THE DAILY TAR HEEL FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 194' VA Demands New PAGE FOUR Gong Put 100 Cashmere Yarn (Hadley Products) Nylon Sock Packs The Yarn Shop over Andrews-Henninger In. ress n Rescue Party Finds Coeds In Mountains MONTREAT, Oct. 6 WO A rescue party . found six hungry, wet and frightened college girls on cold Greybeard Mountain to day. They had been missing 12 hours. , They went hiking yesterday, their object the mountain -summit five miles away. But dark ness and fog closed' in. They couldn't find a cabin they thought nearby. K&M BEER Delivery Service BENEATH Milton's Clothing Cupboard W. FRANKLIN ST. PHONE F-5347 We are just as near as your phone PHONE F-5347 BEERS: Pabst Budweiser Ballantine Blatz Va, Keg Barbarossa Vi Keg Barbarossa Cut-Rates FOR Parties DELIVERED ICE COLD Also Coca Colas Pretzels Potato Chips Peanuts Candies Cigarettes - Phone F-5347 Marvel! Wonder! Gasp! . SEE 0? I Gorilla Reared By Girl Becomes Night Club ret . . . Then Un leashed Giant of Fury! t ALSO CARTOON NEWS Added Attraction Pictures of Card Stunts TODAY ifJv ...... -AmM 1 lHU ftmX UZ2 A dri2zle set in and the girls found shelter under branches. They had no matches. The old Indian trick of rubbing two sticks together didn't work. There they huddled all night, two raincoats ar.iong them. After dawn they started down the mountain and were met by a search party led by Sheriff Lawrence Brown. Then they. were hurried to their campus at Mon treat College, a Presbyterian school for girls. After examina tions, they were sent to the in firmary. All had praise, for their leader Mary Ruth Denman, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Denman of Greeneville, Term. She is senior and experienced hiker. The others are freshmen. It was she thev said, who kept up their courage and mothered them dur ing the rainy night. Others in the party were Ruth Roziern, daughter of Mr. and Mrs F. A. Rozier of Bethune, S. C. Pat Williams, daughter of Mrs Pearl Bradham of Columbia, C; Marjorie Mclntoshn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Downeid of Clearwater, Fla.; Frances Cur ry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Curry of Iverness, Fla.; and Grace Gay, daughter of Mrs. Grace E. Gay of Charleston, W. Va. -NSA- (Confirmed from page 1) this made it imperative that we continue to take an active part in the Association. Herb Mitchell, another delegate to the convention, preceeded Lowenstein with a short report on his impressions of the meet saying that, "The most important thing about the convention was its value as a sounding board on campus problems." The appointment of Georgia Fox and Don Van Noppen to the Student Council, Roy Holsten to the Men's Honor Council, and Joe Bache as chairman of the Campus University Safety Com mittee went through the legisla tive mill without a hitch. ' Jim Lamm, Dick Allsbrook, Jim Maclntyre and Harvey Culpep per were sworn in as new mem bers of the Legislature itself. Until they were sworn in, there were only 22 members of the 50-person body present. A single bill, an amendment to the Campus Chest law, was intro duced and referred to the Ways and Means Committee. It would give the Chest board of directors Girls 1 1 Come to Durham For Your Alterations-Dressmaking Tailoring 425 W. Main-Durham, N.C. Entrance through Surplus Sales Call J-8762 7N Don't expect to drive through the winter season with out mishap unless your car is made ready for the strains of cold weather. Better to have it thoroughly conditioned NOW than be stuck with costly repairs LATER. Ask our expert service men to look it over. Drive in for quick and dependable service RADIATOR REPAIR WHEEL ALIGNING WHEEL BALANCING CASTON MOTOR COMPANY Gray Warns Cost Must Go To 60 Million Pepper Orders Closed Meeting For Committee WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 JF) Tha Veterans Administration tossed one of its hottest potatoes abuses of GI education benefits into the lap of Congress today. Veterans Administrator Carl R. Gray, in easing the sharpest of his recent restrictions on veterans training yesterday, said it's up to Congress to put new teeth into the GI bill. Gray warned that unless the law. is made' moi e strict, the cost of training veterans for jobs will exceed a staggering $60,000,000- 000 by the time the benefits ex pire July 25, 1956. Acting Chairman Pepper (D Fla) called the Senate Labor and Education Committee into closed session to consider the education and training problems. Pepper yesterday read the com mittee a letter from H. V. Stirling, Assistant Veterans Administrator, which said that Gray, has con eluded he lacks authority under existing law to correct grave abuses that now exist. Stirling said practically every World War II veteran is eligible for education or training under the existing law, whether- he needs it or not. "The underlying spirit of the education and training provision of the act for all practical pur poses has been lost sight of," Stir ling said. "The increase in subsistence payments to $75," $105, and $120 a month has encouraged veterans to seek courses or training re quiring only five hours a day or 25 hours a week of attendance. "Schools have been organized since June 22, 1944 for the sole purpose of bf f ering courses which everyone knows would not be continued without GI payments." Gray repealed the controversial "Instruction 1-A" he had issued three weeks ago. It required veterans to provide special justification before they could resume interrupted courses, transfer to new courses or schools, take post graduate work or enroll in schools established since Sep tember, 1944. Gray's new rules provide only that course changes must be in the same general field. Courses may be continued through mas ters' and doctors' . degrees for veterans who have sufficient en titlement. power to set the time of the drive. Speaker Ted Leonard announc ed that the Legislature will be gin hearing reports from govern mental agencies at each meeting, with the Safety Committee and Faculty Evaluation Committee slated for next session. YACK PICTURES PERSONS WHOSE PHOTO GRAPHS have been taken for the Yack year book may now see proofs of the same in the main lounge of Graham Memorial. THE PENALTY OF NEGLECT w "ww!wr''i'"i i I 1 ' I t h j ii : . Co " -5frha K- 1 AS HURRICANE WINDS of 90 miles an hour hit Houston, thousands rushed to storm shelters. Here crowds are shown checking in at the City Auditorium. With the big blow moving in from the Gulf of Mexico and sweeping northward, thousands along the Texas coast were left homeless and stranded. .v- rn i ,14 . j HARMS j V J TjEFFERSONi 13, J fOKT BEND y " V . " A HURRICANE THAT lashed the Texas coast in area indicated by arrow, and moving just west of Houston, brought with it winds up io 100 miles an hour. Although winds near that velocity whip ped in and around Houston, no casulaiies were reported. Campus News Briefs FRESHMAN were reminded yesterday by Ray Jeffries of the Dean of Students' office that the advisees of Dr. C. O. Cathey are expected to attend the required lecture at 10 o'clock this morning in Gerrard Hall. On Monday, Oct. 10 the lecture will be given for the advisees of Dean Spruill and Dr. Shepherd. Dr. Hardre's and Dr. Carter's advisees will be required to attend the lecture on Wednesday, Oct. 12. The same lecture will be given for the advisees of Dean Johnson and Mr Barret on Friday, Oct. 14. i THE 9944 NART SQUADRON will hold a meeting Tuesday night, Oct. 11 in the Air ROTC Building. Lt. Col. Maurice Elstun, urges all Reserve personnel, officers and airmen to attend. RELIGIOUS EMPHASIS WEEK has been changed from January to Dec. 4 through Dec. 8, the committee which is com posed of representatives of all religious groups on campus said yesterday. RHODES SCHOLARSHIP AP PLICATIONS will be accepted until Oct. 14, Dean C P. Spruill said yesterday. To be eligible for the scholar ship, a candidate must be a male citizen of the United States, un married, between the ages of 19 and 25 on Oct. 1, 1950 and have completed his sophomore year by the time of application. Dean Spruill will be glad to talk with all students who are interested in his office, 303 South Building, he said. BOX CAMERAS FOR RENT 10c a Day FOISTER'S Camera Store E. Franklin St. AN EVENING SKETCH CLASS sponsored by Person Hall will have its organizational meeting Monday night, Oct. 10 at 7 o'clock in Person Hall. The class will be taught by George Kachergis, recently ap pointed instructor in the Depart ment TW Art, whose paintings are now on exhibit in the Art Gal lery. Everyone interested is in vited to attend. DR. CLEMENS SOMMER and his party of art students have re turned from their study tour of Europe, it was learned here yes terday. The group toured France, Switzerland and Italy under the auspices of the Columbia Uni versity World Study Tours. The trop was pronounced a great suc cess, and Dr. Sommer has been requested to make it again next summer. ' DRIVER'S LICENSES for those whose names start with L through M must be renewed, it has been announced by the State Highway Department. -Moon- (Continued jrom page 1) have the population, money, edu cation, and leaders. Distance has nothing to do with it. You can fly from the mainland to the islands as quickly as you can fly from Maine to New Mexico." more - people than . Nevada, , or, Hawaii . Peggy points out, has Rhode Island, or five other states, rand pays more .taxes than 14 states. TUNNlSTPlGTUKOf-W7i-" - lien a HAL itiJir DON V 111 I I y I - fcfc'C .1.-85 v V l X DEAN Attack Kills Demo Leader Hannegan ST. LOUIS, Oct. 6 () Robert E. Hannegan, a master politician who helped put Harry S. Truman on the path to the White House, died today of a heart ailment. The former postmaster general and former president of the St. Louis Cardinals had been- in fail ing hearth since 1946, but his death was unexpected. He was only 46. Starting as a ward politician in St. Louis, Hannegan packed a notable political career into 15 years. He died at his home here short ly after 10 o'clock this morning. He was ill during the night, and his physican had been called. Hannegan resigned as post master general in November, 1947, to head a group buying the St. Louis Nathional League baseball club. Just over a year later he sola his interest to his major partner, Fred M. Saigh. The price reported unofficially was $1,000,- 000. Hannegan began in politics as a member of the St. Louis Demo cratic city committee, and work ed his way up to the party's na tional chairmanship. As national chairman he was a decisive factor in getting the vice presidential nomination for Truman at the 1944 convention in Chicago. He swung support to the Missouri senator through adroit work with key delegates and with President Roosevelt. CLASSIFIEDS FREE BUS SERVICE FOR YOUR added convience. Beginning Monday October 10th we have chartered a bus for your convenience from 1:00 PJVI. to 5:00P.M. Monday through Friday. The bus will go from Milton't Cloth ing Cupboard to the stop light near Strowd Motor Co., turn right and pro ceed down S. Columbia St., stopping' at each fraternity on S. Columbia, turning right at the Carolina Inn, pro ceeding down W. Cameron Ave., and thence to Milton s Clothing uupnoara. (chg 1X3) ANNOUNCEMENTS HORSE BACK RIDING AND HAY- ride . at TARHEEL S l ABi-ts, mi. out on Durham road. Riding ring and acres of wooded trails. Group rates. Under new management. (Ui. lxi) FOR SALE 6B HAVE TWO GOOD 6-CU. FT. RE- frigerators will sell cheap. C. L. Bullock. Greensboro St. Carrboro. Across from Baptist Church. (1-7994-3) Lost 12 LOST: WILL ANYONE WHO FOUND a brown. "Lifetime" Sfieaffer fountain pen please turn it in at the "Y" Lost and Found or at 118 "C" dorm. (1-253-2) LOST: ONE TAN ALL WOOL sweater. Finder return to - 210 "A" dorm. (1-255-2) Wanted 24 WANTED: TWO FOOTBALL TICKETS (together) for the Wake Forest game! See Rodney . Taylor at Ouonset Hut 34. or leave message in DTH business oliice. (lxl) WALLIS Production starring iimn mm nfi DsfORE'MARlE WllSOtt and Introducing MARTIN JERRV LEWIS ... LATE SHOW SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY CAROLINA Y Workers Set Meeting For Planning The YMCA Cabinet, Advisory Board members, and staff will hold a retreat at Camp New Hope this weekend for the purpose of planning, studying, and evaluat ing a program for the current chool year, Sam Magill, "Y" president said yesterday. The program will include three sessions, first will' be a session on Christian student's task in the world today; second will be a session on the evaluation of UNC campus needs; and third will be a session on the study and planning of the year's program. Program chairman for the re treat is Charlie Fox. It Takes Art & Skill To Conduct a Fine Symphony FOR A SPECIAL DANZIG Downtown Headquarters For the N. C. SYMPHONY DRIVE Get Your Membership Today- ) Planters Cocktail (popular) (brands) PEANUTS GUM 8 oz. can 6 pkg. 30c 20c N.B.C. Premium NESCAFE t CRACKERS large (Instant) 25c iar I lb-box $1.12 TOMATO SOUP Super cOFFEE 2 cans . i 1 lb. 21c 42c ; , 3 lb. Campbells . $.1 2 CHICKEN SOUP "n SUGAR C 10 lbs. 91c CIGARETTES " $t3S '- TIDE large 28c Book MATCHES DUZ carton iarge 15c ; 28c APPLVIL,LJ : " cam"9 1U oz. jar 17c V"5 21c i 7 i FOWLER'S 11 i Whid Powell's 1 Colonial House System ' CAROLINA--TARHEELIAS Open ll A.M.-12 Mid M-Th. Jl A.M.-2 A.M. F. & SaL Dr. William Kohn OPTOMETRIST . PHONE 3886 Over Carolina Coffee Shop Monday-Friday: 9-6 " Saturday: 9-1 To Bake a Fifte Cake OCCASION FOOD STORE ER'S W. Franklin Street Phone F-3891 . West Franklin Street