WEATHER Cloudy and cold with 52 high today. Yester day's high. 51; low. 40 CHURCH e news of you and your church is on jage 4. V hrea VOLUME LXI NUMBER 49 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 23. 1S52 FOUR PAGES TODAY et"3 n n i n - 3 u 11 I I I I i I 1 1 I 1 I ill I C ki I K Mil V 4 Oi ft ' -A v - & J SLzit. T..i.Jri,.aA'lA.C,K .9.?.RE. WALLIN is shown going for a "7 oniy xaeniiiiea Duke player is halfback Bill Lea ?u.ke!ltS successful in keeping most of Carolina's gains short, Tar Heel photo by Cornell Wright. World Health, Peace Linked 'Irrevocably By Mary Grace Megginson Dean Edward G. McGavran of the University School of Public Health, appointed . by President Truman as one of three U. S. dele gates to a world health assembly in Switzerland, comes home after a three-month study tour of Eu rope convinced that world health and world peace are tied together irrevocably. The assembly is the governing body of the World Health Organi zation of the United Nations. Dean McGavran said that he believes that the World Health Organization "holds the greatest promise for "world peace in the future." He made the first report on his study tour, which covered eight European nations as well as the Geneva sessions, in a lecture this week before faculty and stu dents of the School of Public Health. Problems of world health and world peace dominated the discus sions in Geneva, Dean McGavran said, pointing out that "good in ternational relations and under standing in the past have been most successful in the health field." Atlhough the world health or ganization is only five years old, Dr. McGavran said it has accom plished much. He listed 10 ma jor accomplishments: the stand ardization of quality and dosage of drugs, antibiotics, vaccines, vitamins and serums; establish ment of uniformity in reporting communicable diseases, deaths, etc.; efforts to control the traffic in narcotics and habit forming drugs; adoption of a new code of international sanitary regulations; encouragement of training pro grams across the world; assisting countries in the control of certain conditions, such as malaria, ven ereal disease, and tuberculosis; the Fellowship program; expert committee program which is de signed to avoid duplication of ac- tivities; consultative service in i - " r- V,,1Vi certain areas ua. I" ucatum, sanitation, and influenza control; and tecnnicai com where people are drawn together , x TMom IU WUIK UUl SUllXlXUlia iw f none were able to work out in dependently. GRID SCORES 41 W&M State 27 Alabama Maryland 3 Auburn Clemson 43 Florida Miami 28 Wake Forest Wurman 14 Kentucky Tennessee 14 13 West Virginia So. Carolina 6 21 Virginia -- Wj 7 29 George Wash Richmond 7 34 Citadel Davidson 14 51 Villanoa Boston U. b 14 Columbia PTOVtfL n 33 Princeton Dartmouth 0 26 Svrarus Fordharm 13 41 Yale HJ,rvar, n 28 Holy Cross iemPi 0 17 Penn. State .V,'"t 0 27 Rutgers vrffli 26 28 Northwestern :-- ,xl"noi? fl 21 Purdue - IndTla"f J 27 Notre Dame lw X 27 Iowa State KansaSta tS 20 Missouri Kanl l 62 Michigan State arq" 21 21 Minnesota - Wisconsin 21 34 Oklahoma - Nebraska 13 27 Ohio State Michlg an 7 14 S. California UCLA iz WlH BRIEF ASHEVILLE A sudden 22 inch snowfall swung northward nto the middle Atlantic states after leaving clogged highways, and fallen telegraph and power lines over a wide area in Western North Carolina and the mountain sections of Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia yesterday. Commun ications and transportation were paralyzed for many hours yes terday morning. All communica tions were cut off from Knoxville, Tenn., where the traditional Tennessee-Kentucky football game was scheduled during the after noon. SEOUL South Korean and American officers said yesterday they believe the Communists are preparing to mount a new offen sive against Sniper Ridge and Tri angle Hill on the central front. Enemy groups up to 50 men jab bed at South Korean positions on Sniper Ridge until dawn yester day. Troops holding a slope po sition on Jane Russell Hill on Tri angle beat back a heavier probe of near-company strength. U. N. battlefront commanders said these probes indicated a new Red build up was in the making and that the Reds would mount another all-out attempt to drive the Allies from the vital north-south ridge lines before the first snow falls. VIENNA, Austria Former Czech Deputy Foreign Minister Arthur London pleaded guilty to treason and espionage yesterday in Communism's greatest show trials since the Moscow purge, the Prague radio reported. Lon don, from a microphone-equipped stand in Pankrac prison, pleaded guilty to charges against him and admitted "direct contact" with the American brothers Hermann and Noel Field, Pra gue said. DETROIT C. E. Wilson, Presi dent-elect Eisenhower's choice for cretarv of defense, prepared 1 yesterday to accompany his new "07 The ' eneral Motors president earlier , General Moxorsp had reiuscu i that he would accompany Eisen hower. He revealed his plans at a news conference on Friday, but had no further statement about plans for the trip or his new job, "I'm iust a bush-leaguer and n't talk about the home runs I'm going to hit until after I've hit them," Wilson saia COSHOCTON, Ohio Funeral c0rvi.c for William F . ureen, -irfpnt and leader of 8,000,000 a -Eviration of Labor niencn members, will be held tomorrow in this small east-central Ohio The elderly leader of the country's largest labor union died quietly though unexpectedly in his modest white farm house here Friday following a heart attack. Green became ill in October and mPrl to his home here in the rolling hill country where he was short gain in yesterday's game (24) who is advancing on Wallin. and won the game, 34-0. Daily More Funds Are Sought For Medicine Special to The Daily Tar Heel NEW YORK, Nov. 22 Acting under the impetus of a warning I by President - elect Eisenhower that medical education in the ' icies? In the long run, may not United States can be put on a ' the masses of Asia become even sound basis "free of the threat of more important than Europe it-government-sponsored plans or self?" schemes to control it," the Nation-; For he first time in historv. al Fund for Medical Education ' last night officiaUy launched an expanded $10,000,000 fund-raising campaign in support of the schools. General Eisenhower, one of the j orieinal founders of thp National i Fund, telegraphed S. Sloan Colt, president, the Bankers Trust Company of New York, and the Fund's President, as follows: I regret that the heavy pres- i sure of my November schedule ! makes it impossible for me to at tend the meeting of the Board of Trustees of the National Fund for Medical Education. You already know how much I believe in its work in helping to meet critical financial problems of the nation's medical schools. Only if our med ical schools remain solvent, can we hope to place medical educa tion on a sound basis, free of the threat of government - sponsored plans or schemes to control it. I sincerely hope that American in dustry will support to the limit the campaign which will be launched at the November meet ing by Colby M. Chester." Former President Herbert Hoo ver, Honorary Chairman of the National Fund, set the keynote for the forthcoming campaign when he warned that "A real break down in our independently en dowed medical training system would be a national disaster." In Memorial Hall At Old Glenn Millet The United States Air Force Dance Band will give a concert in Memorial Hall at 8 o'clock to night. Formerly the Glenn Miller service unit, the band plays on a world-wide basis. Over 200 of the best musicians from the top dance orchestras in the nation were au ditioned in selecting the 18 men which make up the band which operates out of Boiling . Field, Washington. The concert is one in a series being given by the band in North Carolina cities for the benefit of "Operation Christmas 1952," a project designed to bring a pres ent by Santa Clause plane to each orphan in the state. The proceeds from tonight's performances, sponsored by Al pha Phi Omega service fraternity and the Chapel Hill Jaycees, are wholly dedicated to this project. Tickets will be on sale' at $1 each at Memorial Hall tonight. West May Be Losing Its Race In Middle East WC Panel Thinks Asiatic Populace Has Two Choices Special to The Daily Tar Heex GREENSBORO, Nov. 22 A frantic, and perhaps losing race in the Middle East against time and Russia was described here yesterday during day-long discus sions of the annual Harriet Elli ott Social Science Forum at Wom an's College. Three imported experts led campus talks on the subject "Ten sions in the Middle East." The trio was composed of Dr. Corne lius William de Kiewiet, president of Rochester University, Jacob C. Hurewitz, Columbia University School of International Affairs and T. Cuyler Young, Princeton. Dr. Young, posing the Middle Eastern question most sharply in the evening session, asked: "Has the time come when we must per- suade our allies, for their own good, to change their colonial rof- the areed. the millions nf the Middle East and Asia itself now have the choice of alterna tives in their course a choice which boils down to Russian communism'Tor 'Western democ- racy- Dr. de Kiewiet, in suggesting the perilous position of Western powers in the situation once said: "The meaning of Russia is that she seems to have solved the problem . of modernization in equipping a backward nation with the implements of modern society . . . While we have depended up on legislative means, money, time and debate, Russia has gone ahead with force and utilization of men." Dr. Young, however, suggested that only in Iran has communism taken such hold that it is dan gerous to the West at this mo ment. He described oil-rich Iran as crouching on the borders "of the Russian colossus, under the upraised paw of the bear, which has already seized her northern territory and has continued pres sure upon her." Young said that Iran, in view of "mistakes" in American foreign policy toward her since 1949, had been courageous in facing down the Russians on their demands. The Iranian party now in power seems determined to walk the line of neutrality and the United States by its neglect and errors of policy in recent years, has missed (See IRAN, Page 4) 8 O'Clock m L i ' ' i f ' , VA s. Aw sy a s f 2" -tyy's. i ' j - . v A ' s -54s- v p. K" . . - N. ; t " s w ss.I vs i ' Hf A " ! ! i ' i f t h n ' . J ; 1 j .X mmm 1 ,.. v ; fiilliiiif iiiiiiiiiiipiwiliil ! lis lti iiMrmfm-nl J,i i"f . . ... s ' . , .... Lutz on the Carolina five-yard line while Tar Heel safety Sonny Ridenhour rushes up in an attempt to break up the play. Riden hour failed, and Keziah scored on the second quarter play. Daily Tar Heel photo by Ruffin Woody. Curne In Hit "Spectator Sport" will be the Rev. David M. Currie's topic when tie addresses students at a University Sermon program tonight at 8:30 in Hill HaU. ",ie want to have something to unify the student body ; and have scheduled this sermon Three Plays To Be Cast On Tuesday Three new one-act plays by local authors will be cast Tues day at 4 p.m. in the Playmakers Theater. Scheduled for production Thursday and Friday, Dec. 11 and 12, they will be student-directed by James T. Pritchett of Lenoir, George Boozer of Lex ington, S. C, and William Bow ser of Chapel Hill. The entire production will be under the general supervision of Foster Fitz-Simons of the Dramatic Art Department. "The Silver Birch" by Sydney Litwack, graduate assistant from Los Angeles, is a drama of prejudice among French Canadians. "Buck" by Tommy Rezzuto of Asheville and "Un cross Those Stars" by Emily Selden of Chapel Hill are both comedies. Unit Here I onigh BRASS SECTION OF AIRMEN OF NOTE .rth 111 oDeaic -.1 .Qi'.trOaCK M Hall Tonight ac a time -when we hoped the most people would be able to at tend," Pat Aydlett, University Sermons chairman said yesterday. "We hope to have an outstanding speaker such as Mr. Currie ap pear on our program each quar ter." Mr. Currie, graduate of Choate School in Wallingford, Conn, re ceived his BA at the University of Texas and has traveled in 15 European and Near East count tries. He attended Yale Divinity School and received his BD de gree from Austin Seminary, Aus tin, Tex. Currently he is director of the Department of Campus Christian Life of the Board of Christian Education of the Presbyterian Church of the United States. A Phi Beta Kappa, Mr. Currie was active in the Y program at the University of Texas and has par ticipated in religious activities at various other universities. He also has served for five years as chair man of the Synod of Texas Com mittee on student work. Tonight's program will open with Handel's "Prelude and Fu gue," with Bach's "Now Let Ev ery Tongue Adore Thee," as the call to worship. Ham Horton, president of the (See CURRIE, page 4) Duke's Devils Hand Carolina Worst Defea Red Smith Scores Three Touchdowns In Carolina Rout By Tom Peacock Daily Tar Heel Asst Sports Editor A far superior Duke Uni versity football team ripped open the North Carolina de fense at will yesterday to score four times in the first half and hand Carolina its worst j licking in the 64-year old ri valry. x near capacity crowa 01 saw Duke triumph, 34-0. The Tar Heels came close to a score only once in the game, pene trating the tight Duke defense to its 10-yard line before losing the ball on a fumble. Quarterback Worth Lutz direct ed the running of Red Smith, Charlie Smith, and Byrd Looper so effectively that he seldom had to pass, the Blue Devils amassing 349 yards on the ground. Red Smith, running from right halfback, was the leading Duke ball carrier, scoring three times while running for 125 yards in 12 carries. Looper scored once, and the fifth Blue Devil touch down came on a pass from Lutz to end Bill Keziah. Red Smith added four out of five conversions for a personal 22 point total. Flo Worrell made the best ef fort of the Carolina backs, gain ing 58 yards in 13 . carries. The Carolina offense looked better than it had all year, but could only gain a total of 165 yards as it seldom had the ball. Carolina didn't cross the Duke 45 until late in the third quarter, when quarterback Charlie Motta directed a sustained drive from the Carolina 15 to the Duke 10. The Tar Heels were in Duke ter ritory three other times, a one yard penetration seconds before the end of the game, and four, five and 15 yard other jaunts. Duke won the toss, took the kickoff on its 17-yard line, and scored six first downs and five minutes and 59 seconds later. The Blue Devil line tore gaping holes in the Carolina defensive unit, and the two Smiths and Looper walt zed straight down the field with Red Smith going over for the score from the two. His conver sion attempt was wide, and Duke took a 6-0 lead at 5:49 of the first quarter. The next Duke score took less time as the Blue Devils started closer to the Carolina goal. Caro lina's co-captain Bud Wallace punted to the Duke 47 after the Tar Heels bogged down. Seven plays later, Looper ran 17 yards from the-Carolina 18 to the 1, and then scored on the next play. Red Smith, who runs right according to Duke support ers, kicked the extra point with his left foot, and Duke held a 13-0 lead at the end of the first quar ter. Duke gave the crowd more than an inkling of the coming rout by adding seven more points less than two minutes after the start of the second period. The Blue Devils started from their own 47-yard line after tak ing another Wallace punt, but wasted less time by taking to the air. Runs by fullback Jack Kistler and halfback Lloyd Caudle gave Duke a first down on the Carolina 25, but a holding pen alty put the Blue Devils back on the 41. (See DEFEAT, Page 3) Staff Meeting A staff meeting has been call ed for tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in The Daily Tar Heel newsroom. Editor Wall Dear asked all staff members to be present. He also extended an in vital ion io stu dents interested in working on the newspaper lo attend. I i I i born iri a small log