diversity of North Carolina Chapel SU1, H. C i WEATHER Increasing cloudiness and mild, followed by showers tonight. EDITORIAL' Who t:zres? State Student legifiiture Suggested iiupi oci;:l5 f vr Vf (CD n r 4 an tin. VOLUME LVJ United Press CHAPELJlILL, N. C. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 7, 1317 Phone F-3371 F-33QI NUMBER 33 Gals Git Thar Chance In Human RaceToday The women get their chance today as member of the "weaker" sex in some 44,000 different celebrations all over the world to run wild in their annual Sadie Hawkins day. The local campus is no exception, and preliminary reports from SH day chairmen Mike ; anorrsKiris Asked For SH Barn Dance cate the wirnmenfolks will outdo themselves in correct ing the long-complained-of 7-1 ratio. To t wit: "Menfolks, beware!" Features of the clay include opening festivities in the Y court, at 1 o'clock, the P.U. F.U. feetsball game at 3, and the Sadie Hawkins day grand barn dance to top off the af fair this evening. A half-dozen campus organizations, un d?r the supervision of Gra- Y a 1 1 e r shoes, ' SHORT skirts, and polka dot ties and blouses will be the "rough" order of the night for the final event of the world's most unique celebration of a reversal of the sexes, Sadie Hawkin's day. nam memorial, are cooper-i , atmg in presenting the day-1 Th gearing of any sort of Ion;1 celebration honoring the homely ex-spinster of Al Capys nationally famous comic strip, Li'l A brier. Fate Decided The fate of several hundred hapless males has already been decided. A fish-bowl drawing , was held yesterday by campus coeds to divide up the "cron" of men who sign ed the CICA roster in theY Icbbv this week. These fish bcwl drawees will be called for around 8 o'clock this eve ning by the coeds fortunate ROurh to drw their names, ?nd thev will be escorted to the Woollen gymnasium barn dace. Lonesome Polecate and Ole Man Mnse ctart the ball roll ing in the Y court at 1 o'clock this afternoon as this dapner f ; duet prMles its reoetive I I ware" of Jov Juice and advice . to all '"nTpr: A f "th 5me I t5iQ wpll-pi-icticod hillbillies I fof th iVestn North Oro- Ilina club '"ill prpsnt their J'C'Tsion. o how CjUe d?nc- cr should Trolly hQ Hone, i "iFornnion "f the prnnd pa- J j-orJ- firoilCfh fo'T-vi nine 11-30 in front of th YMCA. Hil-lnf frn-o tri"vol00 hroiirv' Vot-n'! )n-l -n'tnTririW00 find pr iho Dnnith-Tortes- cuf-Pnnboiind bnd, the m rde "dll noed around to Franklin strpf throiih the hines or:tion, and down to Fetzer fa1fl. Judsrps Named Juderes frr th" hst rrqde fi-t ar noon R L. M9--ki "Haver Fh AT.ndr Prof. J. pQr,rr.cp Harlind Prof F. J. See SADIE HAWKINS, pa?e 4 Dogpatch - mountaineer cos tume will be required for ad mission to the evening's grand bran dance, which be gins at 8:30 in Woollen gym nasium, and the Western North Carolina club, dance sponsors, urged students to "let their imaginations run wild" in dreaming up cos tumes for the affair. An hour-long show of a dozen-odd surprise acts, di rected by Andy Griffith, promises to be one of the top attractions of the night. Nu merous campus personalities, "known better for their Ac complishments in fields other than entertainment" accord ing to close-mouthed program directors, was to participate in the . comic mountaineer ex tarvaganza. Participants per mitting the show will begin at 9:30. - To the wearers of the most authentic costumes and the longest beards will go distinc tive prizes. The authentic costume-judging list includes Li'l Abner, Mammy and Pap py . YoKum, riairiess Joe, Lonesome Polecat, Daisy Mae, Marryin' Sam, and Ole' Man Mose. However, equal awards will also be made to those sporting the best and most unique outfifits of any characters out of the Li'l Ab ner comic strip. Though, the main part of the evening will be devoted to square dancing, to be led by the Western N. C. club, sweet and swing music for - , ill i i round dancing win ue pujw dOW the bridge of supplies also. fiM ART MAJORS r.afn 4 , .f " 1 wmm&mmmiU mbmw i? v.. t if I j Ned Reap, Gardiner Orchestras. Slated Fcr Battle of Bands UNQ State Leaders Move For Goodwill Ned Reap and his Dream Ser enades and Scott Gardiner and i r his orchestra wiU provide must! RatJjO Stat jQH PlOnS tor the World Student bervice fund's Battle of Bands dance to morrow night from 8 to 12 m Woollen gym. Miss Payoff of 1947, selected by student votes from among 0 entrants sponsored by campus or ganizations, will be crowned during intermission by Wayne Brennengan, chairman of the dance organization committee who is acting as co-chairman for Saturday's dance. Cup For Decorations Chuck Voigt, president of the University club, will make tha awards for the best Homecoming decorations a cup for the best A propoicd e::ch-)n?e of uni versity cheer leaders with those 'of State college for the pp ral i lies to be held at the two schools (tonight failed to mstoiiilire lata thcei ladtr with I U!fl JCi IUI VIIUNUI nill yesterday a, head lIMvrt Sherard confrrotl Application for the build- state cheerleaders in Ralcich. ing of a radio station in The intended s-t.:., winch was Chapel Hill was filed last I proposed at a conference of Uni- weeK with the federal com-i vrsity and State colkpe leaders murncations cunuuission, Col lier Cobb, Jr. one of the three applicants, said yesterday. Cobb said that he, Grady Art Majors Decorate Four Store Windows Eight art majors, working un der the direction of student chairman Joseph Fidler and fac ulty advisor John Rembert, have decorated four windows in dovfi town stores depicting student conditions abroad, in connection with the World Student Service fund drive. James Moon, a special student at the university who has spent several years at Cooper Art in stitute, set up a display in the window of Marion's Five and Ten Cent store using principles of modern art to' depict foreign students' lack of food. Mary Neely, Marilyn Elack- well, Mary Moulton and Betty Pierson have depicted in the university service plant win University Asks Conference For Guinea Pig: Privileges Pritchard, and J. B. Johns, all businessmen of the com munity, placed an application to construct a standard broad casting station, to operate on a trpnnpnrv nr 1.1411 Klin- sorority or fraternity and one d a wer of 25Q watt .r " " " I with unlimited broadcasting decorations will be judged at 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Invitations to . State college students who will be here i'or the game to remain for the dance have been extended through the State college Teeh nieian. Ten Cents A Vote Votes for Miss Payoff may stiii be registered in the Y lobby today and tomorrow, at ten cents per vote, and at the dance itself until 10 o'clock. Aii pro ceeds from the dance and the contest will go to the WSSF drive for: -relief cf foreign students. xo Shctv Conditions Abroad time. As yet there are no definite construction plans or agreed network affiliations. The station may be an inde pendent, Cobb added. "The permission request must be granted by the Wash ington commission before any definite plans can be laid," he said. "Federal action on the request should be com pleted in a few months, if no complications arise over the desired frequency." By Herb Kachman The University has been offered for experimental pur poses to the Southern Association of Colleges and Univer sities and will be one of the first institutions inspected if the proposal for accrediting southern graduate schools is passed by the association next month. Freshmen Hall, Lineberger, Stamey, Yates Awarded Braswell Scholarships Worth $200 The four Braswell scholar ships for freshmen have been awarded this year to Charles Winston Hall of Sanford; Adrian Smith Lineberger, Jr., Chapel Hill; Claude .Richard Stamev, Canton; and Herbert Sea well Yates, Rockingham. Valued at $200 each, these scholarships are given an- ually to four entering iresn- men on the basis ot scno lastic ahilitv. financial need, well-rounded personality, and uromise of future distinction. StT'he scholarships are provided a fund of $21,000 set-up in 1938 by an anonymous did Claude Richard Stamey rm- as an endowment in, in the Bethel high school in memory of Dr. Frank R. Braswell of Rocky Mount, class of 1888. The winners this year were all prominent graduates of State high schools last June. Graduating from the Deep River high school of Sanford, Charles Winston Hall ranked first in his class of 12, edited the school paper, served as secretary of the senior class, nnH was a member of the Beta club. Hall made all A's on his high school work as ? , . i i mm It " " . .. ,,JWJ,luLijlrir i uijiumwiiwfn inrii 'ii i iril""nil'l -' . ; , . J :v II y,;t f - SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS 5. Yates, Adrian S. Lineberger, Jr., Left to right above, Herberi Charles W. Hall, ana in the Bethel high school in Waynesville. Stamey, who now lives in Canton was also active on the basketball and boxing teams, in debating and publications, and as pres ident of the Beta club, gradu ating first in a class of 46. Local Boy Valedictorian in a class of 49 here in the Chapel Hill high school, Adrian Smith Lineberger, Jr., lists among his honors duty on the foot ball, basketball, and baseball teams; in school plays and the Universitv band; as sports ed itor of Hillife and president of both the Hi-Y and the stu dent council; and at Boys State. Yates in the Rocking ham high school participated in debating, music, student government, the Beta club, and business management of the school paper. Alternates for these schol arships were Carl Rudolph Spell, Roseboro: Billv Ray mond Hale, Thomasviile; Larry Dew Hooks. Frpmont; and Jere Leonard Morton, Raleiph. Last year's winners were Wilson M. Lee, Benson; Charles Alva Pryce. Rocking ham; Hubert Donald Robert son, Asbville: and Richard Isle'y Walker, Winston-Salem. Dean of ths Graduate School, William Pierson,. has made the announcement fol lowing his return from the annual Conference of Deans of southern graduate schools held in New Orleans for two days last week. Dean Pierson explained that a proposal for accredit ing southern graduate schools was passed by the Conference of Deans and the conference is now awaiting decision of the Southern Association be fore beginning inspections. Accrediting will be of a different sort under the pro posal than that used present ly in the various undergradu ate divisions. Schools under application for accreditation will undergo an inspection to determine their relative stan dards on such matters as fac ulty, library facilities, labo ratory, examinations, student achievements and admission policies. The schools will be graded, Pierson said, according to de partments. "Measurement of institutions will be qualita tive rather than quantita tive," he said. "Accrediting will be determined by the de partment system." Dean Pierson went on to say that if the proposal goes into effect it will have a far reaching effect toward im provement in general gradu- a e work ot this region. Standards of the proposal have been under preparation by the deans for nearly 15 years. Fierson said, ana ap proval nt the Commission or Higher Education has already been obtained. "It only remains now for the Southern Association to approve the standards at their annual meeting next month," he added. The Con ference of Deansx is not the accrediting body," he further explained, "they mav deter mine the minimum standards but the final decision Di Senate Approves Federal World Group . The Dialectic Senate in its meeting Wednesday night passed a hotly contested bill to resolve the present United Nations Gen eral Assembly into a committee to initiate a more powerful World r ederai Government. By an 13 to 6 vote cf the Senate members and a 22 to 14 vote of all present including visitors, the measure . endorsing a more forceful expedient of world-wide agreement was passed only after actively voiced dissention. After its first read ing by Randy McLeod, the bill brought forth considerable de bate from the floor. Edith Knight and Lincoln Kahn, Sena tors and campus members of the Collegiate Council for United Nations, spoke negatively against such a proposal while Al Lowenstein, Russell Baldwin, and Bill Harding led debate af firmatively. Most of the speakers thought that the present United Nations was inadequate, but the issue made on the floor was whether the UN should be nursed along from its infancy with any pos sible improvements or whether another stronger board of World federation should be established with a more inclusive basic con stitution to ward off the impend ing danger ot an atomic Domo war. The final vote came to settle the argument came only at 11:15 o'clock. Decorations for the dance will consist of lighted posters show ing students' conditions abroad- Made by a committee headed by Emily Ogburn they show, the student service center at Kun ming, China;' ruins on the Uni versity of Warsaw campus; co eds pinch-hitting as farmers; and students doing their own laundering and hair cutting. Emily's committee included Gwen Finley, Mary McGougen, Barbara Dalton, Betty Long, and Ruth McCann. Gran Childress, chairman cf the Di membership committee, expressed regret that the length of the discussion on the bill necessitated the postponement of ten applications for member ship.' However, Childress asked that all prospective Senate mem bers be on hand at 9 o'clock next Wednesday evening in the Di hall on the second floor 3f ciiew .asi wneii meir appuca- come ticn." through the Assc tions for admittance will defi nitely be considsred. Prices Is Subject Of Russell's Talk To Welfare Panel Phillips Russell, University professor of journalism, said Wednesday evening that "we cannot hope to understand high prices in Chapel Hill un less we also understand the present international situa tion." Speaking as a member of a panel on high prices sponsor ed by the Southern Confer ence for Human Welfare, Russell laid special emphasis on the British embargo on tobacco imports as a factor which will have a significant effect on the economy of North Carolina. Concrete Means Other panel members, Tom McDade, former chairman of the Vets co-op store, and the Reverend Charles Jones of the Presbyterian church, laid emphasis on concrete things which can be done in Chapel Hill to combat high prices such as establishing eating co-ops and doing without luxuries. University Services Recognized by Navy A bronze plaque, honoring the University's war-time services, will be presented to the school by the Navy De partment in llenan stadium tomorrow, Chancellor Robert B. House said today. ' The formal presentation will be made before the kick of the State-Caholina game by Capt. D. W. Loomis, pro fessor of Naval Science at the NROTC here, and will be ac cepted for the Uinversity by Chancellor House. Departmental Award The bronze tablet is a de partmental award made with Congressional authorization, and is signed by former Sec retary of Navy James r-'orres-tal. The raised inscription reads that "this mark of com mendation is awarded to the Universitv of North Carolina for its effective cooperation in training mval personnel during World War II." Then follows the list of na val training units attached to the University during the war, for which this award is being made: The Naval Re serve Officer's Training Corps, the Naval V-12 Unit, the V-12 Medical Unit, the U.S.N. Pre-Hight school, and the Prefiight school for the Free French P'orces. Tuesday nii;ht, Uu.-; tin? latest effort to lo. tcr food ill be tween the tUo in.titutiOJi'J. Both State and University representatives pledged full sup port at the Tuesday night mci ing to a program dcarned to prevent vandalism on the cam puses of the two colleges. State Difficulty Members of the state delega tion pointed out that ic will be quite difficult for them to in form the complete student body and warn all students against property destruction and prac tices which create ill fcc-ling be tween the two schools, at such 3 late date, They stated that they would be greatly handicapped because their campus publica tion does not come out until Fri day night, virtually too late to combat any possible vandalism. Punitive Measures Jennings Teal, president of the State student government, promised that he would en deavor to get the student gov ernment court to expel any stu dent from State who was guilty cf an act of vandalism. He said that although their constitution does not specifically deal with vandalistlc practices, they are able to prosecute a student in any manner the court 2es tit for "ungentiemaniy' behavior. University; deisKatss to thi3 good-wiii gathering included Tom Eiier, student body presi dent, Bob Broughton, chairman of the Student Council, and Bar ron Mills, Daily Tar Heel editor. Faculty representatives were Dean of Men Fred Wea f r al Claude Teague, business man ager of the University. Phillips Russell ; To Speak Tonight "What iieniy Wallace ha3 to offer to North Carolina" wiil be the topic for discussion when the Wallace Democrats wlub rneetJ tonight at 7 o clock in the Ro land Parker iounge cf Graham Memorial. Presenting hn viewpoint on the subject Phillips Russell, Uni versity professor of journalism, will iead off the discussion be fore the floor n opened to thfj audience fur a jifjii.ral discus sion. "We are now completely or ganuied and itady t.j no to wot.'c on the irnpoitant job of bringing Wallace's views before the peo ple of the t-tatc. We will wel come the presence of everyone who is interested tonight," said chairman Martin ICnculton. SADIE HAWKINS DAY SCHEDULE 1:00 p.m. Opening festivities, Y court; predictions from Ole Man Mose, to be followed by Lonesome Pole cat with Kickapoo Joy Juice, Western North Carolina club will present exhibition of square dancing. 1:30 p.m. Grand parade through town will form in front of YMCA; floats and reasonable facsimiles to be entered by sororities, fraternities, dorms; pa rade will follow around Cameron avenue to Franklin street through business section, past judges reviewing stand; down Columbia street to Fetzer field. 2:30 p.m. Feetsball game between Fcrtsscue U. and Phog bcund U., Fetzer field, sponsored by Monogram club. 3:30 p.m. Sadie Hawkins day Human Racs, Fatzsr field; Marryin' Sam at finish line. 4:15 p.m. Sack races, three-legged races, and other games for happy newly weds, Fetzer field; supervised by Women's Atheletic association. 8:30 p.m. Gala Sadie Hawkins day barn dance; square and round dancing, Woollen gymnasium; Dogpatch costume required for admission; prizes will be awarded for most authentic costumes, longest beards, other outstanding features. 9:30 p.m. Fioorshow of outstanding hillbilly talent, di rected by Andy Griffith. Ciaude R. Stamey.

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