U H C LIB3A3T SERIALS DEPT. ; j 1ttt it ,jq.u;:.3- WEATHER Fair and warmer with 58 high today. Yesterday's high. 48; low, Zl- ill, li. g. SSL 9 Your chance to be a parliamentarian. S edit on page 2. VOLUME XLI NUMBER 25 CHAPEL HILL. N. C WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY A I CVll 17 1 II fill II chedule UN International Festivities Include Movies, Two Presentations By German Students A complete schedule was announced yesterday for the annual United Nations Day celebration here this Friday A panel forum-discussion, "The United Nations Seven State Leader To Address Demo Group Mayne Albright, prominent State Democratic leader, will ad dress a campus "Stevenson for President" rally here next Mon day. Sponsored by; the local Young Democrats Club, the rally will be held in Gerrard Hall at 7:30 p.m. Albright's talk is expected to deal generally with the "Ad vantages Offered by the Democra tic Party to the Young Citizen." Often mentioned as a candidate for governor in 1956, Albright is now practicing law in Raleigh. He was a principal in the 1948 election, but was defeated in the Democratic primary. A graduate of the University, Albright is also well known for his activities in the World Federalists movement. Manday's rally will mark the beginning of intensified activities here by the campus YDC as the j election campaigning moves into j the homestretch. Headed by , second year law student John Sanders, of Four Oaks, the club ; recently was singled out for re- cognition of its activities by the National Democratic organization. Dorms May Be Liable For Lodgers Hie Interdormitory Council Monday night passed a resolution ! to establish a committee to in-1 vestigate the feasibility of hold- j ing dormitories responsible as a group for the actions of their residents. If the recommendations of the committee are approved, dormi tories may be subject to fines or suspension of social room privi leges for infraction of IDC rules. Under present rules, individuals are held responsible for their actions. Elected members' of the IDC Court for this school year were Harry Faggart, Bud Moon, Wiley Kennedy, Gene Cain, Harry Pears all and Mack Hoover. Jerry Cook and John Guilbert were elected alternates to the IDC Court. The court has primary jurisdic tion in cases envolving violation of regulations governing Univer sity residence halls. Baxter Miller, Gerald Parker and Al Braxton were elected to meet with the Dance Committee for the Duroose of selecting a per son to represent the IDC on that committee. Members were advised by. IDC Paul Somerville that A VAMUUM the success of the court remained in their hands. Dorm presidents and IDC representatives as well as dorm residents are on the 100K nut ,-. -.Tiotinnii! of IDC and dormitory rules. Thp onnrt ran send a violation s case to the Men's- Council if it thinks the violator warrants sus pension from school. Last Day Interviews to select UNC's delegation io the annual North Carolina Student Legislative Assembly are being held ioinghl from 8 to 11 o'clock in the Men's Council Room of Graham Memorial. -n Twenty-one delegates will be chosen to represent Carolina at the three day assemly sche duled Nov. 20-22. in Raleigh. Today is the last day- for interviews. Re I ease' Day Friday I ears of Achievement" will be iheld tomorrow in the T.ihm in Auditorium (ground floor). The moderator will be Dwight Rhyne of the Extension Service. Par ticipants will be David G. , Mon roe of the Political Science De partment, J. E. Ingram of the Economics Department, John P. Gillin of sociology and anthropol ogy and C. H. Pegg of -the De partment of History. On Friday, three movies will be shown at Gerrard Hall. They are we The People," "Seeds of Destiny" and "This is the United Nations." All three movies will be shown at 9 and 10 a.m. and 12:15, 1 and 4:30 p.m. There will be a noon ceremony from 11:45 to 12:05 Friday on the steps of South Building. The ceremony will include the pres entation by a group of German students from the University of Goetingen of a book from the Rector of their university to the Chancellor of UNC. Martha Shaefer will present a picture from the Mayor of Goetingen to the Mayor of Chapel Hill. Mem bers of this group are Otto Vehrenkamp, Martha Shaef er, Dr. Fritz Hartmann, Eberhard runaiger ana neimutn ueicner. A group of students represent- member nations of the UN will then present the UN Flag to be flown the rest of the day. This will be followed by the reading of a statement written by Oscar Hammerstein II, "More Than a Dream." An international supper will be served in Lenoir Hall at 5:45. People are requested to go through the cafeteria line be tween 5:45 and 6:45 and take their trays into the north dining room. An international menu has been prepared which will include Dan- ish meatballs, humita (Argentina), broccoli and cheese sauce (U.S.), French bread, pineapple (Hawaii an", salad, coffee (Brazil), and blueberry crisp pudding repre senting Canada. Total cost is 85 cents. A program of international mu sic and dancing will be included after the supper. Community singing of international folk songs will also be a part of the program. Several groups of students from different countries will present special entertainment. Interna tional students, faculty, and (See UN DAY, page 4) Entry Deadline Nears For Yearbook Queens Twelve girls will be selcted for the 1953 Yack Beauty section Nov. 26 in Memorial Hall. Deadline for entries is Nov. 5. Each organization may sponsor as manv entries as it wishes. Ap plications must be accompanied by a $5 fee But Not For Long? Marilyn Leaves Them Sifting In Phone Booth Special to The Daily Tab Hefx STORS, Conn., Oct. 21 It all started when Lambda Chi brother, Robert van Hagen casually commented in the fra ternity lounge, "Wouldn't it be something if Marilyn Monroe came to our winter formal?" Within 20 niinutes a group of 14 Lambda Chi's had pitched in from a nickle to a dollar and a half each and the coast-to-coast wires were humming with a call to the Hollywood star. With the co-operation of a friendly operator van Hagen called the 20th Century Fox movie studios and was referred to her agent, who gave her home number. After over two 5W!SS!e!W9! n JOHN KARSTVER. 65-year-old Pittsburgh man did not like taxes, so he burrowed himself a home under the sidewalk and there he's lived for the past 20 years, avoiding work and taxes. Shown at left is Kaxsiver's underground home, and on the right he is shown at his latest address the Pittsburgh jaiL UP Tele-photo. Students May Cheer Team By Telegram Stay-at-home-students are be ing offered the chance to cheer the team at Notre Dame this weekend. The University Club in coopera tion with the Chapel Hill Western Union is sponsoring a drive ,to have group telegrams with mem ber's signatures on them. Here's how the plan will work, as ex plained by John Seely, UC presi dent: The club will solicit dormito ries and fraternity and sorority houses through Friday. The groups may word their own tele grams and a fee of five cents per signature will be charged. Western Union will operate a direct circuit to Notre Dame and the telegrams will be transmitted and delivered to the team tied in blue and white ribbon. Any group not contacted is asked to phone The Daily Tar Heel office at 9-3361 or 9-3371. SP Chooses Nominees For Junior Class The Student Party's nomina tions for Junior Class officers X 3 V.i. were announcea yesteiuajr uj Chairman Ken Barton. Nomina tions were also announced for two legislature seats from Men's Dormitory District One. Junior Class nominees are Wade Matthews,, president, Ellen Wood, vice president, Bill Bullock, sec retary, Martha Bridges, treasurer, and Jim Cocherham, social chair man. Don Geiger and Bill Brown were nominated from the dormi tory district. Representatives elected to temporarily fill vacan cies pending the Fall elections were Allen Bader, Harold White, Baxter Miller, Skip Nelson, and Jim Haney. hours of phoning,, he finally managed to deliver a message. He stated that Miss Monroe had been elected sponsor of the L ambda Chi Frosty Ball to be held in December and he would like to know if she could make it. Then he waited as the mes sage was delivered. ... Miss Monroe was making a movie and could not come to the phone. However she asked van Hagen to call the next afternoon and she would speak to him personally. The latest development: van Hagen's meals will be served in the telephone booth until the call comes. '- 4- 'I'M""! 'i in i M BRIEF WASHINGTON Republican leaders said yesterday nothing short. of a "personal apology" to General Eisenhower will make amends for President Truman's "unfortunate attempt to intro duce bigotry" into the election campaign. They rejected as in adequate, the statement which Truman issued late Monday denying that he called- Eisen hower anti-Catholic and anti Jewish. Truman described as "moral blindness" Ike's indirect support of the McCarran immi gration bill. . WHISTLE - STOPPING WITH TRUMAN President Truman yesterday described RepubUcan ciaims tnat his administration has been soit toward Communism as an "outrageous faisenood." He said the Republican high com mand has uesd "every propagan da technique and huge sums of money" to try to put over this "big lie" on the American public He said the government has been taking "concrete measures to fight communism at home and abroad" while General Eisenhower and his party have been trying "to sow false seeds of suspicion." . SEOUL Two Chinese bat talions charged Sniper Ridge tnrough mud and driving ram last night, but the Reds faued to break through murderous streams of Soutii Korean machine - gun and rifle fire. Rain concealed tne some 1,500 Reds as they sneaked up1 the base of the central front mountain. However, they had in dicated an attack was in the mak ing by unleashing a heavy artil lery barrage. The Reds did not succeed in getting to within hand grenade range of Republic of Ko rea 2nd Division defenders. TAIPEH, Formosa Chinese Nationalist leader Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek yesterday urged the United States to let his US- equipped troops invade Red China. Chiang told a press confer ence he agrees with the Koumin- tang party that such an invasion by his forces is the only me.ans of halting Communist aggression in Asia. WASM1JNUTUJN bolt COai mine operators urged then- strik ing miners to come back to tne pits yesterday ana end a mass protest walkout that mushroom ed when the government chopped 40 cents off the workers' latest pay raise. John L. Lewis called the 200-man policy committee oi his United Mine Workers union to a meeting today in Washington to discuss the "rank and file' strikes. LONDON A former Soviet Russian army colonel asserted yesterday that Premier Josef Stalin has abandoned a plan to go into semi-retirement because hi leadership and prestige are need ed to carry out new Communist party plans. ay makers To With Death The Pulitzer prize-winning drama and Broadway hit, Death of a Salesman" opens at the Playmakers Theater to night at 8:30. Arthur Miller s play is the story of an old, broken sales man's realization of his insigni ficance. The play also opens the 1952- 53 Carolina Playmaker's season. It will have a five night run end ing Sunday. Thomas Patterson of the Playmaker staff is directing the production. William Trotman, Winston Salem, is cast in the role of Willy Loman, the salesman, and Mary Long, Chapel Hill, plays his wife. The parts of their sons will be taken by James T. Pritchett, Le noiT; and Donald Treat, Water bury, Conn. Other members of the cast are Milton Beyer, Alden, N. Y., as Bernard; Anne Miller, Albany, Ga., as the woman; Walter Creech, Chapel Hill, as Charley; John Bonitz, Jr., Greensboro, as Howard Wagner; Jan Carter, Washington, D. C, as Jenny; Paul Anisko, Elizabeth, N. J., as Stanley; Mary Helen Crain, Dur ham, as Miss Forsythe, and Judith Taylor, Laurenceville, N. J., as Letta. William I. Long, Playmakers technical director, supervised the building of an entire two-story house on the stage. Long has been technical director here for! several years and has had nine seasons with "The Lost Colony." The lighting is being done by Norma Cartwright and Claude Garren. Approximately 150 new stu dents were admitted to the dress rehearsal last night. Tickets are still available at Swain Hall and Ledbettsr-Pick-ard, or after 7:15 at the theater. Humor Mag About Ready Tarnation, campus humor magazine, will be out for Ger- McDermott of the Duke Univer mans weekend, Editor Tom sity Law School said in an ad Alexander said yesterday. i dress here Monday that only the The 32 page campus comic election of General Dwight D. publication will be chock full of Eisenhower to the presidency can cartoons, jokes, poems, photo features and comic advertise-, ments. It will be full sized and have a two color cover. "In order to keep the quality of the magazine up to par. weithe ouo of Eisenhower neea more suDscripuons, wiu Alexander. Subscription blanks will be dis tributed to men's dormitories in an effort to increase subscriptions. Many Woman's College and St. Mary's students have subscribed to the magazine, Alexander said. Constitution Copies Are Now Available Copies of the revised constitu tion are available to all interested students, Attorney-General Phi Horton said yesterday. The revised constitution con tains all the amendments and is fully up to date. Half-Grown Larva . . J Prof Solves Mystery Of News-Making Worm ' By Jody Levey " The mystery of the worm turned yesterday. Dr. C. D. Beers of the Zool ogy Department identified the news-making worm as the "half-grown larva of the yellow swallow-tail butterfly." The query from Hamlet, which made the news last week, was addressed to the "Worm Department, UNC" and read, "Wish you would satisfy our curiosity and wonder why it was found in my house." En closed in the envelope was a slightly mashed worm. Open A nigra ' i 5 a I e - -v I - V - ' I - ' r ' -' - i S . : - -mi i ..." , v i. ' i k ' ,.' -t I " " ' t ' 'A, 6 xK-tfvJk-x-:-: I. BIFF, JIM PRITCHETT of Lenoir, recoils under attack from the umbrella of Uncle Ben, Harry Davis of Chapel Hill, in a scene from tonight's season opener by the Playmakers, "Death of a Salesman." Curtain time is 8:30 al the Playmakers Theater and tickets still are on sale at Swain Hall and Ledbetter-Pickard. Photo by Kai Jurgensen. Speakers Laud Ike As America's Last Hope Asserting that this nation has moved faster and faster toward 100 percent Socialism and Com- munism under the New Deal and Fair Deal policies, Dean Malcolm x "cc Dean McDermott was the prin cipal speaker at a Citizens For Eisenhower meeting held in Ger- rad Wall under the snonsorshin of supporters. The rally was attended by 150 to 200 townspeople, students and faculty members. Ham Horton Jr., Winston-Salem president of the student body, who is chair man of the local Eisenhower Club, presided. He said another rally would be held next week. Other speakers, in addition to Dean McDermott, included Jesse Page Jr., Charlotte. State Chair man of Citizens For Eisenhower, Harold Young, State Chairman of Citizens for Eisenhower in New Hampshire, and Capt. (ret.) E. E. Hazlett, Chapel Hill, U. S. Navy. Captain Hazlett, who said he has been a colse friend of General Eisenhower for 60 years, read Beers replied,' "Occasionally a caterpillar falls to the ground. Such an individual might be carried into the house on cloth ing, cut flowers, or other ob jects. The striking coloration and peculiar markings of swallow-tail caterpillars almost never fail to attract special at tention, so that your curiosity is quite understandable." The letter and the worm land ed on Mrs. Gustave A. Harrer's information desk in -South Building Friday. She turned the request and Exhibit A over to Beers. soman S7- x f part of a recent letter from the General in which Eisenhower said "I have always been guided by what, in my opinion, would be best for the nation as a whole, rather than by what might appear to be the most popular thing to do under any given set of cir cumstances." Page declared that "the can didacy of General Eisenhower is the future hope of America. Our generation has darn near sold this nation down the river, and our young folks have become quite suspicious. We have let all sorts of wild economic dreams leads us away from our good ole solid Americanism for which so many of our forefathers fought and died. It we don't return our government back to the social, religious, and economic freedom, we will be lost. "The Americans for Demo cratic Action and the CIO are playing for keeps." Page, who said he had voted the national Democratic ticket all his life 1940, said that all indi cations now are that this state will give Eisenhower a majority Nov. 4. He said that "Senator Willis Smith is going to vote for Eisenhower, and in the final ana- ! lysis, and when the curtain is be hind him, Bill Umstead is going to vote for Ike." Dean McDermott said that "I am a real Democrat I learned my democracy at the feet of that great Democrat, Woodrow Wil son, and worKea actively ior him." He said that Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt had warned against the dangers of centrali zation, "such as we face today," (See IKE, page 4) No Bum Steer Special to Thz Daily Tar Heel. RALEIGH. Oct. 21. Gordon and Bowman Gray had a lot of bull at the N. C. Slate Fair last week enough, in fact, to win ,a blue ribbon award. Brookberry Karl, a bull owned by the UNC President and his brother, look first place in the N. C. junior cham pionship. Another of Ihe broth er's entries, Sawaga Improve ments Nettie, won first place in the female guernsey division,.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view