Serials WEATHER i - ( Oit iU Xf ff ((TIT hi f. 1 sifl irn riiMir MJ rw SEX That man's at it again. See Nonplus, page 2. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 14 . CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY mm r$mm mmm to mmm wotim Rushees Given Until Tomorrow To Obtain Bids Fraternity Invites Will Be Available In Gcrrard Hall Freshmen have today and to morrow left in which to pick up their rushing bids. The bids may be picked up in Gerrard Hall from 9 a. m. until noon today, and from 10 a. m. until noon tomorrow. Those who went yesterday but found no in vitations are asked to check again Friday when mixups will be straightened out, Fred Me whinney, IFC rush chairman said. The rushing schedule for fra ternities, as released by Mewhin ney: Sunday, 7 to 10 p. m.; Mon day, 7 to 10 p. m.; Tuesday, 7 to 9:30 p. m.; Wednesday, 7 to 9:30 p. m. and next Thursday, 7 to 9:30 p.m. There will be strict silence, that is no rushee may converse with a fraternity man, from 9:30 p. m. next Thursday until Satur day, October 18 at 7 p. m. Shake up Day is Sunday, October 19 from 7 to 9:30 p. m. There will be another strict silence from 9:30 that night until Pledge Day, Wednesday, October 22. Dime-A-Night Dance Series Opens Today The YMCA Freshman Friend ship Council and SUAB are joint ly sponsoring a series of begin ning dance lessons starting at 7 o'clock tonight in the Rendez vous Room of Graham Memorial. The group will begin with the basic dancing steps and progress at whatever rate the students desire during the Thursday night hour lessons. Miss Ruth Price, dance instructor from the staff of the Women's Gymnasium, will as sist the group in getting off on the right foot. Coeds are encouraged to attend in order to aid in the instruction by partnering with the boys. Ten cents covers the lesson for each boy. Ray White is Freshman Friend ship Council chairman for the dance classes. Lane Buckley is chairman of the SUAB Dance Committee. G's Mascot From Korea Now Student Special to The Daily Tab Hekl MORGANTON, W. Va., Oct. 8 Insoo Skippy Kwak, 19, form erly of Korea, is a new member of the West Virginia University freshman class. The gate to a university edu cation and maybe a degree in medicine was opened to Skippy seven years ago when he met Sgt. Gus Farr of Hinton, W. Va. A forlorn little waif of 12, Skippy was sitting by a roadside in Korea. Skippy became Gus' mascot. Gus ordered books from home and began teaching Eng lish to the youngster. In a couple of years, Farr sent (See MASCOT, page 2) Late Papers Students failing to receive Daily Tar Heels early in the morning should check their re sidences on their return from class. Mechanical troubles have forced the paper to be late com ing off the press and many stu dent distributors have had to attend class before they could deliver their papers. UNC Will Mark Birthday Monday I f i . i V - WILLIAM R. DAVIE Civil Service Slates Exams The United States Civil Ser vice Commission yesterday an nounced an examination for me teorological aid positions paying from $2,950 to $3,410 a year. Most of the positions are in the Weather Bureau and are located in Washington. Some positions also, will be filled .outside the U. S. a written test will be given but appropriate experience or ed ucation also is required. Full information regarding the requirements, and instructions on applying may be secured at the post office. Plans Ready For Caravan To Miami Tilt Tentative plans for an extend ed so j urn to Miami for the Nov. 28 Carolina-Miami football game were released yesterday by John Seely, University Club president. Each year, the University Club, student pep organization, spon sors all-out student attendance' at one football game' away from Chapel Hill. "Students will leave Chapel Hill on Wednesday afternoon and arrive in Miami in time to cele brate Thanksgiving on Thurs day," Seely said. "We will motor to nearby Coral Gables for the football game Fri day night and begin the return trip Saturday," he added. "We plan to be back in Chapel Hill on Sunday in time for plenty of rest before Monday's classes." As is customary for these trips, the University Club will provide an ininerary and arrange accom odations for as many students as plan to go, Seely said. Transportation for those who do not wish to travel this dis tance by auto will be provided, Seely said. Writers Can AidQuarterly "The Carolina Quarterly has built up a large off campus con tributors list but .we are eager to receive contributions from Uni versity students," Editor Tom Lloyd said yesterday. Lloyd said he felt that with the literary tradition that Chapel Hill possesses, it should be able to of fer enough talent within the city limits to fill a dozen magazines. "If you are a struggling poet or short story writer, don't hide your work," he said. "Send it up to the office of the Carolina Qurterly in Graham Memorial in time for the October 27 fan puD lication deadline." vs - - a! ' i f v v 1 L.. University Day, commemo rating the 159th anniversary of the founding of the Univer sity, will be celebrated next Monday. The laying of the corner stone of Old East, on October 12, 1793, is ercogmzed as the form al beginning of the University. This year, however, the birthday falls on Sunday, and ceremonies marking the occasion are sched uled for Monday, beginning at 10:50 a.m. on the south court of South Building. Pageantry re-enacting, in pan tomime, the laying of the corner stone of Old East will feature the University's birthday party. Ar rangements for the celebration are under the direction of Nancy Green of Chapel Hill, University senior in drama. Special music will be 'furnished by the Univer sity Band under the direction of Earl Slocum. Preceded by a color guard (rep resenting AROTC and NROTC) Chancellor Robert B. House, Stu dent Body President Hamilton Horton Jr. and members of the Carolina Playmakers in colonial costumes will go from South Building to the pageant platforms. The "Star Spangled Banner" will open the services followed by in vocation by Dr. Samuel T. Habel, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Chapel Hill. Those attending will join in singing the University Hymn. At this point the assembly will pay tribute to students, faculty, and alumni who died during the past year. Chancellor House will lead in the responsive reading of lines from the Apocrypha. One minute of silence will be broken by "Integer Vitae,' 'sung by the Men's Glee Club under the direc tion of Joel Carter, following which Carter will direct the Uni versity combined glee clubs in Gore's "Where Shall Wisdom Be Found?" George Williams will be at the organ. - . The re-enactment of the Mason ic cornerstone laying will be led by James Pritchett of Lenoir, gradaute student in drama. He (See U.N.C. DAY, page 2) Ike Likers Set Parley Tonight For Students Students were invited yesterday to join in forming a Citi zens For Eisenhower group tonight at 8 o'clock in Room 206, Phillips Hall. r j George Scholl, a physics major from Charlotte, issued the invitation. He will preside over the initial meeting tonight. Speakers for the meeting will be Dr. Malcom McDermott of the Duke University Law School, and Grady Prichard, Chapel Hill businessman. "The aim of the committee in Chapel Hill will be to get the students here registered and to the polls on election day," Scholl said. Scholl said another aim will be to get the campaign "out of the newspapers and onto the campus. Literature and I Like Ike buttons will be available and will be distributed tonight," he added. Today Last Chance To Buy Film Ducats The second in a series of out standing movies to be here under student auspices will be shown in Memorial Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. "Distant Journey," a Czech film giving the personal story of a Jewish family under the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, is sponsored by the Student Union Activities Board. Students may purchase season tickets at the door for $1. This is the last opportunity to buy du cats. . i-'i . 1 B II Hi 1 5 IN BRIEF ' SEOUL South Korean infan trymen fighting with bayonets yesterday captured a vital shell cratered peak overlooking the ancient invasion route to Seoul in a brutal battle that has raged since Monday night, A front line officer said the Korean troops cut a Chinese battalion of 700 " men down to 150 in recap turing the crest of White Horse Hill on the Western Front. H A R R O W, . England T w o speeding express trains ripped into a crowded commuter local at Harrow station yesterday in Britain's worst train wreck in its history. By early last night 82 bodies had been removed from the 30-foot high tangle of crum pled coaches and it was feared the final toll might exceed 100. Three hundred persons were in jured. BERLIN Two Soviet MIG-15 jet fighters fired warning shots at an unarmed U. S. Air Force hospital plane in the Berlin air corridor yesterday, but the twin engined C-47 escaped by plung ing into a cloudbank. The mercy plane landed safely at Temple hof Airdrome in the U. S. zone of Berlin. None of the Soviet bulets hit the plane, which car ried an Air Force woman nurse and five other crew members. MADISON, Wis. Gov.: Adlai E. Stevenson carried his presi dential campaign into the Wis consin bailiwick of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy yesterday with the assertion that the "voice of the accuser" must not still all others in the land. The Democratic nom inee in an apparent team opera tion with President Truman and Sen. John Sparkman geared up a fresh onslaught on Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and the Repub lican record on domestic and for eign policies. EN ROUTE WITH EISENHOW ER Dwight D. Eisenhower, who recently said that President Tru man was shooting "harmless blanks" in his direction, was ready yesterday to "fire some real heavy salvoes" at the chief executive. Greensboro Alumni Will Hear Gray Speak Consolidated University Presi dent Gordon Gray will address a meeting of UNC's Greensboro alumni in that city next Tuesday night. The affair is held annually by the Greensboro group in con junction with the University Day celebration. Befriend A Friend Dig Deep For George, Canine Shooting Victim George the Collie, a sort of personal pet to all who know the friendly homeless dog, got shot yesterday. But the doughty doggie isn't dead. He's very much alive and in a local animal hospital and will recover from the wounds received from an unidentified assailant. "The dog's face is swollen very badly but we think he will recover," Dr. L. L. Vine said yesterday afternoon. "We removed some No. 8 bird shot Sss&: 'Wis y . iLrii isS&$& v. A... ,. ,. .:-.;-3 A DEBATE BETWEEN DEMOCRATIC and Republican candi dates for slate office turned into an uproar when Attorney Gen eral Francis E. Kelly punched a heckler on the stage of the Hovey Institute. At left. Moderator Randolph Webber pulls Kelly (second from left) away from John Marschalk of Newton. Mass., after the attack. A Waltham police officer is at extreme left. UP Telephoto. eoiSTracTsng ue Again Toni The Legislature tonight will attempt for a second time to pass an amendment which would revamp existing dormi tory districts. The bill provides for rezoning the two existing dormitory ' districts into five districts. 'More Jobs For Grads Seniors Told "The school placement office is the most efficient means yet de vised to heip - students find jobs and to assist business and govern mental organizations in filling their manpower needs," V i c k Chemical Company Personnel Manager K. G. Bevan Jr. told seniors here Tuesday night. He urged them to take advantage of the University Placement Service. In discussing prospects for the coming year, Bevan quoted es timates that approximately 1,000 companies throughout the United States will be recruiting about five percent more college grad uates in 1953 than in 1952. "Industry really needs good men," Bevan said, "men who want and are seeking a' future, not security. Persons with well defined objectives who will in ject themselves fully into any work and exert their full capa bilities will find that in jobs with a real future, security takes care of itself." Following Bevan's talk, Joe Galloway, director of placement at UNC, said 237 companies sent interviewers to the campus last year to interview students and that nearly 600 requests for grad uates were received by mail and telephone. "We expect to have available to Carolina students this year more employment op portunities than ever before, and we hope all seniors will take ad vantage of our service," Gallo way said. from the dog's face." An unidentifie'd student found George on campus and took the canine to the hospital. The dog's owner is not known and several students suggested that the campus raise the small funds necessary for George's medical bills. Dr. Vine said he would not charge for profes sional services but would charge only the cost of food and drugs. The Daily Tar Heel will ac cept funds and turn them over to Dr. Vine. ghi According to law, if the Elec- tions Committee fails to report on the proposed amendment at this third regular session, it will automatically be put on the floor. The committee so far has dead locked on all discussions of the proposed amendment. Jack Stilwell, one of the leading proponents of the bill, declared yesterday, "This amendment would provide closer contact be tween the student and his leg islator. It is by no means a poli tical move, but actually a return to the original system provided for in the Constitution". Opponents of the bill feel that the proposed amendment would give them a political disadvantage and advocate a different type re- zoning. Under the present system, dormitories are divided into two districts which together contain approximately 1,800 students. Each student, depending upon his district, votes for eight or nine legislators, rne proposea amendment, breaking these two districts down into five, would necessiatate the student voting for only four or five legislators. The amendment if passed would leave women's dormitory and town districts unchanged. "I'd like to urge all students to contact their legislators and tell them to support this bill," said President Ham Horton yes terday. "This amendment would bring the students and legislators together in a closer relationship," he added. SUAB SUAB committee chairmen will meet this afternoon at 1 o'clock for a luncheon meeting in the upper dining room of Lenoir HalL Women's Glee Club The Women's Glee Club will meet today at 4:30 in Hill Hall for a rehearsal in preparation for the University Day concert next Monday. Alpha Phi Omega The Alpha Phi Omega Campus Project Committee will meet to night at 9 o'clock in the chapter room of the YMCA Building. Following that will be a meeting of the Executive Committee at 10 . o'clock. 4Vlli.fa l mmm II I II -II II mm I M n mil Replacement Not Selected For Editorship Snook, Dear Seen As Top Candidates For Vacant Spot Barry Farber, editor of The Daily Tar Heel since last April, resigned yesterday to enter the armed forces. His successor will either be elected in a special election late this month or in the an nual fall elections on November 18 If the latter should occur, President Ham Horton will ap point an interim editor until that tUFMber is a special student from Greensboro. He graduated last June with a degree in journalism. He was elected editor of the newspaper in a landslide majority in last spring's campus Sections. He said yesterday he did not apply for draft deferment because my studies having been formal ly completed, I feel as though I ,J rpa?nn for remain- nave nu vaj-iVA - -ing in civilian life." HesaiditwiU S a minimum of 21 days before he is inducted. Farber had been expecting to be called but did not know he had been accepted until he received a telegram from his mother -yesterday afternoon. It said: Yoar certificate of acceptability to arm ed forces arrived this morning. Love and tears, Mother " Already being mentioned as candidates are Harry Snook and Walt Dear. Snook is a longtime columnist for The Daily Tar Heel and also works on the Durham Morning Herald. He has had wide experience in radio writing. Dear is Publications uuoi and served as editor of the sum mer Tar Heel as well as having held down a reporter's job on the paper previously. Dear ran for the editorship his sophomore year but was defeated by a more ex (See FARBER, Page 3) Payments To Korean Vets Begin Dec. 7 Korean veterans who entered school this fall will not receive any subsistence payments until about the first of December, CoL F. C. Shepard, military affairs ad viser, said yesterday. This does not mean, however, that the first two months of school will have to be financed by the vts themselves. The GI Bill for Korean Veterans provides that subsistence be paid one month after the completion of a month of benefits. This, along with the necessary delay caused by the Veterans' Administrations' re cord process, is responsible for the tardiness in mailing checks. Shepard also said Korean vets must turn in to Room 315 South Building the form 7-1993 (cer tificate for education and train ing) before they can receive any payments. Those who did not turn in this form at registration but filled out application for it should receive it by mail within (See VETS, page 3) Do It Juniors and Law Students should have their 1953 Yackery Yack pictures made today and tomorrow. Picture dress is while shirts, lies and coals for the boys and while blouses for the girls. The photographing is being done in the basemenl of Gra ham Memorial. There is no charge. Yesterday was the lasl day for Sophomores and no more will be accepted, the editors said.

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