ti n c xtsaARt SERIALS"" SEPT. CHAPEL HILL, Jl. C. ah 1 LZ3 SEE STORY ON SPORTS PAGE A. WEATHER Nice Sunday wea ther today. Enjoy .yourslef. -GONE Logan Wilson is on a one-way jour ney. See ediotrial on page 2. VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 81 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY i J i-1 " J I I 'Hl 1 El m rl UNC Gifts Will Go To I Co re a Manning Muntzing ' Korea, a focal point in today's history, has been chosen recipient of the contributions made by Caro lina students and faculty members to the international phase of the Campus Chest drive. Addressing the Campus Chest Board after their decision, Wilmer Kitchen, executive secretary of the WSSF, said, "Korea is not Korea's fight, but rather the entanglements of a diversified world. This world has destroyed many of the institu tions in Korea over issues, for the most part, entirely foreign to its victim. "It is this same world, which having destroyed, must now con sider the problem, and it is their problem, of restoration. It must consider the problem; . but above all, it must act on this problem." As executive secretary to the "World Student Service Fund which offers assistance to international universities, Kitchen told the Cam pus Chest Board in its Friday af ternoon meeting of the "desperate need" for assistance to the war ravaged universities of Korea. The United Nation forces have asumed the responsibility of food for the children and homeless in order to prevent any hunger riots, and the fighting of diseases also has been assumed to protect the fighting men. - - : - "Only the WSSF has risen to the- task of education for the .Koreans, declared Kitchen. "A task that can not be done empty handed or alone." The Carolina Campus Chest group was shown a letter written by President Eisenhower, com mending the World Student Ser vice Fund, for its job done so far in Korea. Stuart Jones, chairman of the lo cal Campus Chest campaign, an ' nounced that the decision to split the program this year into two drives was final since no objec tions were raised by the board. Commenting on this, Kitchen was "pleased to know that a split has been made. A successful cam See CAMPUS CHEST, page 4) 4 ' " . V ' 1 . ' i : l T "-- V v s -X? n NO, THEY'RE NOT BARBECUING THEIR socks. Seems that it's just so cold in Korea that wet socks freeze solid before they have time to dry, so these ingenious soldiers, Cpl. Malcolm L. East lick and Pfc. Fred Leblanc, have devised this "sock-roaster" to dry them out. NEA Telephoto. Consumers To Receive Natural Gas In April Sensationalism Bad For Press Warns Russell Chemist's Talk Set Tomorrow In Wilson Hall By Dave Dear "Sensationalism, in the, newspa pers of today is one of the factors that make for poor relations with the readers, Phillips" Russell, pro fessor of journalism, told the final session of the Newspaper Institute of the North Carolina Press As sociation yesterday morning. Speaking on "Great Phases in Modern Journalism" he pointed out that sensationalism isn't to be con fused with yellow journalism, but rather the misrepresentation of ac tual facts. Picking out small and incidental parts of news copy and playing it up in. the lead paragraph and headlines is bad practice, Russell observed. He noted that many of the large metropolitan publications in the recent presidential cam paign did this frequently. Noting the trends toward pic torial newspapers, Russell com mented, "Now we are in the pic tuTo aep. Manv newspaper sub scribers are lookers, not readers All they are interested in is the story in , the picture with an ex planatory caption. Proof of this is the story in Life Magazine. Prof. George Glocker, chairman of the Department of Chemistry, Iowa University, will deliver public lecture on "Originality and Simultaneity of Human Thought" in Wilson Hall Tomorrow. The North Carolina chapter of the Society of Sigma Xi, chemistry fraternity, is sponsoring the lec ture, which begins at 8 o'clock. , Prof. Glocker is on temporary leave from the University of Iowa while serving as director of the Chemical Sciences Division of the U. S. Army Office of Ordinance' Research at Durham. A distinguished scientist in the field of theoretical chemistry, he possesses an unusual ability to make scientific topics clear to the lavman. He is the author, along with his wife, of a book, "Chemis try in Our Time," and has been a notable success in presenting series of popular lectures on atomic and nuclear structure in various Iowa cities. COME ONA MY HOUSE Connor Dormitory will make history today. The dorm is holding open house this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock and has invited faculty and students. Its open house is the result of visiting privileges iust granted. It is the first dor mitory to be given the privilege cf unchaperoned women visitors. North Carolina newspapers are slow in the realization of the im portance of pictures, he pointed out. Lack of local news on the front page of our state papers is also deplorable. There should always be at least one local, one state, one national, and one international ar ticle on the front page. Choi "For Rosenberg eniency 4- Natural gas piped in from Texas will be in use in Chapel Hill by ate April, according to the Dur ham oifice of the state pudiic Service Company. Installation of the 30 miles of ine extending from Burlington to Chapel Hill should begin shortly after the arrival of the first ship ments of pipe expected within two weeks. The change-over from the pres ent manufactured gas will involve The death sentence for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted atomic espionage agents, should be commuted, according to Dr. Zach ariah Chafee Jr., Weil lecturer. Dr. - Chafee spoke here at Me morial Hall last week for three nights on "Freedom of Speech." He is a professor at Harvard Law School and has been a prominent figure in American civil liberty causes. The fate of the Rosenbergs rests in .the hands of President Eisen hower. The case has gone through appellate courts and the supreme court. "There is some doubt of their guilt. They should live. Other peo pie have committed worse offenses and have been allowed , to live," he said. He cited the case oi a man who helped sabateurs during World War II and was sentenced to death for treason. President Tru man reduced this sentence to life imprisonment. Only one woman has ever been executed for treason. She was hanged in a bag because she was allegedly mixed up in the assination of Lincoln. i Trial judge Kaufman's statement that the Rosenbergs were respon sible for death of hundreds of boys in Korea is questionable, Dr. Cha fee declared. . , ? Cll BRIEF BOSTON New Haven Railroad officials reported yesterday anoth er case of brake trouble on a pas senger train and said it didn't hap pen "accidentally." It was the sceond case of brake trouble since the Federal Limited from Boston plowed into the Union Station con course" at Washington when its brakes failed. The Senate Com merce Committee- which investi gated the Union Station wreck, has turned its findings over to the FBI for investigation of pos sible sabotage. A New Haven spokesman disclosed here that a partly - closed angle cock valve was discovered Friday on the railroad's Boston to New York train, the New Yorker, during a routine inspection. r. rsoyvericsns Ploo WASHINGTON Charles E Wilson finally seemed assured of Senate approval as defense secre tary yesterday but at least one of his top defense aides faced possible rejection. Two prospective service secretaries Robert T. B. Stevens, Army, and Harold E. Talbott, Air Force appeared headed for con firmation trouble unless, like Wil son, they shed stock in companies doing business with the Defense Department. Stevens owns stock in textile firm selling to the De fense Department and Talbott owns stock in three companies doing business with the department. not cost to the 600 gas customers, here; Harold P.McnmolfdV1 vice- president of the Public Service Company, " predicts the natural gas will cost most customers consider ably less since it generates nearly twice as much heat per cubic foot as does manufactured gas. The complete switch-over to nat- ural gas in this area is costing th ePublic Service Company about $2,750,000, Mr. Richmond said. It will also cost the company about $15 a customer to change over gas appliances for the use of the new product. Those who have . asked .for. com miifeitioPof the . sentence v include Dr. Albert Einstein, columnist Dorothy I Thompson, and atomic scientist Harold Urey. Cassel Talks Tomorrow On Race Situation "The Background of the Racial PrnWomc in Smith Africa" will be the subject of a talk by Dr. John ministration now active in the Cassel tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. in Southern region, as well as others Dr. Hurlburt Will Preside Over Meeting Dr. Allan S. Hurlburt, director of the Bureau of Educational Re search and Service in the School of Education, will spend this week in Atlanta where he will serve as chairman of a meeting of leaders on the Southern States Cooperative Program in Educational Adminis- trational Administration. The conference will bring to gether the directors of all the Kel Vaccfnafons Will Be Given Thru Tuesday The deadline for influenza vac cinations has been .extended . to Tuesday, Dr. E. McG. Hedgpeth announced yesterday. About 1200 students responded to the call for vaccinations; last week, but this is not enough, Dr. Hedgpeth said. There is : enough vaccine to serve another 1200. "We will keep vaccinating through Tuesday," Dr. Hedgpeth said. Vac cination hours are 9-5 with no break for lunch. , f An influenza epidemic in Chap el Hill is possible. In fact, there is a fifty-fifty chance of such an out break. Students have been hit at the University of Florida and De- Pauw University in Greencastle, Ind. Flu has spread throughout the South with schools closed in Ten nessee and South Carolina. Over seas, American soldiers in Europe and Korea have been struck down by the winter disease. ; r Scientists have : isolated the flu virus and the vaccine, which in- cludes a chicken' embryo, r is the best-available counter measure. MoreheadiHas Life Exhibit "The Medieval World," a photo graphic exhibition prepared by the editors of Life Magazine, is being shown in the Morehead Building. The exhibit will close Feb. 7. 'This exhibition is made up of photographs which were published as a two-part pictorial essay in Life (April 7 and May 26, 1947) and also includes many pictures that had to be omitted from the magazine for lack of space. Twenty-four panels, each con taining from one to six photographs and captions delineate the roles of the church, the town and the castle in the day-to-day life of medieval man. The section devoted to the church reflects the medieval spirit in a sequence of panels which include the cathedral of Chartres, -J" Formal nruoniT'itinnol nnr;.nn witouiw,auuiiai OCX vices for the second Presbyterian church here will be held at 3 p.m. today in the Institute of Pharmacy audi torium on Church St. The Orange Presbytery Judicial Commission charged with setting up the new church will supervise the services. As yet no name has been selected for the church. . D. J. Walker of Burlington will lead the invocation prayer. A state ment of purposes and introduction of members of the commission will be made by the Rev. Z. T. Piep- hoff, commission chairman. E. Frank Andrews, Greensboro, will give the scripture reading, the Rev. John C. Whitley, Leads ville, re ception of members and baptism, M. E. Yount, Graham, delivering of the covenant and prayer, and Charles W. Perry, High Point, wel come to the new congregation. The Rev. Connelly Gamble of Union Theological Seminary, Rich mond, will deliver the sermon. Mr. Gamble was a signer of the peti tion for a new church while here at the University last year. Mrs. Robert O'Briant of Fayetteville will sing a solo and Thomas D. Rose, acting chairman of the congrega tion, will present the membership list. Following the services the congregation will elect its elders and deacons. According to the petition of March 2, 1952, the forming group asked that a new church be org anized "in order to meet more ade quately, the spiritual and pastoral needs of Chapel Hill." Most of them are former members of the congre gation of th Rev. Charlie Jones, Chapel Hill pastor who has been asked tp resign by the Judicial Commission because of some of his doctrinal views. Mi y DEFENSE Secretary - designate Charles E. Wilson, who agreed to get rid of his $2,700,000 in General Motors Stock, undergoes questioning before Senate Armed Services Committee. NEA Tele-photo. the Lenoir Hall upstairs dining room. Speaking before a combined meeting of the Chapel Hill unit of the Women's International Lea gue for Peace and Freedom and the YMCA World Under standing Supper Forum, the South African born physician is expected to tell of his experiences while practicing in a rural African area. ldgg Projects in educational ad- 'the Abbey church at Vezlay Foun tains Abbey, sculptural details and color reproductions of stained glass from Bourges and Chartres. The second division of the ex hibition treats town life, late in the Middle Ages. Here are seen en gravings of anonymous streets and street scenes as well as such cen ters of medieval life as Nuremburg, Dinkelsbuhl, Constance, Carcas sone and Avignon. intimately associated with re search. Dr. Hurlburt is State Di rector of the Kellogg Project in North Carolina. Also attending from the Univer sity School of Education will be Dr. Samuel M. Holton, a member of the Kellogg Project staff in the state. Carolina Coed To Report For Mademoiselle Virginia Breece, Carolina stu dent, has been chosen to serve on the national College Board of the fashion magazine Mademoiselle. As a College Board member, Miss Breece will represent , the University and report to Made moiselle on college life and the college scene. She will be given three assignments in competition for one of 20 guest editorships to be awarded by the magazine at the end of May. The guest editors will be brought to New York for four weeks next T..np tn helD write, edit and illu strate Mademoiselle's 1953 August College Issue. Their transportation will be paid to and from New York and they will receive a regular sal ary for their work. Larger Ears, Eyes Coming Says Yale Graduate Hersey NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 24 (Special) The oldest college daily newspaper in the country will be 75 years old next Wednesday and to markYhe occasion a distinguish ed group of Yale faculty members and alumni have helped the stu dent editors . publish an unusual anniversary book. The student paper is the Yale Daily,News, founded in 1878 and now serving the entire Yale com munity with a readership of some 8,000' 'persoiis. Their anniversary book, entitled "Seventy-five," contains original articles discussing the problems of the young man today and the un easy world he lives in. And the authors of the articles which offer a great deal of advice and occas ionally some praise and sympathy to the younger generation are men representing a wide range of ac tivities. Two noted writers, John Hersey, Class of 1936, and Archibald Mac Leish, 1915, sound a pessimistic note in advising the young writ ers. Senator Robert A. Taft, 1910, warns that liberty is threatened by big government, while Robert A. Lovett, 1918, retiring Secretary of Defense, and Robert Moseys, 1909, New York park commissioner, call for more college men to enter public service. John Hersey, who served as a news editor while a Yale student, writes that "this is the age of th evacuum tube. We are evolving larger and larger ears, and soon we will be keeping ourselves cool in summertime by flapping grand, ele phantine appendages at the sides ! of our heads, and though our eyes are still keen, and will probably stay small enough to swivel within sockets they have been given, they .strain .at anything but pictures landscapes, roomscapes on brilliant screens, images transmitted by rvacuum tubes . . . "Ours is becoming a cultude of slogans, headlines, digests; the classics are done over as comic books; a candidate for the vice presidency of the land speaks to us in the accents of soap opera; news comes to us, not as stately procession of facts, but as a dance of epithets, a shower of untrust worthy kernels." In contrast, ' Senator Robert A. Taft discusses government and free dom. "I am convinced," he declares, "that all our progress in the past 165 years is due to liberty, and the hope of progress in the future Researcher To Discuss Statistics Dr. George E. P. Box, an English man who is this year engaged in research in the Institute of Statis tics here, will address the Statis tics Colloquium at 4 o'clock tomor row. The meeting will be held in room 206 Phillips Hall. It will be preceded by a tea at 3:30 in the statistical .laboratory for statis ticians and their friends. Dr. Box, who is internationally known for his contributions to mathematical statistics and the techniques of designing, has been associated with Imperial Chemical Industries at its research labora tory in Manchester, England. He is 11 Initiated By Phi Delts Eleven students have been ini tiated into Beta Theta chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, national honorary educational fraternity. They are James J. Coley, Selma; Joseph G. Fallon, Angwin, Calif.; Hughes B. Hoyle Jr., Charlotte; Julian King, Winston-Salem; James A. Kiser, Newton; Carlton -W. Sprague, Danville, Va.; Raymond A. Stone, Louisburg; William G. Teachey, High Point; Jesse M. Vun cannon, High Point; Richard B. Wilson, Chapel Hill and Jay V. Wise, Kannapolis. Negro Seeks Public Office; Is UNC Grad The University's second Negro graduate yesterday entered the Greensboro City Council race. J. Kenneth Lee, 29, eensboro attorney who last summer gradu ated from the Law School here, is the third candidate to file for the race. , Lee was admitted to the Uni versity following a long drawn-out legal battle in June of 1951 when the Supreme Court refused to re view a lower court decision which opened the Law School to Negro students. He began the general practice of law in Greensboro last Septem ber, after being admitted to the state bar in August. A native of Charlotte, he re ceived his bachelor's degree from A. & T. College, Greensboro, in 1944, served two years in the Navy, returned to A. and T. as an in structor in electrical engineering, then entered the Law School of N. C. in Durham where he remain ed until admitted to the Law School here. POLITICAL UNION TO MEET The Carolina Political Union will meet tonight in the Grail Room to discuss the confirmation of Charles E. Wilson as secretary of defense. "There are only two possible courses of action consistent with our American principles," said Donald Sherry of the CPU. "We may repeal the law or we may re ject Mr. Wilson; to overlook the law would be to. establish a bad precedent." . STUDENT BUDGET Campus organizations desiring to receive funds from the stu dent budget for 1953-54 should submit their budget estimates to Ed Gross, secretary-treasurer, in the Student Government of fice, first floor, Graham Memo rial, prior to Feb. 1.