SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1957 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE USIS's Role Aired By Kendall Says Fosters Good Relations STUDENTS On Bridde .'7. By KILL MRRKIMAN The role Tit United Slates Informa tion Service in Keeking 'peace, free dom and progress" abroad was air'd here Friday by a fromer UNC student stationed in Europe with tin t'SlS. Harry Kendall, USIS agent, spoke l.clore a group uf faculty and stu (it nts about the part he played in lovlorin cood relations with foreign countries. Kentlall said the pniple of other countries judged the U. S. by adhere to their customs. '"You will enjoy yourself more and receive a warmer welcome if you take part in the cultural aspects of others," he said. Mr. and Mrs. Kendall received a great amount of good publicity for the U .S. as they attended a New Years party at a Japanese shrine dressed in Japanese kamonas . The people felt more relaxed and will ing to talk to them in such an en vironment, said Kendall. "You have to tell these people iidions of any individual that they about more than just our foreign came in contact with Irom the policy," he stated. tinted States. I 'SIS oficers must be a Mr. :.nd Mrs, Ameiira to these people" said Kendall. The I'ntted States is a very bin li' tue in foreign news and the peo ple of other countries are interested m the United States, he asserted. Kendall said a great deal about Itif Little Hock problem has ap Hired in foreign news because the people are interested in racial dis 1 1 imination. This lM,ks"fbad for the U. S Most of his time was spent in Japan where he and his family lived and worked with Japanese people. Kendall said that his whole family represented the United States. His daughter attended a Japanese kindergarten where she learned to speak Japanese and his wife attend ed many speeches and parties given in their honor. Kendall said that his jobs varried from being a judge at a beauty contest to that of intertaining the governor on unofficial visits. "They are interested in the way we live and want to show us the way they live. You have to visit thoir homes and be a neighbor to them." lie also said he tried to meet and talk with as many people as he could so that people in all parts of the country would be better in formed about the U. S. Kendall said a cut in least year's budget has put many of the USIS ! staff members out of work, but they J are making plans to have a fixed Positions Filled On Honor Council Appointments were filled for ..ml it is my job to answer anv annual budget of about 130 million questions that may arise about this j dollars. This would he sufficient for the organization to operate on. Kendall stated that this foreign relations program works through newspapers, radio, television and motion pictures. Kendall worked for some time as reporter for the Charlotte Observer and then he started his travels abroad. -iitiiert. "stated Kendall. A peat many questions have been asked about the troops stationed in tott li'n countries as well as the moral conduct of these soldiers, he aid. Kendall also stated the U. S. tiait treat these people as they have always rwen treated and must the High School Honor Conucil Committe at the regular meet ing of the Student Legislature on Thursday night. Those appointed Included: Chairman David Parker Susie Fa gan, Jim Merritt, Ben Levy, Ca leb White, Carter Jones, William Norman Franklin and Elizabeth Fenwick. Legislature Clerk Tog Sanders said that although most of the vacated seats have been filled by appointment, there still are a few Student Party openings. Of all the choices that a bridge player has to make The one that occurs most frequently, and where the wrong choice is made more often that anywhere else, is between 3 No-trump and 4 of a major suit. Making the correct choice necces- setates precision bidding jon the part of both members of a team. There are in popular use today a half-dozen conventions designed to aid in this choice in certain situa tions, the two most popular of which are the now almost standard Stay men over No-trump convention and the new and increasingly ' popular Jacoby Transfer System. There is not space to deal with either of these here since they are both long and involved and do not even try to deal with this problem in all of the many instances in which it arises. x t if I Neither Deals. Dr. Abraham Widra, above, of the UNC School of Medicine, has been granted $15,000 by the U. S. Public Health Service for a three-year research project on cell structure and genetics of certain pathogenic yeasts. World Briefs (Continued From Page 1) orbit, then drop in the satellite a rounded onion, that is. "Four of them will send the best customer into space," said McMa jhorr. . Suhrawardy Resigns j KARACHI, Oct. 11 (AP) Pak istan's Prime Minister H. S. Suhra- wardy resigned today after 13 months in office. As an avid sight-seer and affable .talker, he became, well acquainted with the American people on a recent U. S. tour. Ke was consid ! ered a strong link in Pakistan's t American ties through SEATO and Fellowship Sponsors Study Group At UNC IDC Selects fSweetheart' Side Vulnerable West j Dr. Blackwell P. Robinson Author of William R. Davie Will Be in Our Shop To Meet His Friends And Autograph His Book Saturday, October 12 from 3 to 5 P.M. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. DAILY CROSSWORD ACKOvi 1 Uud-Wss of; Powers I Apollo s LittrtpUct 11 Kinj 12 Celtic speech 13 On I s name 14 Deep spoon. 13 Knockout 16 Perch 17. DM Dutch l a Mr ) 18 Kxila nation 19 Spanish fricndi 22 r'.ai.ied tank of turf 24 Kxcla nation, 27 Border it Ate (U. S.) 28. Seaport (Utaz ) 30 Haiem room 31 Filmiest 33. Threads (kind) 35 Excla matlon 36 Oold (her.) 38 ripen 3. Type measure 40 Wanderer 42. Pillage 45 Capital (Egypt) 46 Worship 47. Take away daw) 48. Writing tablca DOWN ' 1. Frtar'a UUa 2 Blockhead K olloq ) 3 Hodge podge 4 Soak flax 5. Constel- lation 6 AitAidiaty ". Muse of lyric poetry 8. Cover 9 Capital ( Nor. ) 10. Lean-to 16 Command to a dog 19. Alder tree ( Scot. ) 2 J Whirl- pool (Nor.) 21. Satiate 23 Com (Iran) 25. Service stripe (slang) 26. Singing voice 29. Sloths 32. Like ale o-it YttUrdar' aw 37. Highway 39. God of love 41. Contend for 42. Craze 18 Steam (com- 34. River (Fr.) 43. Poem Lining form) 36. Killer whale 44. Aye h i' i" i' yx-1' i" i' i - !.! -1-L 7773T- 7?" !L!1 i ' 71 "II ffl 1 IT- WUNC Radio 6:57 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8 00 p.m. fl:30 p.m. 10.00 p.m. 10:15 p.m. 11:30 p.m. Station Opening -Paris Starting Showtime Earths Core to Out er Space Horizons In Music Evening News Sum mary Evening Masterwork Station Closing NORTH S QS62 11 7 D 10 CQJ1093 EAST S 93 II QJ10C2 D QS72 C 53 WEST S AJ5 II A543 D AJ4 C A42 Anne Miller. sDonsorerl hv TCuf I fi)n Dormitory, was crowned ''Sweetheart of UNC Dormitories" by Tom Walters, IDC President, at the annual IDC dance held in the basement of Cobb Dormitory last night. A bouquet of roses and a ten dollar check were given to the 1937 dorm sweetheart after she was crowned. SOUTH S K1074 H K93 D K53 C K76 The Bidding: NORTH EAST Heels Receive Team Telegram Eight hundred seventy-two stu dents signed the team telegram, delivered in scroll form and tied with Carolina blue ribbons, which the UNC football team received in Miami yesterday. The telegram was sponsored by the University Club. The message read as follows: "Do it again Big Blue. Toss Mia mi way out into the Altantie and let I them sink. We know you will crush them and bring remains home in a cup. Feed what is lett ot Miami to the fish. So roll them down you Tar Heel warriors, we are behind you." A year ago the University Club sponsored a team telegram to Okla homa, one which was signed by 1443 people. The Oklahoma tele gram was 241 feet long, or a little over 80 yards. Pass 2H Pass 411 Pass Opening Lead: SOUTH Pass Pass II 10 IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the infirmary yes terday included: Alvin Nowland Elmer, Robert Alexander Barnwell, Richard Louis Benzio, James Ward Coates, James Lee Merritt, Lowell Hart sell, Carter Ingram, Donald Rothrock, Gibson Vester Barbee, William Harvey Wearmouth, Sid ney Sawyer Campen, James Con nell, Artis Monroe Moser, James' Allen Hervner, Graham Ernest Nichols, John Rodney Toler, Don William Guffey, Charles Ben nett, Robert Clack, Lillian John son, Winifred Nancy Johnson, Nancy Elizabeth Turner, Willie Mat Davenport, 'Patricia Kline, Patricia Chandler, Jo Anna Fus sell, Susan Elizabeth Merrick, Margaret Ann Tucker, Robert Henry Quifin, 'John Kendrlek Homey, Walter Poolt, Arthur George Shields, George Harriss, Virgil Mickey Coeharns, John Dorrorah, Robert Clayton Gib son, Sanford James Garrell, Do die Faltes Mikhail, Henry Mich ael Smith, George Martin, Doug las Jennings Carter, Pringle Pip kin, 'George Davis, Rdbert Eas lev, Robert Ramsey, James Harry Menzel, Ringgold Wilson Wit mer, James Arthur, Kenneth Burnham Aldord, William Har old Morris, Robert Preston Hag aman and Robert Leonard Far-omer. Today's hand deals with the case in which one hand is 'square" (4-3-3-3 hand pattern and the other is distributional. West holds the "square" hand with 18 points, the upper limit of the opening 1 No trump bid. East has 5 high-card points and 2 distributional points with his 5-4-2-2 hand pattern. East's correct call is 2 Hearts, snowing 0-8 points. I repeat, zero, and his partner must pass unless he has a maximum. With as many as 9 points in today's hand East would have bid 3 Hearts over 1 No-trump, telling his partner that the combined hands hold enough points to produce a game in Hearts, but not necces- sarily in No-trump. But in all cases a bid of either 2-of-a-suit or 3-of-a- suit over 1 No-trump announces at least two extra points if played in the suit named, and, of course, at least a five card suit. If this ap proach is used over opening 1 No trump's, as it is standardly, then you may bid, say 2 Diamonds, with six cards to the 10 and 'no pionts, and fully expect your partner to pass, and the chance of making 2 diamonds is far, far, greater that of making 1 No-trump. Walters said, "The crowd was very good considering the UNC 'Miami football game was broad cast at the same time of the dance." All students were invited, to the dance, though it was held mainly for the dormitory men. Bobby Hass and his jazz quar- WEST i tet "a real swinging group" 1 NT says Hass, played for the dance. 311 t Cookies and punch were served Pass for refreshments. - Martha Fortune, sponsored by Everett, and Carol Tieslau, spon sored by Battle-Vance-Pettigrewr, were the two runnerups. He also said, "Thanks to Betsy McKinnan and her Independent Women's Council for decorations for the dance." 'The only qualification for the beauty contest was all contest ants had to be coeds. 1 other pacts and principles.. After he quit, Suhrawardy's Awami league supporters prompt ly put on a protest march charg ing he was forced out. Suhrawardy resigned in a dispute with the five Republicans in his coalition cabi net over reorganizing West Pakis tan into four or mofe small prov inces. Suhrawardy opposed the move. Queen Departs LONDON, Oct. 11 (AF) Queen Elizabeth n sipped a champagne cocktail tonight at a palace fare well party on the eve of her visit to Canada and the United States. The royal family, British govern ment officials and the U. S. and Canadian Ambassadors were there. U. S. Ambassador John Hay Whit ney excused himself early to fly home and help with Washington preparations. The royal couple leave London ariport at daybreak in an American-made airliner to Ottawa. TTie Daily Express said the tour would prove to he the toughest 10, days of Elizabeth's reign. The British picture her as a goodwill missioner showing British royalty's new humanized look to North Americans. As White House euests, the Brit ish believe, the Queen will invite President and Mrs. Eisenhower to visit Buckingham Palace. The feel ing here is that the Eisenhowers will accept. Elizabeth is clue at Government House in Ottawa 15 minutes be fore dusk Saturday. On Monday she opens the . Ca nadian Parliament, meets with her Canadian Privy Council and re ceives VTPs at a reception. She and Philip leave Ottawa Wednesday for Williamsburg, Va. They will spend the night there. The Presbyterian Westminster i Fellowship is sponsoring study groups this semester in conjunc tion with other church groups and the YW-YMCA. Each study group is limited to twelve students who will enter in to free discussion of a topic in which they have a common inter est. There will be a resource per son who knows the subject matter well and can be referred to for in formation and resource materials and a student leader to moderate the discussion. Discussion in study groups is to be kept strictly on the subject, and members have been asked to read material ahead of time in order to be familiar with the subject. . Meeting times of the following Florida State Employs Moose groups are subject to change in case of schedule conflict. Any in terested persons have been invited to join the groups. The following topics will be un der discussion: "WThat We Believe" (Christian Doctrine); "Race Rela tions;" "Contemporary Novels and Plays;" "Prayer;" "Science and the Christian Faith;" "Suffering. Pain, and Death;" and a Bible study on "Genesis." On Monday at 5 p.m., the sub ject "Suffering, Pain, and Death," will be discussed in the Nurses Dorm Lounge. Miss Janet Sutton is the resource person; the student leader will be elected from the members. Of special interest to nursing, medical and pre-med students, the group will consider the meaning of suffering and the medical ap proach to suffering. It will discuss death, immortality and preparing oneself for death, as well as the Roy Clifton Moose former UNC i practical implications of a Chris- protesor ana a tounoer ot tne tian view of suffering and death. Carolina Quarterly, ioined the Ejnglish Department of Florida State University this year. Even before his graduation from Carolina in 1949, Moose be gan his literary career. In ad dtion to being one of the foun ders of the Carolina Quarterly Review of Literature, he was al so one of its editors. Upon receiving his AB degree from the university, Moose was awarded the Thomas Wolfe Me morial Award for fictien which was the third and last time the presentation was made. , After graduating at Chapel Hill, Moose, a native of Catawba, went to Oxford University in England on a Roary Interna tional Fellowship and received the B.A. degree with honors in 1953 and the M. A. degree in 1956. At the present time Moose is writing a novel and is working toward his doctorate from the University of North Carolina. Moose, in order to encourage creative writing at Florida State University, is interested in hav ine a literary magazine estab lished on the Florida campus that would be similar to the Carolina Quarterly. L USED PAPER-BACKS 10c 3 for 25c In a choice that ranges from gory crime to high-flown philosophy. Cheaper than renting. Why pay more? The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Street 1 JJ'ilm. -1 . .Ill --- III -A . et3, I . REGAISCOPC w starg Robert ARTHUR-lathi MOLAH i NOW PLAYING Now! The one cigarette in tune with America's taste! n F: 1 has all you want! CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE: WEIMARANER PUP pies, 2 males, 3 females. Males '$73.00, females S50.00, 7 weeks old. Excellent stock. Can ; be seen at Vine Veterinary Hospi tal, Chapel 'Hill, N. C. FOR SALE: 1954 DETROITER Housetrailer. 42 "if t. will finance. Call 92031 from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Call (5751 after 6 p.m. and' on -Sundiys. : Back to today's hand, since West has a maximum and four hearts 'he needs only three since East an nounces five) he can safety raise to 3 Hearts. East in turn has near- i ly a maximum 2 Hearts bid and it 'he is courageous at all will bid 4 Hearts. At first glance the hands look like they are "fixed", but it will be observed, that three of the" Kings in Smith's hand could be transferred to North's and yield not one trick more. Holding South'shand this depart ment favors the 10 of Spades rather than the 4 as an opening lead on the probability that East is short in the suit and a forcing card may prove better. The 9 of Hearts is also acceptable as an opening lead since it does not in any way affect the trick taking ability of the king, repardless .of where the Ace lies. The play is as easy as they came. East must give up a club -and a spade, and if South never leads, a diamond, then he must lose one, and only one, in that suit. The correct play in the diamond suit is to finesse the Jack and play the Ace Hoping that .South holds the King doubleton. If the suit breaKs which is to be expected odds-wise East's fourth diamond can be ruffed out. So the contract rests on the success of the Heart finesse. Oddly enough, when this hand was played on Sept. 30, only two out of'eigth pairs were in Hearts, and only one of these at the iame level. The tobacco you want . . . only the choicest grades of quality tobacco. And it's all 100 natural tobacco! The tip you want exclusive T-7 filter, developed especially for Hit Parade, lets you have your flavor, too! The taste you want . . . the freshest, liveliest taste of any filter cigarette. Get new Hit Parade today! f -v the tobacco.. fST nl the tiD... L b and the taste! iilKoll r IM'IL Mfol i j f mi i vr ..A..x.Kheu&aK a -j u mdi h aw - -. -v -vi - - n-'aq ia rri i e rt . n rtirT rr w ri r Tarn a r nara W .i M -y ..-K v ; ..... .1 zrm-:- 1JI . n- ' $ 4 Ot ' At the Grand Prix Sports Oar Kaces , s ' - in Watkins Glen, N. Y., and j , -X ' I . ; ' . ' -.-r i ' ' i '1 . 3 are smoking Hit Parade : ,

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