LIPHHY (Periodical Depi) University of !.'orth Carolina Chapel Hill,. ' C. . r A WEATHER Mild with scattered showers. EDITORIALS Springtime Coed Portrait Hj The People, Yes United Press CHAPEL HILL, N. O, SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 1948 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NO. 133 . .... . . . Co-Editors Receive Kerr Endorsement V In a statement yesterday afternoon, Tom Kerr, losing candidate for the editorship of Tarnation, bucked his party's stand to endorse Bob Smith and Tom Wharton as co-editors of the humor, mag. Thanking those who worked for and supported him, Kerr ask ed his Voters to back the coT editors against Charlie Gibson in next Tuesday's runoff. He said, "After several days thought on this issue, I have de dided to back Bob Smith and Tom Wharton because they are willing to openly face the voters with the real issues. Charlie Gib son, with whom I have discussed this at length, is unwilling to let the student body know where he stands on the Tarnation mat ter except to say he wants to be editor. , "Messers. Smith and Wharton are not experienced editors, but they are bent on organizing an efficient, well-run mag with all the talent available. This attitude of frankness on an election issue to the present very clowdy, is highly commendable and merits the conscientious student's con sideration and vote." Kerr, present assistant editor of Tarnation, fell in third spot last Tuesday with 586 votes, to be excluded from the runoff. He was at the Orange print shop Friday afternoon when the Student party endorsed Charlie Gibson, but he said later he felt confident of Smith's and Whar ton's election as "this is not a party matter." TOM KERR Charles Me Johnson Accused of Losing I $1,000,000 Yearly T i :n a :i 1 r Tm itt Kerr Scott tonight accused one of his rival candidates for gov ernor, state Treasurer Charles M. Johnson, of "losing a million dollars a year for the taxpayers." Scott said Johnson has lost the money by holding state funds in bank accounts instead of invest ing them in securities. The former agriculture com missioner said a 1943 state law gives the state treasurer power to invest funds in interest-bearing securities which are readily cashable. Instead, said Scott, Johnson has stored away millions in surplus funds in bank accounts which earn no interest. Said Scott, "The people's money, in sums up to $50,000,000 in a single bank, is in the hands of bankers who are paying nothing and lending it back to some of the people at varying rates of interest," and Scott said he does not blame the banks. "If I were the banker I sup pose I would be grateful for those interest-free millions ladled out to me from Raleigh," Scott said. "I might even be grateful enough to support the state treasurer for governor." Johnson reported earlier this week more than $171,000,000 salted away in 239 bank accounts. Johnson's report showed some 135-million dollars was invested in securities. y S y yy fyyy 7, y&y y y ' f ' ' y s yT yf , y J ' y yyy' y f " ' " y: y y y , yy y , Ay f f y y' y" s y if"? yy J? y yy y y 'yyy4y f ' yy ' 4 4 'jftf iU & $ yf-tyy 4 ' Y y. yL y? y 4 lyl S y 'JX'yy y y," Sy ryy y Ay y j y Vy a y y c y- y y 5 y y yy yMr-m,y y mymmmmimzmi wmm Ma mmmmm. i ySyyy " ,y y fffiyy yyiy - v w fry v s, yy y . t y yvsi? I ' i t r J- -f yJfr f -y3r iiM-yT 2r I t ' i n ) --niii Tii - iffr-fnirr-tT yitt1 wrwmt - n n tTi mur - Instalfation Is Set for Wednesday In an effort to unify into a more compact cooperative group the coeds elected to office in last week's elections, a mass coed in stallation service is planned for Wednesday night at 9 o'clock in the Presbyterian church. Taking part in the impressive candlelight installation service will be coeds elected to offices in the Women's Athletic association, Coed Senate, Women's council, YWCA, Legislature, and also house presidents. The YWCA Planning commit tee, headed by Rachel Woodley, has charge of the program, which it is hoped will help coeds real ize their position as campus lead ers rather than merely as heads of single groups. Justice Seawell To Address Group y y ' y yi ?Zjy? fry, ?Z.zr y,yi yy y'."r AJ A yy it y- s y yyy tv y y ' X ty-yy-ySyy jrjyy? ' 4, fyi&jssy itf- V y,y ?r4ryy yy y y. ?y yy&y ? y yy" ,jV"? i ' yV &-yyyy ? v yy y $yy y , yyyy-yyy yy A y. y,r i yy IX is '4y&i"i' "SyKyfry&yw, ? yy yy . fyy. y yy&y $ &y,y y " yyy y y -y y . yy , m v, w y f y aav . y yyy yy yy y y yyyi, J yy S yyST ? yZy y y yy y y yy y yy yyyyy -y y y yyr -yyy " - yy " y y y J y ' V y- s f yy y v v y y s y y ys yyyyy v y y y yyyyyy"yr-4 s yy.s vy yt x y yy fyii(yy First Public Function of Golden Fleece Scheduled For Next Monday Night State Briefs sL yVyy ry:yy i r, mMiWmyWymiyWMMk y , y y S- y y y y y ,V " y ' - y y- f y yy -v f fiy l 1 r'7Ay yyy- yy -Hi ' y4 y yt. y y if-y yyiy yyy y - & v i, y VJ"-y 4fj ffr f.if ? yh&ix y rs,&f if y& yy yyy y. wr-viTrtWri'iTftni IT WAS THREE YEARS ago tomorrow lhat America's heroic war-time - president. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, died at the "Little White House" in Warm Springs, Georgia. On April 12, 1945, the courageous leader who brought the United States out of the depression, and all but victoriously through World War II, passed away before the final victory. The whole nation will remember a great man tomorrow, who died in the service of his country. New Officers Picked For Delta Sigma Pi At a regular meeting of Delta Sigma Pi, international commerce fraternity, the following officers were elected for the coming year: head master, Hubert Aenchbach er: senior warden. John McPhaul: junior warden, Milton Hinnant; member of the University class scribe, Melvin Finch; treasurer, of 1889. Fred Pierce; historian, Hoke Tonight's banquet will climax Steelman; master of ceremonies," six months' orientation of the Monore Landreth; and master of new pledge class. Bill Lane, chap festivities, Pete Dobbins. ' ter president, will preside at the Delta Sigma Pi, only commerce program and Ralph Strayhorn, fraternity on the campus, has out- preceptor, is in charge ot arrange Associate Justice A. A. F. Sea well of the state Supreme Court will address members of Phi Del ta Theta fraternity tonight at 7 o'clock when 14 new initiates will be honored at a pledge banquet in the Carolina Inn ballroom. Justice Seawell resided in Chapel Hill for several years be fore his appointment to the Su- nrpmfi Court bench. He was a Local Political Thunder Is Stolen by Senator Aspirants By United Press The pitch of North Carolina's voices was rising this week but the silent- written words of the two " Democratic Sen atorial candidates seemed to steal the political thunder. Alleged Attacker Kerr Scofl Attacks Tidewater Company Tarboro, April 10 (UP) Gu bernatorial candidate W. Kerr Scott renewed his attack today on the Tidewater Power company of Wilmington. Scott, speaking at Tarboro to representatives of 14 rural elec trification co-operatives, said that most power companies are sell ing electricity at low rates to ru ral users, but that an exception to this is the Tidewater Company, which serves 16 Southeastern counties. Scott claimed that the rates of the Tidewater Power company . are strangling the de velopment of those Southeastern counties of North Carolina. Outstanding Men To Be Tapped In Solemn Services By Charlie Gibson The Golden Fleece, highest men's honorary organization on campus, will conduct its forty fifth annual tapping ceremonies of new members Monday eve ning, April 19, in Memorial hall at 8 o'clock. In keeping with the secret nature of the organization, the number and names of the men to be tapped will not be re- ' vealed until the ceremonies one week from tomorrow. A group spokesman stated that because of the inipressiveness and solemnity of the service the doors will be locked directly at 8 o'clock, and all who wish to at tend the ceremonies should be in their seats by that time. The usual Monday evening religion classes which Frank W. Hanft, pie alike, will again benefit the 'University law professor, is con- Return Engagement of Polgar Scheduled for Tomorrow Night By Sally Woodhull In his second campus appearance in a week's time, Dr. Franz Polgar, internationally famous telepathist, memory- expert, and hypnotist, will appear in Memorial hall tomor row night at 8 o'clock under the sponsorship of the Student Entertainment committee. In his show last week, Polgar successfully hypnotised a num ber of students, persuading them in turn that they were children, peanut vendors, crusaders against long skirts, or anything else that might serve his purpose. Each of the subjects behaved in- the man ner Polgar suggested, and the show proved highly entertaining to the large audience. For Mere 50c Tomorrow night's performance, open to students and townspeo- Both incumbent William B. Umstead and challenger J. Mel ville Broughton outlined their stand on North Carolina's liquor question in answer to question naires sent out by the Allied Church league. Both say they personally favor a statewide referendum on the liquor issue. But while Broughton says he definitely would not appear be fore a committee of the . state General Assembly to urge a re ferendum, if he is elected sen ator, Umstead has left that door open. Umstead admits that he doubts if it would be proper for him to appear as a senator before a General Assembly committee to urge a statewide referendum, but he has not said he would not do so. He says he would like to talk it over before deciding. . Strong Stand Broughton has taken a strong stand on that point. He says that in his knowledge no United States senator has appeared be fore a state General Assembly committee in North Carolina to support or oppose any purely state measure, and he adds that for him to do so would be "en tirely inappropriate." The Allied Church league also asked the senatorial candidates to express their views on national advertising of liquor. The league asked them whether they would support the Capper bill not in congress which would bar liquor ads from interstate commerce. Umstead says he will support the Capper bill. Broughton says he is not suffi ciently acquainted with the Cap per bill to say yes or no to that question, but he says he believes advertising of alcoholic bever ages has gone beyond all proper and reasonable limits and is a serious menace to the welfare and morals of the people generally. Broughton has phrased his Lr next Tuesday, Norm Sper and Beach, Fla.; Harold Floyd Rouse, stand I would favor every rea- hfrlie Stancell The platforms Farmville; Jack Stokes, Norfolk, sonable proposal designed to were not printed last week due Va.; Jim Phillips Thomas, Balti- bring about a decrease in the sale to unforseen circumstances for more, Md.; and Andrew Williams, and use of oxicatmg beverages which the DTH was not to blame. Jr., Hamlet. throughout the Umted States." Ask Continuance For Whiskey Case Greensboro, April 10 (UP) A third continuance has been or dered in Greensboro in the case of charging seven men with con spiring illegally to handle $1,900, 000 worth ow whiskey. Judge E. Earle Rives of muni cipal county court has continued the case until June 8 despite the plea of defense attorneys that the men be tried immediately or the case be dropped. Defense attorneys pointed out that some of the defendants were indicted last August, and said they suffered from the repeated continuances of the case. Assistant Solicitor James E. Coltrance asked for another con tinuance because he said a new move will be made Tuesday in Baltimore affecting North Caro lina's attempts to extradite one of t'.e defendants. The state seeks bring Baltimore liquor dealer Sam Gildar to Greensboro for the trial. FEW PEOPLE HAVE Provincetown, Mass (UP) Ralph Snow says he's never read nor heard of a bigger egg than the five-yolk, 31-ounce one laid by one of his Rhode Island Reds. Scott said nnlv thrpp rthr . . wi rr ..... . IeflVf? ran I rflfPQ1 states last year nad more new j electrified farms than North Caro . Williamston, April 10 (UP) jlina, and at the end of the year The Martin county sheriff says only 129,000 farms were still officers have found no trace of i without electric power in the aLNegro who .reportedly tried t.o'state-He said that made a total attack a 19-year-old bride near Parmele. Sheriff C. B. Roebuck says Mrs. Cary Bryant reported a Ne gro grabbed her in the kitchen of her rural home. The sheriff quotes Mrs. Bryant as saying the attacker was in the house when she returned from carrying water to her husband in the field yes terday. Roebuck reports no tracks were found on the grass and the wind wiped out .any footprints that might have been made in the sandy road nearby. He says Mrs. Bryant was able to describe the assailant only as about 22 years old, wearing a cap and overalls. The sheriff says bloodhounds were unable to pick up any scent. Mrs. Bryant says she fought her attacker, overturning furni ture. She says she fainted, but the Negro fled. TOWN GIRLS At a Town Girls' supper meet ing, held "on Monday night at the Episcopal parrish house, officers for the coming year were elected. The new officers, who will take over their duties after the Lead ership Program, include: Carolyn Guthrie, president; Lexsy Pier son, vice-president; Betsy Emory, secretary; Marie Sparrow, treas urer; and Patty Winslow and Mary Mac Kear as co-social chair men. of 160,000 farms served by more than 40,000 miles of electric rural lines. Due Process Winston-Salem, April 10 (UP) Sometimes it takes months or even years to complete the trial of a man on criminal" charges, but a Negro trusty in Winstoa Salem is an example that some times the law can be fast. Otto Jackson was arrested on charges of stealing the purse of a county building employee, tried, convict ed and sentenced to 12 months on the roads all on the same day and without leaving the sec ond floor of the county building. Stancell Lists Plans, Aims lined as its prime aims to aid in the development of better commerce students and business men. Several professional trips to large industrial plants in North Carolina and professional banquets are planned in the near future. ' PLATFORMS TODAY On the front page of today's Daily Tar Heel will be found the platforms of the two candidates the runoff for neact cneeneaa- ments New members who will be re ceived into the chapter today fol lowing formal initiation are as follows: William Parker An drews, Flat Rock; Joseph Bach, Upper Darby, Pa.; Harry Eugene Buchanan, Hendersonville; Georg? Carter Carr, Leland, Fla.; John ny Lester Clements, Crew, Va.; George Crowell, Lenoir; Edwin Davenport, Rocky Mount; Garrett Fitzgibbons, Jr., Cartersville, Ga.; Bobby Johnson, Atlanta, Ga.; Garland Jonas, Ponte Vedro "1. Get back the Carolina spirit of prewar days. That can be ac complished through giving yells at the proper time and not giv ing "Hold That Line" when we have the ball. "2. Full cooperation and un derstanding with the student body. "3. Organized pep rallies both at home and away given on time and at a stated place. "4. Entertainment along with pep rallies such as presentation of interesting speakers and the football team. "5. Definite arrangements for caravans for games played away from home. "6. An organized method of transportation for those who de sire it. "7. Intention for better coop eration between the cheering squad and the band which has in the past been noticeably light. "8. Improvement of the public address system. "9. If elected, I feel that the card stunts are a real necessity to create the spirit at Carolina which has not appeared on the East coast to any extent. It will be a definite asset to the University in carrying out the true Carolina spirit. "If elected, I would like to an nounce that I will turn the en tire card system over to Norm Sper. However, in view of these facts I feel that the cheering squad itself will need separate attention. "So let's join together this com ing fall to create an All-America cheering section to back an All America team." Handwriting Case Greensboro, April 10 (UP) Attorneys for a Guilford county Negro say they will appeal to the state Supreme Court to try to prove that the last will and testament of his sister was in her own handwriting. Whitsett is seeking to gain the estate of his sister, Vergie Whit sett, but other relatives claim the handwriting of the will is not the same as that of other samples of the dead woman's writing. Student Entertainment fund. The committee will present a series of concerts next year free of charge to students, but in order to pay the debt incurred while student entertainment was on a voluntary basis, funds must be raised. Price of the show is 50 cents, and tickets may be obtain ed at the door. As a demonstration of his te- lepathetic powers, Polgar last week found his check, hidden without his knowledge in the shoe of a coed. This was nothing, according to Pence James' writ ing in the Saturday Evening Post, compared to some of the feats he had performed. In one city they hid an object under the upper plate in a man's mouth. In Chicago he found a war stamp hidden in an office on the fourteenth floor of a sky scraper. In New York he found an ob ject concealed miles away, pro-;the Christopher for the past year ceeding to the spot and giving the driver directions, although no ducting in Memorial hall will be finished by 7:50 before the Fleece rituals. Valkyrie' Sing The annual Valkyrie Sing will be held following the tapping. This event will give fraternity, sorority, and dormitory men and women an opportunity to com pete vocally for loving cup awards given by the Valkyries, similar honorary organization for coeds. The tapping of new members into the men's honorary order marks the Fleece's only public meeting each year. It has been a practice since the group's for mation forty-five years ago to conduct meetings and activities in utmost secrecy. Since its offi cers' names are withheld from the public during the year but are always announced at the tapping, the Jason, the Grammateu9, and one ever told Polgar orally where to go. HIDDEN TOOTH Columbus, O., (UP) Mrs. Lela Gasser believed 23 years ago that her visits to the dentist were a thing of the past. That i was when she paid her 'final" visit to have her teeth pulled and dental plates made. Now she has just been back in a dentist's chair having a tooth pulled. Mrs. Gasser, mother of two children, was baffled by a lump in the roof of her mouth. X-rays revealed an impacted ., cuspid, which a dentist removed. will be recognized next Monday. 14 Last Year Members of the Fleece are chosen for their intellectual and moral character, their relentless fidelity to duties, ideals, scholar ship, and dilligence. The order does not set a specified number for membership each year but selects each member in propor tion to the number of men on campus who are deemed worthy of membership. Last year 14 men gained admission into the order. At present the 18 students and the 9 faculty members In the Fleece do. not "as a group sponsor any campus action. However, in dividually They work towards a common aim, all tasks being in stigated without public credit. NormJ Sper Releases Platform Bus Victim Mount Airy, April 10 (UP) Funeral services will be held to morrow for a truck driver of Pilot Mountain, who was killed in a collision with a Greyhound bus'. The wreck killed 57-year-old Elmer R. Slawter. The huge bus overturned in a field but luckily it was operating without passen gers. It was driven by George F. Bush of Winston-Salem, who re ceived minor injuries. STATE STUDENT LEG. All students who have been selected to represent the Univer sity at the State Student Legis lature in Raleigh this coming weekend will meet at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in Roland Parker 1 of GM to consider im portant business, according to Pete Gerns, who is in charge of the delegation. "1. More unity is needed at Carolina. In the past Carolina hasn't had the unity to give the student body the benefit of co operative cheering. In order to have more unity I plan to have a cheering section, or card section as it will be called, that will cover sections 17 and 18. Aisle 17 will be blocked off in order to give a solid block. I have pro posed card stunts that will be used in this section. That alone will bring the unity that we so badly need. "2. New cheers. I was a student at UCLA where cheering and half-time entertainment is para mount. I propose to bring some of their ideas to Carolina, which will give us new blood in the form of cheers. "3. We need to know our songs. To accomplish this purpose I pro pose to have a recording made of all our songs and have them play ed in Lenoir hall on Friday af ternoon and Saturday noon dur ing football season. This should also give added spirit for Sat urday's game. 4. I propose to have a four- foot platform erected at the base of the football stadium that will cover the length of the card section. The cheerleaders give their yells from the platform which will have two eight-foot amplifiers at each end. This will make impossible for everyone to hear what cheers, are called for by the head cheerleader. ; "5. If elected, I can assure the student ' body that my job will not end after football season, but will carry on until after spring track. I propose to lead cheers during the basketball season, using the loud speaker to an nounce the various yells so that everyone will be able to hear the name of the cheer when it is announced. "Finally," Sper said, "Whether elected or not, it is my desire to cary out as much of my plans as the head cheerleader will allow." CORPORATE COMMUNION Bishop Edwin A. Penick of the Episcopal church will offer a Cor porate Communion service at 8 o'clock this morning for all stu dents and town people whom he has confirmed in the past. At 11 o'clock, Bishop Penick will preach and administer con firmation and at 6 o'clock to night a supper will be held in the Parrish house in honor of all Episcopal students in the Uni- will versity.