00
Serials r;?t
WEATHER
Showers today witK hight of
74.
n.
RELIGIOUS
The revival of religion current
today may not be 'a revival at
all, but a killing. See Page 2.
VOLUME LXVI NO. 49
Complete UP) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1953
Offices in Graham Memorial
FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE
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DREAM GIRL AND TROPHIES fiis Ciierlstf-.- Pope, Pi Kappa
Alpha Dreim Girl, is shown above with five trophies to be
awarded for winning floats in t!ie 'Ei.it Co-!.' flcat r araJe Friday.
The float divisions aie fraternity, tororiry, men's do.r.iitiry, and a
combination cf nv.n's and woman's t'omiiiorics.
.. . .
e
Student Legislatur
Passes Four Bills
V.y Dili: DANir.I.S liuk-nt government and who shall
Student Legislature passed four he rispinislblo for the selection of
bills, onv by .speik'l orders, uhielillie cheering squad and to-ordinat-will
affect future legislation, drink- it l; their activities."
in regulations, the Lenoir dirt area
iuul duties of tl.e h ad elieei leader.
Meeting Thursday niyht, the gov
ernini,; body approved a bill wnitii
v. ill allow any student organization
a chance to consider pending leg
i.lation concerning said group Joe
Warner (UP).
Thes provisions will b; incor
porated into the bylaws of the Stu
dent Legislature.
This amendment will be referred
to the s'udent body in the fall elec
tions this week.
The student body will also vote
on a bill (Norman Smith Ind.) to
provide an amendment to the con
stitution which would provide for
a .single annual fall election of Legislature.
I Tie governing body defeated a
Through a bill introduced by Otto ' resolution (Jim Crownover SP and
Fenderburk SP), a committee to
study the drinking rules of UNC
i.i to be established. Included on
the committee will be the IFC Court
Chairman, IDC Couit Chairman, the
chairman of Student Council, IDC
Women's Honor Council and Worn
en's Residence Council, and three
rrembers appointed by the student
body president.
IUII'OKT
The group will submit a report
to Student Legislature not later
than four weeks after its appoint
ment. Legislature sanctioned a bill Fun
derburk) to provide a committee of
three 'selected by the student body
pH'sident) for the pavement of the
cl.rt area between Lnoir Hall and
tl.e Law School.
Iiy special orders, they passed a
bill (Rules Committee to change
section 4 of Article IV of the UNC
Constitution to read:
"There shall be a head cheer
leader who shall be selected by the
Cluiilie Gray UP)," introduced by
.special orders, to attempt to secure
the telecast of the UNC-Notre Dame
game on WRAL-TV.
23 Entering
'Bear Dooc
Queen Cdntest
The queen for the 1959 . "Beat
Douk" Float Parade will be se
Itctcd Tuesday night to reign this
weekend.
David (Irigg, in charge of Pi Kap
pi Alpha's parade and beauty con
test, yesterday released the lames
of 23 coeds already in the contest.
The parade itself will be held Fri
day afternoon at 3 o'clock. Thirty
three fraternities, sororities, men's
dorms and men's and women's
dorms will enter floats in the parade.
Coeds in the beauty contest and
their sponsors include the follow
ing:
Sally Pullen, Mclver and Joyner;
Sharon Footh, Kappa Sigma; Ann
Lucas, Parker; Mary Lou Wetzel,
Sigma Phi Epsilon; Jo Anne Hard
:in. Alpha Gamma Delta; Mary
Dritton, Kappa Alpha; Maxine
Greenfield, Alpha Delta Pi; Car
roll Cunningham, Grimes;
Charlotte Pope, Lambda Chi Al
pha; Paula Quick, Pi Beta Phi; Bet
ty Finly, Manly; Sophie Martin
Lewis; Judy Rock, Mangum; Jody
Guerico, Alpha Tan, Omega; Janice
Gabriel, Sigma Nu; Ann Robinson
Delta Delta Delta; Doodie Wald-
man, Kappa Delta;
Sally Wade, Chi Omega; Claire
Ilanner, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Cole
man Jenkins, Sigma Chi; Pat Wil
See PARADE, Page 3
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Irish Win 9th Straight
Game From Tar Heels
By RUSTY HAMMOND
Special To The' Daily Tar Heel
' Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame's rugged Fighting Irish
brought an abrupt halt to Carolina's six-game winning, streak
here yesterday as they bested Jim Tatum's Tar Heels 34-24
before a packed house of 56,000 fans.
Although the Tar Heels moved the ball well all after-
o
noon, their vaunted defense just
Txracn't in Duir!tnrQ n c Vi a TVicVi
Measurement
Of Radiation
Is Future Need
You have a stake in the develop
ment of instruments to measure
radiation. Your health in the fu
ture ind the welfare of your grand
children may well depend upon it.
Fa
rolled up and down the field al
most at will.
The issue was still in doubt up
until 5 minutes before the end of
the game when Notre Dame scor
ed their 5th touchdown to sew up
the contest.
CAROLINA GETS EARLY LEAD
Carolina jumped off to an early
lead, going for a touchdown the
first time they got the ball for
Yet if that sounds trrim. two the third straight game. Ronnie
health specialists reminded Satur- Koes recovered a loose fumble at
day that as for measuring radiation the 'Notre Dame 45 and after
danger and doing something about nnQmg own to the 4, Jack cam
it, "Man is in a much better position min2s Don Kemper in the left
corner 01 tne cna zone alter run
ning far to the right. The ' two-
Emil Chanlett and John Lumsden Pfnt faUed but Carolina led
b-U.
oiiino
Fall elections will be held Tues
day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Students
will elect class officers, represen
tatives to Legislature, Men's and
ecrions i uesaay.
aces Are Liste
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LAUGH CONVENTION? No, just Jim Tally (left) and Barry Noll rehearsing their lines for the
Carolina Cavalcade of Talent show coming up Tuesday night at 8 in Memorial Hall. Tickets are on
sate at the Y and in Graham Memorial for fifty cents. Photo by Peter Ness
Womens' honor Councils and Stu
dent Council.
A polling place will be located in
each dorm except Kenan and Con
ner. Residents of Kenan will vote
in Mclver and stuaents living in
Conner are to vole in Winston
Dorm.
Residents of Emerson Stadium
may vote in Ruffin Dorm and resi
dents of Memorial Hall and all oth
er University owned buildings' ex
cept the dorms may vote in Old
East.
' Town men living in District I are
to vote at the Carolina Inn; those
from. District II at .the Scuttlebutt;
residents of District III at Graham
Memorial.
Town women are to vote at Ger-
rard Hall.
Men's Town District I is bound
ed by Columbia Street on the east,
camron Avenue on the north, and
the corporate limits of Chapel Hill
on the west and south.
Men's Town District III is the
area bounded by Franklin Street
on the south and the corporate
limits of Chapel Hill on the east,
north, and west.
Men's Town District IV is bound-
explained radiation measurement in
a lecture sponsored by the UNC
School of Medicine. It was one in
a four-month series' of weekly Tec
tures, all dealing with radiation
Chanlett is associate professor of
ed by Columbia Street on the west, sanitary engineering in the Univer
Franklin Street on the north, and sity's School of Public Health
hi rci-r 0 liinitc m Phnnol Will T.nTTl'lripn ic rhipf industrial Vivcriono I
. . , j . . . . . . , " . golden opportunity by recovering
uii me tctsL tiiiu suuiii, aiiu an men ctgium "i oiaic uucuu ui
students residing outside the cor- Healli,
porate limits of Chapel Hill.
-it r rr t:j.:i. 1 11 i I tVi ck lavrQo rF K x-i'yl A frm V r I "
womens iovvn uisirici snail oe i.a. - PietrncantP who slsshp nvpr frn-r,
composed of ail women students narmim enecis ot racuation, ana
residing in sorority houses and all yet not deprive them of the bene- d flnd tfa . .
women stuaenis not nvins in uni- f-a uidi wm tume wuu me aiumiu
ver'sity owned buildings. age is the task of all scientists,"
Poll tenders will be in each of the the speakers said. "It is not just
districts and there will be rosters Ule J0D ot we nuclear pnysicists
which the district residents must and the physicians."
Notre Dame's George Izo picked
off a Tar Heel pass at his own 33
then guided his mates to their
first score with Nick Pietrosante
bulling over from the 2.- Stickles
convertd to put the Irish ahead
7-6.
The Irish capitalized on another
lden opportunity by recovering
a Carolina fumble on the Tar Heel
49 and marehincr atra?n fnr tViAir-
, rj 1U U second touchdown. Again it was
yard out; the conversion was
a 14-6
spread.
Notre Dame continued to pile
up the points when they took over
on a bad punt at the Carolina 36.
Red Mack skirted right end for 7
U.S. SUSPECTS NEW SUMMIT DRIVE
Khrushchev Backing Away From War Danger
countersign before they may vote. A11 the danger from radiation is not yards and the Irigh TD Th fc
I . 1 A I
connnea 10 raaiation sicKness, was good oncc again to make it
Chanlett and Lumsden warned. It 21-6
is realized that radiation exposure I SMITH SCORES ON PASS
m lyuayj, geneidtioa wm uiwe us Carolina just cot under.the wire
toll in tomorrow's generation. Over its second score of the day
exposure to radiation may result when Cummings hit Wade Smith
in future generations with a poor on a beautiful down the middle
and inadequate genetic heritage." pass good for 33 vard, and scora
They noted that Great Britain, as Again the Heels tried for two, and
a step to prevent such a tragedy, again they failed, going into the
already has adopted a policy to pre- dressing room at intermission on
vent more than one-fifiteth of its the short end of a 21-12 count.
population from engaging in any Carolina came roaring back ?t
occupation where radiation may be the beginning of the second half,
present. Such jobs range from oper- going all the way after the kick
at:ng an x-ray machine to testing off. Cummings fcxt Al Godstein
nuclear weapons. twice to provide most of the vard
At the present, Great Britain does age, then Don Klochak smashed
not approach the one-fifieth figure, over from the 3. The try for two
but in the future all nations may wasn't good again, and the Heels
reach such a percentage of work- trailed 21-18,
radiation projects, they
Students may vote only in their own
district.
G. M. SLATE
' Monday's Activities in Graham
Memorial include:
Carolina hymposium 7-8 p.m..
Kappa Kappa Gamma 7-9 p.m.
Grail, 10 p.m.; Yackety Yack, 5-
7 p.m.; student Party, 7-9 p.m.;
.Stray Greeks, 7:30-9:30; IFC, 2
4 p.m.; Rules Committee, 4-5
p.m.; Elections Board, 2-6 p.m.;
Bridge, 7-11 p.m.
?
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FECD THE METER
INFIRMARY
Students in the Infirmary yes
terday wrre:
Robert Dougla Gillikin, Charles
Pattfnion Kldridsc Jr., Cary
Irwin .Matthews, John Stewart
Klett-her, Garlon Ie Basniht,
William Nelson Anderson, Allen
MaalhM Cohta, Kenial Harry
lieen, Miehael Jolm Swain, Her
man Fdward Tiektl, Julian Willis
l.radley and Ciiarles Moulsomery
Hit ks.
By JOHN M. 1IIGI1TOWER ,
WASHINGTON (T) -i Premier Ni-
j ' kita Khrushchev seems to be back
j ' ir,g away from the danfiers of a
k military showdown over control of
I ; West Berlin. '
" U. S. officials said Saturday that
Khrushchev obviously intends to
keep the dispufe, which lie started
a week ago, in diplomatic chan
nels. They suspect strongly that his
plan is to parlay the German situa
tion and other current East-West
controversies such as the nuclear
talks at Geneva into a new drive
for a summit conference.
Evidence of a jcalming down in
Khrushchev's campaign over East
Berlin was seen here in his latest
move which took the form of a
statement that he intends to make
formal proposals to the west on the
future status of the city.
Khrushchev clearly has the initia
tive in anything he wants to under
take. The Western powers have
been unable to come up with any
fresh ideas for outmaneuvering him
on the German issue or throwing
his incipient summit campaign off
balance.
With Secretary of State Dulles in
Seattle most of this week, having
devoted his latest public speech on
Thursday to a denunciation of the
lied Chinese communist system,
East Germans To Vote Today
BERLIN W) At least one intends to give up its occupation
rights in Berlin and the allies should
do the same.
Ever since then, East German of
ficials have eagerly plugged his
line. Traveling from one end of
East Germany to the other, they
attempted to whip up their audi
ences with the Berlin issue.
"The allies and their spies must
leave Berlin," the speakers cried.
"Berlin for the Berliners."
Not that the East Berlin party
bosses need any kind of slogan
to win an election. There is only
one way to vote against the Red
list of candidates cross them all
platform for communist shouting
about the status of allied occupied
West Berlin will be removed today.
About 11 million persons , will
dutifully troop to the polls in Com
munist East Germany and cast
their single-list ballots for a new
parliament. ,
They will thus write a climax to
an "election campaign'' that has
featured a theme with internation
al repercussions "get the allies out
of Berlin."
The theme was kicked into the
arena by no less a campaigner than
Nikita Khrushchev. Speaking at a,! off the ballot.
some observers here got the im- ception for Soviet Military schpol
Moscow rally last Monday, the So
viet Premier said the Soviet Union
In a communist state, most peo
ple vote for the list.
pression that the United States for
the moment was lagging one crisis
behind.
Actually Dulles was addressing
an audience largely occupied with
Far Eastern issues. His return here
yesterday enabled him to direct de
tailed attention to the Berlin crisis.
He will have opportunity to dis
cuss the situation in a speech at
Cleveland, Ohio, Tuesday night. He
will address the National Council of
Churches of Christ in America.
Saturday the White House an
nounced that the U. S. Ambassador
to West Germany, David K. E.
Bruce, will confer with President
Eisenhower Monday before returning
to his post. He will leave for Bonn
later in the week. Officials denied
that he was speeding up his plans
in any way on account of the Com
munist threats toward West Berlin.
The main Washington interest in
the situation Saturday concentrated
on the two points which Khrushchev
made last Jiight at a Kremlin re-
graduates. He said he does not in
tend to fight the West for Berlin (al
though he renewed warnings
against the West fighting East Ger
many) and he declared he is pre
paring formal proposals on the fu
ture status of the city.
State Department authorities in
terpreted the latter remark as
meaning hat some time soon the
United States, Britain and France
will get notes from Moscow formal
ly putting forth . Khrushchev's de
mand that they withdraw from West
Berlin and let East Germany's com
musist regime take over the city,
They have no intention of doing so
It is believed here that Krush
chev's talk of formal proposals
means he woul drather debate the
Berlin issue through diplomatic
channels and try to whip it up into
one more argument for a summit
conference than to create condi
tions in East Germany which would
laise the danger of military conflict.
ers on
added.
Sixteen Tables
Eiusy At Bridge
KLOCHAK GIVES HEELS
24-21 LEAD
Once again the Tar Heels fought
back, for their fourth touchdown
and the second time they held the
lead throughout the whole game.
Moe DeCantis snared an enemy
aerial from its intended receiver
at the Carolina 28, and his mates
Sixteen table.-; were in play for I marched straight down the field
nMonday night's regular dupli- 10 taKe tae leaU- Tne m? play was
cate bridge tourney at Graham a ezt 27-yard heave from Cum-
Memorial. Play for the event was mmgs to Goldstein at the 1 yard
divided into two sections, and f ol- line- ochak crashed into the end
lowing is a list of student winners: zone t0 Put the HeeIs anead 24"21-
Section A: North-South: Bill Cai- 0nce aain the try for two was no
son and Mike Alexander, first eood' but the Tar Heels led with
place: Jimmy Tedder and Frmk 5:JJ of tne tmrd garter left.
Carlisle, second place;; and Don otre Came however did not
Gray and Jim Butler, third place. take to this pat,ern of P13? fondly
East-West: Kennv Miller and Rarrv IKI5H, Page 4
tt 1 . r: 1. l iir.u n 1 s 1
ridiim, ium piace, vv au rwina am THE STATISTICS
Fred Steck, second place
Section B: North-South: Bill Un
derwood and Gene Whitehead, sec- First Downs
ond place. East-West: Anne and Rushing Yardage
Gray McAllister, third place. Passing Yardage
Bridge director, Dan Duke, an- Passes
nounced that the monthly master Passes Intercepted by 2
point game is scheduled for Mon- Punts , 6-41.7
day, Nov. 17. Participation is open Fumbles Lost 1
to students and public. Yards Penalized 35
UNC ND
12 22
94 32?
184 15 -
10-20 12-
3-f