University oi Tiorth Carolina
Chapel Hill, N. C.
1-31-43
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1 ,
WEATHER
Fair and mild temperatures.
EDITORIAL'
We're Smart Guys
Greet the Team Back
More People More Frats
VOLUME LVI
Yugoslav and British Ambassadors Share CCUN Speakers' Role
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PfCSS CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1947 . Phone F-3371-F336I NUMBKrH
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University
Enrollment Figures Hit Record Total Of 7,528 Students
U.S., Soviets
Said to Hold
Key to Peace
.There can be no peace with
outbasic agreement between the
United States and Soviet Rus
sia, ; Sava N. Kosanovic, Yugo
slav Ambassador to the United
States, asserted in an address
tonight at the University.
.Speaking at the final session
of the first International Colle
giate Conference, sponsored by
the Collegiate Council for United-Nations,
Marshal Tito's too
diplomatic representative in
this'cpuntry lashed out against
"those who .need this war at
mosphere" and "make use of ev
ery; .weakness, emphasize every
mistake, in order to create the
impression that the United Na
tions organization does not and
cannot exist"
- Pe VP ting a good portion of
his address to a defense of the
yetor. power in the United Na
tions Security. Council, Ambas-
sador Kosanovic insisted that
theytab-PresfJU
"If this right of veto did not
exist-under the present cir
cumstancesthe United Nations
organization would be weak, its
future problematical, its deci
sions unreal. The great powers
might, even abandon it if the
"general policy did not suit
i I Sir : J ohn Magowan, British
Minister-to the United States in
charge of trade relations, shared
, the speaking program at to
night's session. Naming peace
ajid prosperity as the long term
objectives of the United Nations,
he mamtained that "these two
ideals are too , apt to be regard
ed as' separate and distinct.
, '"The main tain ence of peace is
regarded as the task of political
leadership,' while prosperity is
too often ' regarded as a matter
solely for the individual efforts
of 'businessmen and their cus
tomers, as far removed from
political influence as possible,"
he asserted. "Surely however in
the modern world, peace can
only be made secure if prosper
ity; or rather, the opportunity
for achieving it, is first estab
See SPEAKER, page 4.
Dr. Hardin Craig
Will Give Address
On University Day
By Raney Stanford" '
The celebration of ' the 154tli
University . Day and the ...fiist
convocation of tne : new year
will be held on the campus the
morning of Oct. 10. Dr. Hardin
Craig of the English department
will deliver the convocation ad
dress, and his talk will be pre
ceded by the traditional acade
mic procession under the direc
tion pf Dr. J. C. Lyons, faculty
marshal.
University Day commemorates
the laying of the cornerstone of
Old East, the oldest building on
the campus, on Oct. 12, 1793
This year's celebration will be
held two days earlier to place it
in the regular scneduled week.
The convocation talk and the
faculty procession officially
marks the opening of another
year at the University. It is one
of the two times during the
year when the school's profes
sors appear clad in their acade
mic ; caps and gowns -r:'":
Music for the occasion will
be provided by a men and wom
en's glee club, and memorial ex
ercises will be held for alumni
and students who have died
since the last University Day.
Classes will not be held dur
ing the hours set aside for the
event.
Former Record
Set Last Year
Mow Shattered
By Charlie Gibson
: The University these days Is
loosening its belt and just con
tinues to grow, grow, and re
grow, according to the latest
release from South building on
this term's enrollment.
Last month 7.528 students
came to Chapel Hill so set an
all-time high for the number to
attend the University during one
term. The last winter quarter
had set the former record peak
at 6,893. In September, 1946,
only 6,802 were on hand, mak
ing the student body slimmer by
726.
As yet there has been no
breakdown of this term's figure
either into various classes and
J A J . ,
uejjanmems or oetween men
and women students.
If
- ' it i
GM Rendezvous
By Margie Taylor
' Bigger and better entertain
ment is being offered this week
end by the new campus center,
the Graham Memorial Rendez
vous. Continuing its outstand
ing success, the Rendezous will
present Scotty. Gardner and his
band tonight from 9 o'clock to
midnight and tomorrow night
from 10 to 12 .Tomorrow aft
ernoon the doors will open at
2:30 o'clock in order that stu
dents may listen to the Carolina-
Texas football game
. Among new features is the
large fireplace at the south end
of, the roonf, surrounded by
comfortable lounges, where
marshmellows may be toasted
The refreshment, bar is open
from 6 o'clock in the evening
through midnight each day, fea
turing Rendezvous specialties in
sandwiches, priced from five to
30 . cents, pastries, soft drinks,
and ice cream.
Formerly the Candlelight
room, the Rendezvous is located
ch the. ground floor in Graham
Memorial, and may be reached
through the front entrance or by
the walk leading from the front
of the building to the back en-
Veterans Must Submit
Eligibility Certificates
All veterans beginning in or
transferring to the University
this year from another school
should have turned in their cer
tificate of eligibility during reg
istration, Colonel F. Carlyle
Shepard, University veterans
Director, warns. Those who have
not yet done so should contact
room 316 in South building im
mediately. Veterans failing to submit the
official form 7-1950 to provo
their rights to subsistence may
suffer unnecessary delay in re
ceiving checks for this month.
The regional headquarters of
the Veterans -Administration in
Winston-Salem has notified Col
onel Shepard that many veter
ans enrolled here now have in
complete records for the forth
coming pny roster.
If the enrollment grows on
and on annually at this 10.7 per
een t increase over the beginning
of last year, there will be ap
proximately 8,333 students here
by 1948; 10,198 by 1950; more
over-crowded dormitories, long
er lines, worse , registration
problems, and a future mathe
matical prediction which the
DTH will leave for Einstein to
J calculate should he ever ex
haust his study of the fifth di
mension.
I v V&UtX'A V .... . " 1
Wright, Bernot
Not in Lineup
For Tough I;oc
By Bob Goldwatrr
Austin, Texas, Oct. iNmtU
Carolina and Texas, both nhle
feated, clash for the first time
this afternoon at 2:30 (CST) in
an intersectional contest le
tween two of the nation's top
frid machines. A crowd of ovrr
45,000 is expected to jam the
Longhorns' Memorial Stadium
to witness the game,
Texas, because of two impres
sive victories' in early season
games and the fact that the con
test is being played in Texas,
rules as a slight favorite over
The football game today be
tween Texas and Carolina will
be broadcast over station
WDUK, Durham starting at
3:15 (EST).
The play by play will he
called by Ray Reeves for Uia
Tobacco State network. Game
time is 2:30 (CST).
Geology Fraternity
Holds Initial Meet
Opening its second active year
since the war in a business meet
ing Monday night, the Alpha
Alpha chapter of the honorary
geological fraternity, Sigma
Gamma Epsilon, elected Harry
M. Peak to serve as president
during the coming year.
Highlighting the meeting was
the initiation of eleven new
metnbers By : the faculty, plus
the election of James Jordan as
vice-president, Henry L. Berry
hill as ' secretary-treasurer and
Ralph C. Heath as correspond
ing secretary and editor. Plans
were formulated for the redec
oration of the chapter room and
the organization of future so
cial events.
DEEP IN THE HEART OF TEXAS The Tar Heels, now -in
Texas where they will battle the Longhorns led by Bobby
Lay ne, are pictured above as they boarded the airplane at
the Raleigh-Durham airport. To a man, the Tar Heels intend
to win, "sure as death and Texas." (Photo Courtesy Durham
Sun.)
Club To Form
niverssty Law
Made Graham1
Two boys from Wilmington, j
Doc Clark and Paul Baschon,
have anounced a plan to form
a social club among their fellow
Wilmingtonians here on cam
pus, it was annonuced yesterday.
If enough interested persons
will attend a meeting next
Wednesday afternoon from 3 to
4 o'clock in the Roland Parker
lounges No. 1 and 2, the Wil
mington club can be organized
properly, get officers elected,
and arrange its policy.
The Wilmington club is to be
formed very similarly to clubs
already established among Uni
versity students from Winston
Salem, Charlotte, and Gastonia.
Everyone from Wilmington is ' t:es with conferences at Stale
urged to attend this Wednes-1
day's initial meeting.
Professor
s Oil Aid
By Bill Sexton
Henry P. Brandis, law school professor, has been appointed by
Secretary of State Marshall, special assistant to Dr. Frank Gra
ham, U. S. representative-designate on the U. N. Indonesian Com
mission. Brandis, promoted this fall to)
full professorship, will accom
pany Dr. Graham to Indonesia
as a member of the personal
staff assigned by the State d
partment to the American rep
resentative. The president of the Greater
University, set to leave Chapel
Hill Sunday, will begin his du-
Gnest of Tau Epsilon Phi
New Zealand Counsellor John Reid Calls the United Nations
(No Short Cut to International Amity' at Informal Session
By Jud Kinberg 150, Reid and Smith brought out
Speaking at a fraternity bull important aspects of the prob
session inursaay nignt, iew
Zealand Counsellor John Reid
called the United Nations "no
short exit to international amity.
It is a young organization try
ing desperately to solve in a
few years problems that have
caused world eruption for cen
turies." Reid and Dr. Sydney Smith,
both speakers at the Carolina
Council for the United Nations
three-day rally, were guests of
the Tau Epsilott Phi house after
appearances on the CCUN ros
trum Thursday night. Other
greek societies at the informal
refreshment! -and-rhetoric affair
were Alpha Tau Omega, Lamb
da Chi Alpha, Zeta Beta Tau,
Pi Lambda Phi and Alpha Ep
silon Pi.
With questions coming trom
the college, men numbering over
lems facing not only their own
nations, but the entire family of
nations. To the New Zealander,
one success already scored by
UN is arousing of militant pub
lic opinion. He cited the re
sultant action taken in the
Iranian and Indonesian turmoils
to point home the role that
informed and articulate peoples
can play through influencing of
their representatives at Lake
Success.
When discussion swung to
obstructionist tactics of Soviet
Russia, Reid quickly scotched
any idea that "there can be any
international control body with
Russia. We've got to face facts
about current friction: Russia
has cause to distrust the West
ern nations."
Dr. Smith, Cambridge educa
tor currently touring the United !
States, frankly admitted the
need for American aid in the
near future if his country is to
ride out current economic
storms. Swinging to politics, he
predicted a split in the ranks of
the Labor party rather than any
fall from electoral power for the
Atlee government.
"They seem to constantly fear
themselves and the result is that
we get things done far too late.
Why for months we knew we
had to stop luxury importation
of those Hollywood films, but
it was only after almost a year
of such talk that the present
plan was imposed. When Labor
gets special powers, , they seem
rather ashamed of them and re
calcitrent in putting such laws
into effective use. We can t keep
up that sort of thing."
Accompanying the two speak
ers to the TEP reception was
Mrs. John Reid.
department headquarters in
Washington. An official source
indicated he would attend ses-
sions with Secretary Marsha 1
and far eastern affairs experts
beginning Monday,
Then Dr. Graham's assign
ment will carry him to United
Nations headquarters at Lake
Success, where he will confer
with U. N. Secretary Trygvie
Lie and the secretariat staff on
details of the journey to Indo
nesia and the commissions oper
ations. Other conferences will
bring him in contact with dele
gates of the other two nations
sending representatives to the
commission, though it is expect
ed that the members of the com- j
mission will not assemble in thej
U. S., but rather enroute to In
donesia or on that troubled is
land, i
Special assistant Brandis is ?
graduate of the University of
North Carolina (B.A.) and of
Columbia University (LL.B", .
Before joining the faculty of the
University he served with the
N. . C. Revenue Department.
During the war Brandis was
connected with Naval Intelli
gence. He is now a member of
the North Carolina and New
York Bar associations.
'r -
Pictures
Have Tied Up
GM Darkroom
Though the Graham Memorial
student darkroom is now tied up
by Yackety Yack photograph
ers, it is hoped that regular op
erations may be resumed short
ly, and the facilities of the lab
oratory will be opened to tho
entire student body.
In the meantime, darkroo n
manager Bob Coulter announc
ed, all students holding mem
the -North Carolinians, part id-
pants in the $ugar Howl last
season. j
The Tar Heels snapped an 18
game winning streak belonging
to the Georgia Bulldogs last
week, 14-7, in Chapel Hill.
Texas' record thus far lists wins
over Texas Tech, 33-0, and Ore
gon, 33-13.
Two Out
The Tar Heels will c minus
two of their top performers for
today's game. Co-captain Joe
Wright, who was counted on to
start at blocking back, did not
make the trip because of a swell
ing condition that is an after
math of a penicillin treatment.
Don Hartig is expected to re
place him as the offensive quar
terback, with Bobby Weint fill
ing in on defense. A I Bernot,
reserve center, 'also missed the
trip.
The game will provide an in
teresting meeting between two
of the nation's top candidates
for A II-American honors this
year. Those two well-known
gentlemen are Charlie Justice,
Carolina's renowned tailba'k.
hPrshin rarH ntitlinnr thorn to and Bobby Laync, Texas' brtl-
use of the room, should have Iam Passinfi quartcrhack. otn
these reissued for darkroom
work this year. This is bein2
I done to make a check on which
cards are to be used actively
this year, since a great number
HENRY P. BRANDIS
boys were named on many nml
able All-American outfits pri'r
to the season's srart, and the
fans will be expecting quite a
show from the two.
TilCf irn r ny-l T llrn1 rm l r- l
were issued last winter. Anyone , , , , 'c 7
. . . . , . , . backed up by fine supporting
having chemicals stored in the
room at present should al-;o
check with Coulter immediately.
He will be in the Graham
Memorial office from 8 to 9 o'
clock on Monday, Wednesday
Thursday, and Friday evenings,
and from 10:30 until 12:30 Sat
urday mornings. Free lessons in
darkroom procedure may bo ?r
ranged through him.
casts. Walt Pupa, burly Tar
Heel fullback, demonstrated Im
ability quite conclusively
against Georgia by tossing two
touchdown passes that meant
the game. Jim Camp, speedy
wingback, is another Carolina
Coach Cherry has an even
boy who will cause the Long
horn def": pI'v of trouble.
See INVASION, page 3
Yugoslav Ambassador Sava Kasanovic Steps Off Airplane
With Controversial Book, Tito's Imperial Communism1
"Tito's Imperial Commu
nism," controversial fall publi
cation of the University Press,
stepped off a plane at Raleigh
Durham airport in strange com
pany today.
The book, which blasts the
present government of Yugo
slavia in no uncertain terms, was
carried by Sava Kasanovic, Yu
goslav ambassador to the U.S.
and U.N. delegate. Kasanovic
was bound for Chapel Hill as
guest speaker at the Internation
al Collegiate conference which
ended last night. Chapel Hill, Kasanovic criti-
In terms no less uncertain j cized the U.S. Department of
than those of the book's author, , State for refus;ng visas to news
R. H. Markham, the Yugoslav papermen desirous of visiting
diplomat criticized the Univer- Yugoslavia. "We welcome
sity publication. He termed it them," he said, "but vour gov-
superficial," and charged that
it was "so full of hate."
"As minister of information
during the early years of the
war," said Kasanovic, "I came
in frequent contact with Mark
ham. He had different opinions
then."
In an interview enroute to I accept.
ernment will nor let them
come."
Referring to his recent invi
tation to six prominent Amrrj.
cans to tour his nation, the
Yugoslav diplomat said he "was
cnrrprl fn o-Jvf tUc tlan nr "
1 when five of the six declined to !