V IT C Library C'lapsl Hill ; w WEATHER Partly cloudy and mild. Today's high, 65. Yesterday's high and low, 62 and 33. ARYAN The editor discus ses aryanism and the Phi Delts. Page 2. VOLUME LVI, NUMBER 117 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY hi--.- rt . ' s . , " - i . ' Ewfce-iwiJfc. - s-c. - "" Mtr ' "'' 'V ..::$S'- v..... . - mWSS wiinwii u awnw."'' m mi iiu i p yVi4 ' P-'-H"' ' ! If, ) . N M " - i r f I 4 . i I -I '.y i - - . I! v. 1! ' I t H If ? I 1 i v I: J ?-- I SPONSORS FOR MILITARY BALL last night were (left to right) Miss Connie Moore of Norfolk with Midshipman Capatin James E. Eagan, Miss Dot Smiih of Spencer, West Virginia with Cadet Colonel Charles M. Winston; Miss Diane Breslow of Rahway, New Jersey with Randolph Watson (not in pic ture); Miss Imogene Walker of Concord with Cadet Lt. Colonel Kenneth G. Anderson; Miss Nancy Mc Coy of Westfield, New Jersey with Midshipman Commander Bruce A. Bauer; Miss Jessie Smith of Kin ston with Cadet Lyman B. McLawhorn; Miss Pat Boesser of Winston-Salem with Cadet Lt. Colonel And rew J. Bell; Miss Jeanne Johnson of Atlanta, Georgia with Cadet Major Eugene Shaw; Miss Jane Ellen Brown of Clarkton with Midshipman Lt. Commander W. Travis Porter; Miss Pat Behnenkamp of St. Louis with Cadet Major Alvin V. Samuel; Miss Luanne Thornton of West Palm Beach with Cadet Major Robert B. Jackson; Miss Martha Irvin of Hendersonville with Cadet Major Eugene D. Foushee; Mrs. Alan R. Perry with Cadet Major Alan R. Perry; Miss Margaret Cheatam of Henderson with Mid shipman Lt. William D. Smith; and Mrs. Charles A. Callins with Cadet Major Charles A. Collins. Science Must Recognize God, Says Teacher By Jennie Lynn Today's science is leaving out simple faith in God, said Dr. Eric C. Rust at a YWCA lecture last week. "How can we as Christians re spond to this scientific world?" was the question the doctor tried to answer. Dr. Rust is a British mathematical and atom physicist who became a Baptist theologian. He said that scientific material ists assume that the only way to know reality is through "studying measurement the weight of things and the way they are maneuvered." "Scientists are concerned with generalizations," continued Dr. Rust. "They want to find what things have in common, the univer sality of things. How can universal truth be found by looking every where?" Het .said God and truth must be searched for "by going deep down into" one person's ex perience of redemption at one point." He pointed out that scientific materialism had its origin in re ligious faith. Aristotle's world was j S S .7d mTtter. An acorn one became an oak tree because an acorn was potentially an oak tree. There was a sort of "mental com ponent within the acorn, he said figuratively. To Aristotle, said Dr. Rust, everything had an end and purpose and "moved in an attempt to sati isfy its true nature.' He never troubled with experiment. He thought of nature as semi-divine, man to him had within himself all the thoughts of God, Dr. Rust con tinued. He went on to explain how ex perimentation came with the Re formation. Dr. Rust said the first scientists were devout Christians. A fundamental error occurred when Decartes began to separate mind and matter, he said. Matter has extension and can weighd. Mind cannot, he added. This, ac cording to the doctor, began the long period of struggle between religion and scientists. Fire At Inn Burning grease on a stove in the kitchen of the Carolina Inn caused little damao yesterday morning according to the Chapel Hill Fira Department. The blaze broke out at about 9:15 a.m. when greasa on the stove became too hot. Firemen said It took only five minutes to extinguish the blaze. New Easter Opening At Moreheacl A beautiful presentation, "Easter, the Awakening," opened at More head Planetarium this week, explaining the Spring season in life-like reproductions. A 45-minute production, the result of weeks of preparation, the presentation will run through Aprils 20, with shows daily at 8:30 p.m. and in the afternoons on Saturdays at 3 and 4 o'clock and on Sundays at 2, 3, and 4 o'clock. Students get tickets at reduced rates. The demonstration includes a20 minute narration on the signifi cance of Easter and the rebirth of Spring, utilizing science for deter mination of the exact dates of the events surrounding the crucifixion t and resurrection of Christ. ."Having originated from the name of the Saxon goddess Eastre of Spring and fertility, the word Easter symbolizes the awakening of life from apparent death, mani fest in both nature and mankind," manager A. Jenzano explained. "We have tried to capture this glory of the season and combine it with the gripping story of Christ and the cross for our pro- gram," he said. In accordance with its policy of inviting one camDus erouo to every wThow. Alpha Delta Sor- ority will be guests of the Plane- tarium tomorrow night. Dorm Janitor Stole Letters; Goes To Jail DURHAM March 28 (Special) A 19-year-old former Negro janitor at Everett Dormitory at the Uni versity of North Carolina was sen tenced this week in Federal Court here to 18 months in the reforma tory for stealing mail. Ernest E. Wilson pleaded guilty to charges after a postal inspector testified that Wilson stole two "test letters" at the dormitory. The etters. both containing $5 bills, were sent special delivery to tne dormitory last December and left intwo students' rooms The postal inspector testified; that the Chapel Hill Post Office had received many wu ! , . hfMnf rece-ved aDout ieuer& uui by the students m He said Wilson waff arrested ai aftr the letters had v ift in th dormitory-rooms and that the two bills were found in his wallet Wilson denied any vilrfcr. of the other thefts, the postal inspector testified. Production ; I m miracie man Franz Polgar Here Thursday Dr. Franz Polgar will thrill stu dents with mind miracles in a Me morial Hall program next Thursday night. "Miracles of the Mind" is the name of the hypotic hocus pocus to be presented by SUAB. There is no admission charge. Polgar is a leading hypnotist. Since coming to t&e United States more than 16 years ago, Polgar i figures he has put more than a million people to sleep, usually with their willing assistance, The Hungarian born hypnotist claims no "supernatural powers and refuses to garnish, his demonstra- tions with 5ide show xaumbo jumbo. However, every year he appears before "300 audiences in the U. S. leaving them happily befuddled by his implausible feats. . , . ; His act is right for , television, admirers say, and he expects to have his own TV program soon. "I must be very careful though," says Polgar gravely "not to put the ten million people to sleep who watch me." Polgar has been a frequent visi tor to the campus, and SUAB offi cials said that they feel sure every one will enjoy this show. Vote 2nd Time For May Queen Because one of the would-be wv aueens was ineligible, a sec- vote wyj taken tomorrow to elect the coed to preside over the traditional ceremonies. Voting will beheld for town stu dents in the Dean of Women's . ff . f 8 untn 5 pjn ' . . ..... tomorrow. University buildings :residents vote tomorrow night , Sorority and dorm presidents are reminded theballots must be in to the dean's office by Tuesday at as a non-vating member except in 2 p.m. Voters must vote for 10 , case of tie, one member appointed coeds no more,; no less or thetby the president and one appointed I oaiiois wiu oe umu uuu ...... SegregaHon Ban Ice Draws rmcism :r Policy ATLANTA, March 28 (Special) Georgia Gov. Herman Talmadge said yesterday President Eisen hower made a "great mistake" in banning segregation in federally operated schools on Army posts. "Truman's advocacy of such measures contributed greatly to Eisenhower's victory,' Talmadge said in an interview at his Love ioy, Ga. Farm. "Now it looks like Eisenhower is trying to go Truman one better. ' "Nonsegregation won't work in the South. The white people don"t want it and the Negroes don't either." In Atlanta, Rep. John Greer of Lanier County said he hoped South ern Democrats who "deserted their party to support Eisenhower on the theory that he would uphold segregation are satisfied." The president's order will effect Ft. Benning, Ga. which has four white elementary schools with 1,063 students and 45 teachers. There is one Negro school with 31 pupils and two teachers. The Ne gro children attend school in nearby Columbu? and the Army pays their tuitioh. Their segrega tion policy will i not be changed according to thehead of the Col umbus schools, i Later this week, the governor ! I told a Jacksonville, Fla. television audience he would take abolish the public; schools Georgia if the U. S- Supreme Court faiTs to uphold segregation. The Georgia chief executive said he would call an extraordinary ses sion of the. Legislature and recom mend such action . "' " " Criminology A member of the University Extension Division said yesterday there is an immediate need for copies of Barnes and Tetters "New Horizons in Criminology". The books, he said; will be used by North Carolina convict study groups. The study groups are being formed from among the most desperate convicts to study certain aspects of crimm ology .and crime prevention. " Those students who will loan the book te the Extension Divis ion are asked to call Richard Mc Cleery, Ph. 9471. Council Board To Name Seven To Seek Posts The Student Council selection board will meet Monday from 3 until 6 o'clock and Tuesday from 4 to 6 o'clock in Roland Parker 3 to select candidates for the coun cil. Seven seats are to be filled in the spring election. Three are women's, one is to be filled by a man and three are at large seats, one of which is to be filled by a graduate student. There are no specific require ments for Student Council except that each student must be at least a junior. The selection hoard wants thinking students capable of mak ing decisions to serve on the stu ent council, said Ted Frankel, chairman of the council and se lections board. Frankel explained that the board will give each candidate an equal opportunity to be endorsed. He urged all interested students to appear before the selections board. Selection of Student Councils by a board rather than having them ! ,V r w 1 last quarter in Legislature. The selection board is composed of the chairman of the Women's J" TTL "u.T. Z2.Z inesiaence council, cuairmau oi uae mn . -i.-: i.1 T IFC Court, chairman of the Law School honor court, chairman of the Medical -School honor court, 'chairman of the Student Council ivy mc sycci v. siluiC f V-.Jk . SINGER JANE F ROMAN leaves New York Supreme Court after she testified about the crash of a Yankee Clipper plane near Lisbon, Portugal, ten years ago. Miss Froman, who was seek ing $2,500,000 damages from Pan American Airways, was awarded $3,300 for her crippled leg and $750 for lost baggage NEA Telephoto. WASHINGTON C. Wesley Rob- the running board of his slow erts quit his $32,500 a year post ' moving vehicle in an attempt to as Republican national chairman ; Friday after a Kansas legislative 7 invesatin" committee hrfd-that' StetPS HhTv'o setup inrf-de spirit . of the state lobbying law President ttt: . hotter called the resignation "wise decision." Roberts says he J i e..it.. 13 111C VILUIU ui a tmciuu tuu-1 trived" political plot in Kansas. WASHINGTON The Senate has approved Charles E. Bohlen as am- bassador to Moscow in a smashing 74 to 13 vote of confidence in President Eisenhower. The ap proval was also a slap in the face to Senator McCarthy who opposed the nomination on the grounds that Bohlen was an advocate of the Truman-Acheson foreign policies. RALEIGH The North Carolina Joint Appropriations subcommittee retreated behind closed doors Fri day to work out the disposition of the State's tax funds. The commit tee is under heated attack by the press for its enactment of a law which allows it to bar the public from its meetings. The law has been labeled a dangerous pre cedent." NEW YORK Mickey Jelke has been sentenced to three to six years in prison as an unrepentant Cafe Society procurer. He is al ready serving eight months on an other charge. Pat Ward, sipping martinis in a nearby restaurant when she heard of the sentence commented it was only "a fraction of what he deserves." 'I Can Afford If Repentant Realtor Advertises Good Lite In Full-Page Ads WASHINGTON, March 28 (Special) An anonymous realtor who "sinned" by "going to bars, overeating, overswearing and oversmoking" has been running full-page newspaper advertise ments to help other people keep straight. "If you have sinned and over done, there ought to be some way to tell other folks how to avoid the pitfalls," said Leon Acker man. "The only way to do it, if you can afford it, is to advertise. "I can afford it." When Ackerman, a wealthy realtor, started buying full page ads in Baltimore, Philadelphia, .Boston and New York, he left out his name. The ads first consisted of a single verse in the middle of a full page, at cost from $300 to $600 and up. The Biblical verses Unclaimed Racing Loov May Be Handed UNC The University is after the dog track winnings the bettors never claim. A bill was introduced in the General Assembly Friday which would permit the winnings "on any horse George Bentley Memorial Rites Set For Today A memorial for George F. Bent ley, assistant to the University librarian who died in an automo bile accident Thursday, will be held at 3 p.m. today at the Episco pal Chapel of the Cross. Mr. Bentley's body was shipped to Nashville, Tenn. yesterday for burial Monday. Mass was held for htm yesterday morning in Ger- rard Hall. Dr. Pierce Butler, Chicago edu cator who is visiting lecturer in the School of Library Science this Quarter, is in critical condition as a result of the accident. He is in the Alamance Hospital still uncon scious. . The mishap occurred just north of Burlington Thursday when the car, driven by Bentley, smashed into the rear of a tractor-trailor. The driver of the tractor testified he saw the automobile approaching fast behind him and he stood on flag the car. j. Two other passengers m the car, Z T ' of the University staff are m Me ! iiiwiiai liuspitai UCiC Willi liac- . , lions are tprmpn cafKrarnrv i " Mr. Bentley was 37, years old and the father of five-small chiT- dren. He came here in 1947 as head oi me horary s circulation uepart- j ment and two years ago was pro- mted to assistant to the librarian He was a native of Nashville, Tenn. and took his A.B. degree at Vanderbilt University. Russia Expert To Talk Here Dr. Clyde Kluckhohn,. director of the Russian Research Center and professor of anthropology at Har vard University, will deliver a lec ture in Gerrard Hall Wednesday night at 8:30. Dr. Kluckhohn is being sponsored by the Institute for Research in So cial Science and the Anthropology Club. He will speak on "The Pro blems of Values in Contemporary Civilization." Author of a number of books and with extensive field work experi ence, he is one of the top ranking anthropologists. Dr. Kluckhohn will serve, dur ing his two-day visit here, as con sultant on a Veterans Administra tion project being conducted by the University's Institute fro Research in Social Science. preached such doctrine as "Love Thy Neighbor" and "Love, the Greatest Gift." Readers began telephoning the newspapers to learn the identity of the advertiser. So many per sons called that the papers fin ally asked the man to sign his name. Ackerman agreed, under pro test. He now signs his name in small type at the bottom of the ads. He never mentions his real estate business or makes any identification of himself. "I came to this country as a poor lad," Ackerman said. "I made a lot of money. I made it all honest. But I sinned . . . "I think that it is only right that in my advertising I should carry the theme forward that he who understands love, under stands love, understands God and God is love." or dog races at any race track in this state where the placing of such bets is legal" to be paid into the University's escheats fund if they were not claimed within 60 days. Escheats is the system whereby property reverts to the state be cause of the failure of persons leg ally entitled to hold it. However, the future of legalized racing itself is in doubt in the state. The General Assembly now has before it a bill which would outlaw the races which began in the mid 1940's. Racing now is legal at Morehead City and Moyock. The bill came from Sen. Edwin Pate, who introduced it at the re quest of Kemp Cate, escheats of ficers for the Consolidated Univer sity. Cate's office is in Chapel Hill. Another escheats provision sim ilar to the one contained in Sen. Pate s bill was considered two years ago but the General Assem bly failed to pass it. Besides providing for escheats of dog track funds, Sen. Pate's pro posal also would escheat to the University the wages or salaries owed by any corporation in the state which were not claimed .with in two years of the end of the cal endar year in which they were earned. At present, only corpora tions engaged in construction work are required to pay such unclaimed hSes into the fund. At present, unclaimed funds go the es- cheats fund after one year. Still another provision would enable stocks and bonds whose owners cannot be located to be . transferred to the escheats fund, ' The Consolidated University gets j a nice hunk of income annually from the escheats money. The money is taken and invested by the University and the interest from the principal is used to pro vide scholarships. The scholarships are divided among the three con solidated institutions according to their student enrollment. Student Injured In Car Accident John Peebles Watts, 22-year-old University student from William ston, is undergoing treatment at Memorial Hospital as a result of an automobile accident near Durham this week. Watts suffered a fractured right arm, fractured rib and multiple lacerations. He was taken to Watt3 Hospital in Durham but was moved to the Chapel Hill hospital after receiving emergency treatment. The accident occured on the paved road leading from Nelson to the Raleigh-Durham Airport when the car Watts was driving left the road. State Highway Patrolman Tom Moore, who investigated the mis hap, said that Watts' car failed to make the curve at Iron Creek Bridge, skidded 102 feet, jumped he creek and went on for about 30 feet after striking the creek bank. Three From Here Attend Seminar In Washington John Nicholson and Alve and Benny Stewart recently attended the Meet Your Government Sem inar held in Washington. Purpose of the seminar, sponsor- ' ed by the national student YM and iYWCA, wasto observe the process of federal government and to show the relevance of the Christian .faith to political life. Spaghetti Eat spaghetti and send a gal to school, advises Delta Delta Delta Sorority. Tonight the Tri Delts are hold ing an "all you can eat" spaghet ti supper from 6 to 8 o'clock for the price of SI a guest. Purpose of the benefit is to raise money for the local Tri Delt scholarship fund which awards a coed scholar ship. Tickets at the door (210 Pitts boro St.); come early; eat all you want, the coed sponsors say.

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