I. - - - - s-i 1-31-43 EDITORIAL: A Repudiation Election Fever Griselda and Scribe NEWS: UP Names Jacobson Library Additi Coed Elections -THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- VOLUME LV United Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APEEL 9, 1947 NUilEEE 159 HEWS' BRIEFS No Progress Made to End Phone Strike Union, AT & T Heads Confer at Capital Washington, April S (UP Jo seph Eeime, the head of the strfkir.gr telephone workers, told the nation j t i Coed Election R esu Its Show t arhara Cushion Speaker Of Senate UP Names Jacobson F or Mag Editorship Frank Alspaugh and his tumb ling troupe will perform at the UTA open house tonight at 8:30 o'clock. Debate Team Goes yesterday evening that federal peace makers have gotten nowhere in their efforts to end the nationwide walkout. In his denunciation of the expres sed hope of Conciliator Peter Mano that long distance lines operators night reach an agreement by today, Beime asserted that he himself had seen no proposal from the phone com pany and therefore saw no reason lor optimism since no separate peace ! with the Bell system will be reached ! -ry r - yv m , without the approval of the policy 15 BlOFC JJl i Olilgllt committee governing the strike as af iiiemoers oi tne .ueDate team tnax participated in the Grand National Forensic tournament at Fredicksburg last week will take part in the Di alectic senate debate tonight at 9 o'clock in the Di halL The bill for discussion at the meet ing proposes that legislation be , en acted by the government 'ire quiring union and .company delegations t tCat Vrsons advocating tne over- t the la- f tarovr 01 tne government be expelled whole. Good Progress , Once again government concilia tors announced good progress in their attempt to send 225,000 phone work ers back to their jobs. The govern ment's first team of labor experts are detemointed to keep negotiations go ing. In the nation's capital long lines of spent the day in conference at dot department. The President is said to be watch ing and waiting. Present Chief Unanimously Endorsed To Run for Second Term this Spring Marshall Spears Unanimously Chosen Head of Coed Athletic Association By Bettie Washburn In the lightest vote recorded in coed elections, Barbara Cashion, rising senior from Chapel Hill, defeated Ail dry Bryson and Ben Beale for the speakership of the Coed Senate. The new Senate sneaker has at- Senate Begins Debate On Aid to Greece Plan Washington, April S UP The Senate yesterday began debate on what may well be the most im portant foreign policy (decision to come before the current session of Congress aid to Greece. Senate pres ident Arthur Yandenberg of Michigan opened the discussion with an hour- lo immediate aid for both Greece and and excluded from employment in la bor unions, public utilities and the U. S. Federal government except the armed forces; and that such persons be expelled and excluded from posi tions of authority in all branches of the armed forces." Nine new members will be consider ed for acceptance into the Senate. All students are invited to participate in the discussion. Kenan Will Be Feted At UVA Club Tonight The coeds of Kenan dormitorv will ng speech in which he called forbfi the University Vet- , erans association tonieht at the or- Turkey, warning that Congress ! ganization's weekly open house. UVA endanger the welfare of the nation if j President stated that the clubhouse iz refuses assistance in the Middle j doors opfin at 8;30 , . - , , ! Featured will be Frank Alspaugh Vandennerg admitted tnat the aid hb Carolina team. Just DiH is a -calculated risk to head off drg5sed a third world war and named Russia Und coed choen, and specifically when he warned tnat oth- j dgarettes fnTTlishe er countries have expansionist ideas AU veterans ,ar?ed to attend ir Greece and Turkey. He added that; lxmctiQ he believed it is wiser for the United j By Sam Whitehall A University party unani mous nomination yesterday put the name of Fred Jacobson in the .running for Editorship -of the Carolina Magazine. Without a dis senting voice, the men who represent UP endorsed Jacobson, successful can didate last year and current editor of the Magazine. Renomir.ation of Jacobson for. a second term is a move unprecedented in recent campus publication history. "We feel that Fred has done a tre mendous job in reviving a Magazine which hit rock-bottom during war years," explained a University party spokesman. "Recent issues of the Carolina Magazine have been general ly accepted as the .best since 1942. We feel that, if re-elected, Jacobson will bring to the editors post the experience needed to stabilize the pub lication at its best.' Long Record of Service A rising Senior, Jacobson has a long record of scholastic, service and professional writing and editing be1 hind him- Before joining the Army, he worked for two years in the New York .SunV sports departments " In the service, he was in intelli gence and was also battalion publi- tended the University throughout her college career and has been outstand- f Gauss to Speak On 'City of Man' w yncr irs stnnoTTf- CTrvvgrri Mien At TVTP-i- ent she is a member of the Student ; council and served as nresident of the Town Girl's association this past j YhlS MO ITlin ST year. ; WAA President j TCth "The City of Man" as his Marshall Spears of Rocky Mount ! topic, Christian Gauss, dean emeri went into the presidency of the Worn-! tus of Princeton university, will ad an's Athletic association unopposed j cbss the first Convocation of the I fbv other candidates. Spears transfer- spring quarter tins morning at u. 1 red to the University from Stephens j o'clock in 3Iemorial halL 1 ;' college this falL While here she has Gauss' ts& will center around the i? i been active in woman's athletics and revolutionary iatuxe ox luk Fred Jacobson, editor of the Car olina Magazine, received the nom ination of the University Party for reelection. Police Discover Langley Collyer also served on the Woman's council and the WAA council. Bill Lloyd of Chapel Hill defeated K. D. Durham of HendersonvHie for the vice-presidency of WAA. Miss Lloyd is a member of the YWCA cab inet, the Student legislature, Town Girls' association, and the Woman's council. Bar bee Elected .Betsy Ann Barbee, also of Chape! Hill and recently elected president of the Town Girls' association for the coming year, was elected secretary of WAA -over Mary Ellen Wellons of Raleigh. Miss Barbee has served as president of CICA, president and vice president of the WAA Corns c II. i Janet Crinkley of Warrenton de-i era and the need of bringing political and social thinking into line with the fundamental concepts of the "humane tradition." All classes at 11 o'clock will be ssspended so that all students and faculty members may attend. New York, April 8 (UP) New York police tonight closed the books on the mystery of the rich, eccentric Fifth avenue hermits, the Collyer brothers. The brothers, Langley and Homer one a musician, the other an admiral ty lawyer had lived as hermits in States to step into the 3Iiddle East sow even if it means an open break' with Russia. Vandenberg stated: "If i we were to reject the plan, we would give the green light to aggression j everywhere. Our moral authority and j leadership would die on the spot- We , would multiply our own hazards." j DAY CONVENES The Chapel Hill branch of the Disabled American Veterans will meet this evening at 7:30 in the Horace Williams lounge of Graham Memorial, announced Victor Kelly, commander. All disabled veterans are eordiallv invited to attend. cations chief. His heroism under fire was recognized by the award of the Silver Star for "valor far beyond the call of duty." Returned Winter, 1946 Jacobson returned to Chapel Hill and the University in the winter quar ter of 1946, immediately resuming work on student publications. Campus experience includes night editorship and associate. editorship of the Daily Tar Heel, and columnist for the same j police have been going through the paper. . j home and searching through the city ; Jacobson is probably the first can-; for Langley. didate to have edited the publication! Seldom had a case so. stirred the; before being elected to the post. That j imagination of the big town. Every-: came about when he was invited to! one reported seeing long-haired Lang-; i edit the February, 1943, issue of the ley but the police feated Nina Moseley of Chapel Hill - for the treasurership of WAA , by a small margiar Crinkley "is" a" transfer from Peace college. Mary (Butch) Goodwin of Edenton and a transfer from Louisburg col lege, went into the office of awards chairman of WAA unopposed. The 284 ballots of the snecial elec-j tion were cast ' as follows: Senate I contributor to magazines and collab- their Fifth avenue mansion for near- Speaker Barbara Cashion. ISO: Aud-jorative works of national interest, ly 40 years. ry Bryson, 99; Ben Beale, 50; Vice Currently the president of the United chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, Gauss, before his retirement from ac tive service, was for many years Dean of the College and professor of romance languages at Princeton. Awarded Legion of Honor Today's speaker has been fervently interested in the problems of inter national and intercultural relations. He was awarded a knighthood in the French Legion of Honor in recog nition -.of Jus. achievements both as scholar and teacher. In addition to numerous books in the field of literature and the ro mance languages, Dean Gauss is the author of "Why We Went to War," (1918). and "A Primer for Tomor row." He also ha3 been a frequent of Trrre wfks a??o. Homer, blind and I rmident of WAA Bill Llovd. 160: Ellen Wellons. 119; Treasurer paralyzed, was found dead in the j K. D. Durham, 112; Secretary of j WAA Janet Crinkley, 1S2; Kb trash-filled mansion. Since that time, i WAA Betsv Ann Barbee, 148; Mary Moseiey, 12S. Rush Says Library Additions Are Part of Indefinite Future Carolina Magazine The talent- he showed in this job led to his 'nomina tion and greatly aided in his election by an overwhelming majority m last vear's election. Today, shortly before 4 o'clock, po-: The long-needed additions to the University library must stay Ike found Langely. He was dead, ap- i jn te cj25S 0f things to come for an indefinite period, Charles E. parents crushed to death in one - of j Tjniversity librarian, said yesterday. The advisory build- ' a maze through the mansion. Ford Rites to Be Held At 2:30 This Afternoon Detroit, April S (UP) Acording to a company spokesman, funeral ser vices for Henry Ford, 83-year-old mo tor industrialist, will be at 2:30 to morrow in St. Paul's Cathedral in De troit. There will be no pallbearers. The public will be admitted to ser vices; however, the burial at Addison Ford cemetery near Greenville will b- private. The body will lie in state to day at the huge reception hall of Greenfield village, Ford's famous showplace museum. Little Symphony Completes Series of 63 Concerts Lewis HoMs Meeting With District Leaders Washington, April S (UP) John L. Lewis appears to be relenting a bit in his safety shut-down of the nation's coal mines. L?wis held a meeting of his dis trict leaders in Washington today, then telegraphed a new set of instruc tions to his local unions. There has been no complete report on what went cr: at the meeting, and newsmen haven't seen the telegram Lewis sent out. But reports from leaders who did attend the meeting indicate that Lew bi has decided to relax his require ments for thorough federal inspection before any mine can be re-opened. WEATHE& today Considerable cloudiness and showers, little change in tempera tares. Swalin Directed State Orchestra A total of 63 concerts, includ ing 30 adult evening concerts and 33 free concerts for 28,550 children, were played by the North Carolina Little Symphony or chestra which has just completed its annual spring tour. The Little Symphony, composed of 20 of the 60 to 65 members of the Orchestra's personnel, gave concerts in every section of the State, from Murphy to Manteo, during the last month and a half, and also gave a highly successful performance before the General Assembly in Raleigh. The full Symphony, composed of some 65 players under the direction of Dr. Benjamin F. Swalin, launched the most ambitious tour "in its history, today in Reidsville, with appearances scheduled in 23 different communities from Asheville to Wilmington. Two concerts, one for adults and one for children, will be given, in re peat appearances, adding five new towns to the schedule. Following the Pveidsville concerts tndav. the Symphony will appear in Leaksville April 10, Kannapolis April 11 (private concert), Greenville April 14 (private concert). Washington v. ing committees of the library administration board and the state- ?wide Friends of the Library will hold planning sessions throughout the spring and summer to make recom mendations to the main University building committee, but actual con struction cannot begin until the gov ernor and his advisers decide that building costs have come down enough for the state to get the greatest bene fit from money expended. V x i " . X', ' 8r- -: f r- .1 i. See SYMPHONF Page U i - Governor R. Gregg Cherry is shown here congratulating Director Benjamin F. Swalm of the North Carolina Little symphony after the orchestra had given a conrert in the State CapitoL. r Paring First Job "The first job of the planning com mittees will be a paring one," said Rush, pointing cut that the Univer sity's original request for $1,500,000 had been cut to 514115,000, "And then construction details must be based on building costs that will be one-half or three-quarters of what they are today." If the library started building now, he explained, only one-half the abso lutely required space could be com pleted under present conditions. And the needs of the Library are con stantly growing. DaUy Tar Heel Staffs Meet this Afternoon All members of the news, sports, and editorial staffs of the Daily Tar Heel will convene this after noon at 5 o'clock in the DTH news offices. 4 All staff members must be pres ent on time, as several very impor tant matters will be considered. No excuses will be accepted unless cleared in advance through the edi tor or managing editor.