimously was elected Religi ous News Editor for the U.N.C, Inter-Faith council by an execu tive board and by the council at separate meetings this week. Neal came to the University School of Journalism as a trans fer student from Brevard College where he edited the bi-weekly student newspaper organ, the Clarion, and where he was stu dent director of the college news bureau. At Greensboro, Neal headed the Greensboro High School bi-weekly, High Life, and wrote a daily column for the Greensboro Record. For the past three summer he has served the Transylvania Music Camp in Bre vard as a member of the news bureau there. According to Jim Haney, presi dent of the campus Inter-Faith group, Neal's chief responsibility will be in public relations for the council, particularly the editing of religious news for The Daily Tar Heel to appear once a week. Second Change In Coed Rush Times A revamped revamped coed rush schedule was put out yester day. It was the second revision of the original one. I follows: Today, four 45 minute parties from 7 p.m. to 10:45; Tomorrow, day of rest; Tuesday, three 45 minute parties from 6 o'clock to 8:45; Wednes day, dinner party from 6 p. m. to 8 o'clock; Thursday, dinner party from 6 p.m. to 8 o'clock. The Panhellenic post office will be open Tuesday from 10 a. m. until 2 p.m. and Wednesday at the same hours. Of Year Grid Scores Duke 7 Tennessee 0 Navy 31 Cornell 7 Maryland 28 Clemson 0 Pennsylvania 7 Dartmouth 0 Columbia 16 . Harvard 7 Perdue 21 Ohio State 14 Northwestern 20 Vanderbuilt 20 Indiana 20 Iowa 13 Princeton 61 Rutgers 19 Georgia 49 N. C. State 0 Pennsylvania State 35 .. W & M 23 Holy Cross 12 Tordham 7 South Carolina 27 Furman Virginia 42 VPI Maine 14 Vermont Wake Forest 7 ..(tie).. Boston Col. Notre Dame 14 Texas RALEIGH North Carolina Democrats who waiver in their support of Adlai Stevenson had a warning yesterday that they are "going down a dark alley." Doing the warning was Gov. W. Kerr Scott who said at a press conference that no man who sup ported Republican Herbert Hoo ver in the 1928 campaign has gained political prominence in the state. SYDNEY, Australia An Aus tralian physicist who saw Brit ain's first atomic explosion from a vantage point 56 miles away, yesterday said the blast could have been from a type of hydro gen bomb. The observer said the color of the flash and its size dif fered materially from those of the atom blasts he had seen. SAN FRANCISCO President Truman yesterday shrugged off Republican criticism that his at tacks on General Eisenhower are beneath the dignity of the presi dent. An aide interpreted the Re publican squawk as a sign that Truman is getting under the GOP's political skin "just what we want." t MOSCOW The Soviet Commu nist party will meet today for the first time in 13 years to revise its constitution and ratify a new five-year plan. Some 1,500 dele gates from all over the Soviet Un ion and 500 or more prominent foreign Communists will gather in the marble-walled grand hall of the Supreme Soviet. LONDON Sir Roger Makins, 48-year-old career diplomat and son-in-law of the late U. S. Secre tary of War Dwight F. Davis, has been named British ambassador to the United States to succeed Sir Oliver Franks. Makins, a top economics expert, has served twice previously in Washington diplomatic posts. Franks, a for mer Oxford University professor who has held the ambassadorship since 1948, plans to return to aca demic life. A Foreign Office spokesman said the new U. S. ambassador will take over his post in late December or early January. Just Rumor Dr. David Garvin, district health officer, squelched a ru mor yesterday. Dr. Garvin said reports cir culating that a cook at the Monogram Club had polio were not true. He said the cook had been examined by doctors and was first treated for his illness on September 15. "Of course," Dr. Garvin said, "every diagnosis now considers polio. This cook, however, does not have it."

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