1 E Chi (TAP.U'IA;. 1h H"" WEATHER u.c Library Prajsing y9a Staff - EE Fair and cooler today and tonight. VOLUME LVII CHAPEL HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1949 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 147 i i . - r 11 II.- v pv r -ah if II It i1 ) i i I r -4 I, Alaska Jobs Are Not Open This Summer Office Swamped With Inquiries By Margaret Gaston '"He's upstairs in his igloo chew ing on a piece of whale blubber,'-" was the reply given to students who wanted to see Dick Fleming a few weeks ago. It seems that Fleming's popularity increased three-fold about a month ago when he was quoted as being an authority on a "get rich quick plan." Fleming, senior from Green ville, was hired as an unskilled laborer by the Alaskan Railway Co. last summer to the tune of $300 a week, plus room and board. Tookie Hodgson, senior from Murfreesboro, Tenn:, interviewed him, and sent a story to the state papers pointing out the lucretive opportunities offered in Alaska. The Daily Tar Heel also ran his story, as did many other college papers. The results were amazing, Hodgson said. He reported that both he and Fleming have re ceived about 40 inquiries each re questing further information on job opportunities in Alaska. However, Joe Galloway, direc tor of Placement Service, has this to say about summer work in i Alaska. "If you want a summer job, DON'T go to Alaska." ' As a result of Hodgson's article, the Placement office has been swamped with inquiries estimated by the staff to be close to 2,000, Galloway said. This figure in cludes those persons who have been by the office two and three times to check on latest reports, as well as the long distance calls and several letters from other col leges. , Immediately after the inquiries started pouring in, the Placement Service wrote to the Alaska Rail road in Anchorage, wmich is un der the United States Department of the Interior. Its director of personnel reports: "Many students from all over the United States as well as the University of Alaska are planning on employment in Alaska this coming summer with the Alaska Railroad, other government agen cies or private contractors. Many of these students have been dis couraged from taking such a step principally because of transporta tion and other costly expenses in volved, and the lack of definite assurance of employment upon arrival. ... Our employment policy is to give first preference to residents of Alaska, even on seasonal jobs. "The employment of all addi tional persons for the construction season is accomplished by hir ing locally those persons avail able at the time the vacancy exists. . . ." The report of one general con tracting firm in Fairbanks, Alas ka, is typical of information re ceived from private employment sources. Galloway said. "The majority of our personnel are locally hired through the va rious unions. Wc do not send out ride for other personnel unless the local supply is exhausted. "At the present time, the local unions are not accepting any new members and will not accept any new ones until the majority of their paid up members arc work ins." Commenting on the general summer employment picture, Gal- (See ALASKA page 4) Frolics To Begin Friday Afternoon The 1949 May Frolics will b gin Friday afternoon when Skitc Henderson and his orchestra pr. sent a concert in Memorial Ha' from 2 until 4 o'clock. The ar nual affair is being sponsored b seven fraternities on campus an will last throughout the weekenc Two formal dances wiU be play ed by Henderson. The first, or Friday night, will get underway it 9 o'clock in Woollen gymna sium and will last until I o'clock. The second dance will begin at o'clock on Saturday night and will last until 12 o'clock. 1 i -" y. . ... "!, I ? 'A V v .: ' ' , '? 1 JUDGE JOHN J. PARKER Judge Parker Will Address Fleece Meet Post-Tap Banquet Set Monday Night Judge John J. Parker of Char lotte will speak privately next Monday evening at a post-tapping banquet in honor of those this year whose leadership, serv ice, and integrity meet the quali fications for membership in the Order of the Golden Fleece. Judge Parker, Fleece member himself who graduated from the University in 1907, has been a U. S. circuit judge since 1925. Re publican nominee for governor in 1920 and President Hoover's nom- ' inee for the U. S. Supreme Court, ' Judge Parker has served on the Board of Trustees since 1921 and headed the Alumni Association in 1932. In 1943 the Americar Bar Association awarded him itf highest honor for "conspicuou service in the cause of American jurisprudence." What some people consider tc be the University's most impres .ive ritual, the tapping will be Sin promptly at 7:45 o'clock nex Monday evening in Memorial Kail. Because of the suspense o the ceremony the doors will be locked the minute the tapping tarts. It is advisable that any one who wishes to see the cere nony or to attend the Valkyrie sing which follows the tapping mmediately should -be in hit eat before 7:45 p.m. After the reading of the myth of Jason and his quest for the Golden Fleece to symbolize he "oic achievement, black-robed figures will stalk the darkened auditorium, seeking the men who ire to be honored. After this procedure the Order will disclose the names of its officers for the first time this year. There will be no limit to the number of men who may be tap Ded since the current roster of Fleecemen select their own suc cessors on the basis of the per centage of men students on cam pus deemed qualified. In its 48 years, the Fleece has already honored 452 people. Its roll lists such prominent digni (Ste FLEECE, page 4) Scampering Over The Lawn ' Phi Delts Entertain Orphans From Eton With Easter Party By Leonard Dudley Thirty-six children from the Christian Orphanage at Elon Col lege were entertained at an East er party by the Phi Delta Theta fraternity yesterday afternoon at the fraternity house on Pittsboro road. For an hour after their arrival. '".e children scampered over the wn in search of Easter eggs at had been hidden by mem irs of the fraternity. After all e eggs had been found prizes ere awarded to the three find ig the most eggs. Prizes includ d three large cellophane-covered askets complete with an Easter -abbit and candy eggs. Later the children were enter tained in the large living room of the house by a five-piece band composed of Hubert Teer and Fuller Glass, banjos; Bill Har ward, guitar; Vernon Suitt, ac cordin; and Dwight Carden, bass. Publication Gets Praises From Review Quarterly Hailed In Benet Article The Carolina Quarterly, cam pus literary magazine, was hailed by the Saturday Review of Litera ture of April 9 as a "cultural venture a chance for poems and stories and a hieh standard of writing." William Rose Benet, noted au thor and critic, writing a column entitled "The Phoenix Nest" for the Saturday Review, saluted the committee "which launched the Carolina Quarterly at the Uni versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C, where Paul Green the, playwright says there is a great chance for such a publi cation." Benet drew a parallel between the beginnings of the Quarterly arid the Carolina Playmakers, saying "all of you will remember the Carolina Playmakers in the days of Tom Wolfe and 'Prof f Goch. Here is another cultural venture a chance for poems and stories and a high standard of writing. The NEST grabs its bonnet off to the new Quarterly. May it thrive!" The Quarterly, organized last year by a group of students after the Carolina Magazine had been voted off the campus, is under the editorship of Roy C. Moose Emily Sewell is the Business manager of the publication which appears in November, February and May of each school year. Di Will Discuss Banning of Coeds At Senate Meet A lighter note will be struck tonight when the Dialectic Sen ate debates the merits of clos ng the University of North Caro- ina to women students. The resolution to be discussed jy the Di members and the visi tors at 9 o'clock in the Di hall in New West building proposes that women be sent to the Woman's College in Greensboro. The complete text of the reso lution to be presented by Sam Manning, chairman of the Ways ind Means Committee, resolves 1. That the University of North Carolina at Chapel. Hill be re turned to its original function of serving only qualified males in the field of education. 2. That the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro be expanded to adequately take care of those women who wish to receive training at the Greater Univer sity. 3. That women be admitted on ly to the School of Pharmacy and those other schools which cannot be found at other state institu tions in North Carolina. 4. That all dormitory space now occupied by women here be used for occupancy by the male stu dents. 5. That this arrangement go in to effect in the fall of 1950. Chancellor House, who was a special guest, joined the band for five numbers and then was prevailed upon to render a solo. Later refreshments were served to the children on the lawn. When asked if he were having a good time, Ben Black, aged 9, answer ed, "Yes. We had a good one here last Christmas too! "I didn't expect these though," he added, exhibiting a half pint of ice cream, four Easter , eggs and two pockets bulging with cookies. Before 5 o'clock, when the party was supposed to end, many of the children were already get ting onto the bus for the return trip to Elon. A fraternity member who knew that there were more prizes to be distributed, asked them to come back to the house. "No thanks," replied one tousled headed little fellow, "We've had enough to eat, thank you." Ti mi i ii n m i - ii - ilium i i mil n T n iTr-nrir"-'tf " ---- STANDING ON THE PORCH of the White House. President . Truman is all smiles as he receives his annual American League pass for the '49 season from Calvin Griffith. 2nd, while Clark Griffith, Washington Senators owner, holds handbag containing pass for nation's First Lady. Renowned for his "switch-pitching," the Chief Executive tossed the firBt ball at opening game in Washington yesterday. (International Soundphoto) University Club Plans Big Entertain Program Campus Sing, Carnival Night Are Part Of Series; Sing To Be Made Permanent The University Club, in a splurge of spring activity, yesterday announced that it was planning two events of campus entertainment for the near future, a Campus Sing and a Carnival Night. The Campus Sing, scheduled for Sunday night, will be a com munity sing and a skit by the Monogram Club called "If Men Played Cards as Women Do," a well-known one-act play. University Club spokesmen said they hoped the Campus Shfg would become a weekly event, with: a skit put on each week by a different campus organiza tion. The Monogram Club show will feature a football trio of Joe Romano, Joe Gurtis and Joe Cospito. The fourth actor, neither a footballer nor a "Joe," will be swimmer Norm Sper. The show will begin at 8 o'clock and last approximately one hour. The scene is the Forest Theater. Carnival Night is scheduled for one week from Friday April 29. The time is 8 until 11 o'clock and the place is Woollen Gym nasium. . Each organization on campus has been asked to participate in the event by operating a carnival j concession. The University Club will award a trophy to the group with the best-executed and most original idea. A meeting will be held at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in Roland Parker lounge of Gra ham Memorial of all persons in charge . of. concessions. The floor plan for the carnival will be drawn up at that time. " Rings Available In Y Tomorrow Students will have their last chance to order class rings to morrow when Lee Blackwell, Eastern Carolina representative for the L. G. Balfour Co., will be present in the Y from 9 o'clock in the morning until 4:30, said Dou gald MacMillan, chairman of the ring commission here. Orders for senior rings will be taken at that time, and complaints I on orders placed previously will be handled, MacMillan said. This year's ring sale' has ex ceeded all past records, he said, with a total to date of over 600 rings sold. "The most ever sold here never exceeded 300 rings," MacMillan said. CP Legislators Will Meet Today A meeting of Campus Party legislators for this afternoon at 4 o'clock was announced yesterday by V. C. Taylor, newly elected chairman of the party. The meet ing will be held in Roland Parker lounge 1, Taylor said. p- s Radio Auditions To Be in Swain At 2 Tomorrow The Radio Department of the University announced the open ing of its annual radio auditions beginning 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon which will be held in the student production studio in Swain Hall. Talent is being sought for 23 15-minute student dramatic shows to be produced in the Late afternoons from April 27 through I May 27, the department an nouncement said. Interested students are invited to bring any script they particu larly would like to read, though they will be asked to also read material that will be provided at the time of audition. The auditions, and shows are j being produced under the direc tion of the Radio Department, a department spokesman said. Those chosen to appear on the shows will be able to hear the tape-recorded productions played back and will receive construc tive criticism from the director and instructor, the announcement said. . Mind Reader, Extraordinaire Student Entertainment Committee Presents Hypnotist Polgar Tuesday By Charlie Gibson Franz Polgar, the amazing hyp notist who became a campus sen sation last year by working pranks .on students whom he had imagining themselves either four ears old, stuck to their chairs, or drunk on water, is coming back next week. An admission-free preformance for University students to be sponsored by the Student Enter tainment Committee in Memorial Hall at 8 .o'clock next Tuesday evening will mark Polgar's fifth appearance on campus. The "Mir acles of the Mind" showman came here first in 1940, again in 1942 and then was brought back for two shows that had enthusiastic audiences packing Memorial Hall for two consecutive weeks last year. Everywhere in America that "The Amazing Dr. Polgar" has appeared his telepathy and hyp notism has turned disbelievers in to magic converts. William Engle, DC Submits Three Famous Dorm Names Daniels, Gardner, . Wolfe Suggested A recommendation that A, B, and C dormitories be named for Josephus Daniels, O. Max Gard ner and Thomas Wolfe was pass ed by the.Interdormitory Council Monday night. The recommen- ; dation will be submitted to Chan cellor Robert B. House. The action was taken after council members had nominated a total of seven possible persons for whom the new dorms might be named. Other names included James Polk, Horace Williams, Andrew Jackson and J. Melville Broughton. Pete Gems, Council president, said that council members nomi nated the various names last week and consulted residents of the dormitory areas on their preference during the interval. The three men, for whom the Council has suggested the dormi tories be named, are famous in the state, the nation and the world, Gerns said. Daniels, late publisher of the News and Ob server, was Secretary of Navy un der Wilson and served as Am bassador to Mexico under Frank lin Roosevelt. During his life time, he was a close friend of the University. Gardner, also a University Alumni, was governor of North Carolina and had just been ap pointed Ambassador to Great Britain when he died suddenly Wolfe, a native of Asheville, is world famous for his novels and other contributions to the liter ary world. He attended the Uni versity from 1917 to 1920 and died in 1938. Dick Walker, student dormi tory advisor of Lewis, was elect ed to represent the IDC on the University Housing Committee. This move came about after James Wadsworth, University Housing Officer, spoke before the IDC and stressed the impor tance of the (Committee knowing student opinion on various hous ing problems. Roy Armstrong, chairman of the Housing Committee, invited the Council to elect a student representative to the Committee. TMA Meeting Set To Discuss Picnic Town Mens' Association presi dent Nelson Taylor yesterday ask ed that all TMA members be present at the regular bi-weekly meeting of the Association to morrow afternoon at 4:30 in Gra ham Memorial to help complete plans for the joint Town Men Town Girl picnic to be held at Hogan's Lake Friday, April 29. i science editor of the New York World-Telegraph wrote, "Polgar floored the professors of psychol ogy at New York University in their tests. It was, they agreed, an. undeniable demonstration of thought transference." The respect in which Dr. Pol gar is held is indicated by the fact that he is the only member of his profession listed in "Who's Who in America." The hypnotist himself claims that his unusual power to read other people's ! thoughts first came to him when he recovered his memory after a half year of mental unconscious ness following a head wound on an Italian battlefield in World War I. Back to the University by pop ular demand for another of his skows in which "mirth is mixed with magic," Polgar will conclude the Student Entertainment Com mittee program for the current year, according to SEC chairman A1 I iviacKie sworn Asks Cooperation In All Branches By Charles McCorkle Bill Mackie, sworn in at 9 o'clock last night as new presi dent of the student body, sent out a plea for cooperation and conscientious work in all branches of student govern ment for 1949-50. Talk Contest 0 Deadline Set By Mackie Seniors Eligible For Mangum Medal E. L. Mackie, Dean of Award3 and Distinctions, yesterday issu ed final notice to interested sen iors of the deadline for applica tions to the Wiley P. Mangum oratorical contest. Seniors who will graduate be fore the end of the winter quarter 1950, are eligible, he said. Those seniors interested are urged to contact Earl Fitzgerald (Chi Phi house), chairman of the Debate Council, at once. Titles of the speeches are to be presented to Fitzgerald as soon as possible, he said. Dean Mackie said that several students have already filed appli cation for the contest which will be held here on the evening of May 17. He emphasized the fact that this will be the last time any mention will be made of applica tions. . Manuscripts are to be turned in on the evening of the contest, 1,200 to 1,500 words in length and typewritten. The choosing of a subject will be left to the student, Mackie said. This is the second annual Man gum medal award since the war began, the Dean said. Mangum's late wife, of the class of 1815, first established the award in 1878. The deceased Mangum was a for mer University graduate, an ex cellent speaker, North Carolina judge and Senator. Originally, the medal was pre sented to tho member of the sen ior class who, during the four years prior to graduation, exhibit ed the best qualities of oratory, debating and scholarship. Renew ed last year after eight years, it is now offered on the basis of a single contest held before gradua tion. Leary Calls Caucus Of UP Legislators The University Party legisla tors will meet in caucus this af- j ternoon at 3 o'clock in Roland i Parker lounge 2 of Graham Mem orial. UP Chairman Joe Leary said there would be a discussion of tomorrow night's Legislature meeting. Scotty Venable. This committee in student government is appro priated funds by the Student Leg islature to bring popular enter tainment to the campus. Students are now admitted free to all SEC sponsored performances which this year have been by such art ists as Hazel Scott, the Trapp family singers, Joseph Fuchs, and Charles Weidman's dance ensem ble. However, faculty members, stu dent wives, and townspeople are also admitted to features on the SEC program upon purchase of tickets at 75 cents each at the doors of Memorial Hall, opening at 7 o'clock. Venable has stated that this policy will be in effect again next Tuesday for the Pol gar demonstration although he plans to reserve most of the room in the auditorium for another capacity student crowd because of the mind reader's popularity here in the past. I si; Mackie, speaking before an au dience of more than 100 people in the hall of the Dialectic Sen ate in New West Building, listed a program of eight points to be carried out to improve campus government through the coming year. They were: 1. Improvement of the judici ary branch, the understanding of the Honor and Campus Codes by all students. 2. Legislators should consider carefully all legislation going through their hands, and should vote in the best interests of stu dent government. 3. Improvement of the execu tive branch in its carrying out of the laws passed and to be passed by the Student Legislature. 4. A smoother working elec tions set-up. 5. More efficiency in the hand ling of student finances. 6. A more effective orientation program. 7. Furthering of the aims and achievements of the Greater Uni versity Student Council. 8. Bringing coed government closer to student government as a whole. To see that the Coed Sen ate ' works closely with the re quirements of the constitution and appropriates wisely. Some 80 officers took the oath of office last night, including Vice-President Ted Leonard, Co ed Senate Speaker Patricia Den ning, Secretary -Treasurer Nat Williams,, members of all the councils, the Legislature, Coed Senate and other officials. Pat Denning called for a three point program in reference to coed government in her address to the assembly. Sho asked for (1) Definition of the powers of the Coed Senate, (2) Inter-cooperation between coed government and 'sludt-nt government, between the Legis lature and the Coed Senate, and (3) Subsidiary coed organiza tions to be self-sufficient finan cially. Retiring President Jess Dod mond delivered the first addrc on the program. He called the past year "a road of great pleas ure and one of hard work." "Student government." Dcd mond continued, "is like being married to a possessive woman. It holds your heart and it dc (See INAUGURATION, page 4) AROTC Review For Inspection Held Yesterday Led by the Field Music band and demonstrating the precision of West Point cadets, the Air ROTC unit went through its paces on Navy field yesterday for its annual yearly inspection and final drill period of the spring quarter. The unit was inspected by a team from the Continental Air Command at Mitchell Field, New York. Inspecting officers were Col. G. S. Brown, Maj. J. J. Har ris and Maj. T. A. Scott, Jr. The inspection was followed by a full-dress formal review with the inspecting officers taking tho review along with Col. Byron R. Switzer and his staff and special guest, Bill Mackie, new president of the student body; Gene New ton, president of the UVA; Col. F. Carlylo Shepard; and Col. Robert L. Fowler. Col. Brown said that he was well pleased with the review, adding: "The unit has made ex ceptionally good progre ss si nee it was established here two years ago. I think credit for this should go to the people in the depart ment and in the whole institution who have supported it." The unit is commanded by Ca det Col. Paul J. English; Cadet Lt. Col. Robert M. McAllister; Ca det Maj. Robert A. Gray; and (See REVIEW, page 4) ic x, le y Ml" at k r- r- rh in ip' id e , at n it.