Serials 3ep. A EDITORIALS Statement at YDC They Don't Mix For The Nary WEATHER Considerable cloudineti with scattered showers and little change in temperature today. 11 ilTT rW VOLUME LVIII Associated Press - CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1949 Phone F-3371 F-3351 NUMBER 15 n DDI n OJ ICO! CO I El t f ? ( I r 1 X t If f Ninth - Inning Brings Yanks Single By Mize 4-3 Series Win t f,' i i ' PEE WEE REESE, Brooklyn shortstop, takes : the first pitch from New York Yankee Hurler Vic Raschi in the second game of the "World Series in Yankee Stadium Thursday. The Dodgers evened the post-season classic score at one all with their 1-0 Tictory. The ball is halfway to the plate. The catcher is Charlie Silvera and the umpire is Beans Reardon. Reese clouted a fourth inning homer off Yankee Starter Tommy Byrne yesterday to tie the. score at that period in the ball game. But the effort went in rain as the Yankees held down a ninth Inning rally and whipped the Brooks by a 4-3 score. Hypn ofisf To Entertain At Vets Club Tonsght Campanella, Reese, Olmo Hit Homers By Gayle Talbot EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN, Oct. "T-OPj-Big : Johnny Mize ; came back to haunt r,'. the .National League today.. . - - A . Vantea - rtnlv -C1T1P Allff- -25. the 36-year-old veteran . smashed a " two-run pinch . single - off the ' right wall to spark . a . three-run ; rally: in : the ninth inning that 'just nipped the homer blasting "Brooklvns. 4 to 3. in the third game of the World Series. The "two clubs were knotted 11 in another homeric pitchers' duel when Large John unloaded the blow that broke the game wide open. Another Yankee run crossed before the Brooks re- j covered from Johnny's smack, and it was just as well, for both Luis Olmo and Roy Campanella smashed four baggers into the letl 1 field stands before Joe Page erased a pinch-hitter for the final jout of the tussle, j The American Leaguers were a badly frustrated crew up to the time Mize delivered. His was the fourth hit off Ralph Branca, who had pitched a tremendous game for eight and two-third innings. Page-Relieves, After Hornet . Page, who relieved Tommy Byrne after the southpaw had thrown a home-run ball to Pee Wee Reese and then had loaded the bases on a single and two walks in a fourth-inning blow up, throttled the Dodgers on one lone hit the rest of the way be lore Olmo and Campanella jump ed him at the end. Joe looked .jittery and the crowd of 32,788 was yelling for blood when Bulky Bruce Ed (See YANKS, page b) L i. Morrison Writes Story For Magazine 'Southern Fireside' To Publish Article In November Issue 'Tar Heel Symphony," a. 2,200 word, illustrated, feature by Joseph L. Morrison, assistant pro fessor of journalism, will, appear in the November issue of "South ern f ireside," Editor Dan Sei well. revealed yesterday. : The announcement that Mor rison's story had been accepted came in a letter from Seiwell to Morrison. Morrison is the second member of the University Jour nalism department to have his byline in the magazine, following the lead of Professor Walter Spearman who is the "Southern Fireside" book editor. Morrison, University alumnus. class of 1940, submitted his story in time to coincide with the North Carolina Symphony cam paign for membership. The issue, scheduled to come out about the first of November, is the third in the young magazine's life. The first edition was published in September. Seiwell, who edits the Birming ham, Ala., publication, also is an alumnus of Carolina, class of 1928. He has aimed the magazine primarily at the readers in the South, he says. Copies will be available ori'the" newsstand in Sloan's Drug Store and the Post Office newsstand. Tom Shetiey, psychology uujor ?nd loral Iiyp:i3ti:t. will be the mbMt attraction at tlv Vet'.? Club t'inicht. Thr club house will open a 8:30 and Shetiey is scheduled t' appear at 9; 30. Although Shetiey kaz appeared a' numcrour. campus rntertaii mcntj. his show tonight will be nn- ho ha-; never before p resell i rJ L'k? Frrnr Pulsar, noted hvpnotir.t who Eoweaicd in Manorial Aud'torium U; t z.urin.-;, Shttloy will demonstrate how a rcr;-n can retpin hir, abilities .o dl!:. tjlh and follow direction.', even thovi-h he i round a:leo Djim,: one of lm performance: 1j ' t year h- sent a boy bck to hi:; fl-TT- m th- first and fifth prccle. 'Vh"n th- hoy v?o askM to write hi nanic, he did so in a scrawl tint wa; hm-dlv legible. who wish to use the radio there io hear the South Carolina game. Tomorrow afternoon the club hoiu-e will open at 3 o'clock. Charlie Fot?y, UVA president, -;aid the club house manager, Vestal Taylor, will receive reser vations for parties of six or more for any niht. Tho:e wishing to make table re jervations should call Taylor at I he clubr.ouse at 3e3st 21 hours be fore they want the table reserved. Foley oso said that this year the club house snack bar would carry a complete line of hot -andwiches. ? S . . .V X ( fir f . SOME -100 STATE HIGH SCHOOL editors and business managers of newspapers and yearbooks registered yesterday for the eighlh annual North Carolina Scholastic Press Instirule being held here. Tommie Luplon of Greenville, treasurer, is pictured on the left. With President Donnie Lou Jacobs (center), Durham, presiding, the group went into formal session last night and heard a discussion led by Reid Montgomery (right). A Director of the South Carolina Scholastic Press Association, Montgomery discussed "What Makes A High School Paper Readable." This morning and afternoon will be devoted to practical discussion groups with an election of new officers also scheduled for the afternoon. The two-day conclave will end tonight with a banquet in Lenoir Dining Hall. Paul Green will be chief speaker. ' Durham Mayor To Ad Open AVC Meet Next dress Wed The American Veterans' Com mittee, at an open meeting Wed nesday night, will hear Dan K. Edwards, mayor of Durham, speak on "How Durham Is Meeting the Housing Problem," John McCall, chairman of A.V.C. and student from Charlotte said yesterday. Mayor Ed Lanier of Chapel Hill, who seconded the A.V.C's Robbins, Roth Take UP Posts Zane Robbins and Paul Rotl have been appointed as co-pub licity chairmen of the University Party, Fletcher Harris, chairman of the party's steering committee, said yesterday. Robbins is a member of Chi Psi fraternity and a member of the Daily Tar Heel staff, "Roth is a Pi Lamb and varsity debater. Both are sophomores. The party steering committee will meet Wednesday to fill five UP seats in the Student Legis latur which have been vacated by resignations. here, will be present at the invitation to Edwards to speak meeting, accompanied by mem bers of the Chapel Hill City Council. McCall said, he hopes that the report on a recent sur vey f o housing needs in Chapel Hill made by J. A. Williams, Assistant to the Business Man ager, and N. J. Demerath, As sociate Professor of Sociology, Bids On Law Are Opened; Low 325 Gs Low bids totaling $324,935 on additions to the University Law School were announced yesterday by Business Manager C. E. Tea gue. Construction on the addition, Dart of the multi-million dollar Greater University expansion jrogram, will begin as soon as the bids are approved by the State Attorney-General. The addition will be built on the back of Mar ng Hall, and ivill approximately double the room space. Six companies, including Caro lina Engineering Co. of Chapel Hill, were included in the bid ding. King-Hunter Co. of Greens boro bid for the general con duction project, bidding $268, 222. H. Raymond Weeks of Dur- ' ham is architect for the work. The new addition will eliminate the need for the temporary law building behind Manning Hall. Y Dancers Hope For Good Weather Tonight Weather permitting, Graham Memorial will play host at a real' old-fashioned square dance in the Y court at 8 o'clock tonight. , Arnold Wilson and Bob Calla- ' han, members of the famed will be ready for presentation at the meeting. -.Lawarpis, wno has had a pnenomenai rise in politics, is a Duke graduate, having been a Southern Conference wrestling champion during his college career. Before taking his pre sent office, he served a term in the State Legislature . He has recently secured the i management "of -a - housing au thority in Durham, and Chapel Hill city officials have been in vited in the hope that some similar program may be insti tuted in Chapel Hill. The meeting Wednesday night, said chairman McCall. will be at the new meeting place in the Presbyterian Church .".nnex on Rosemary Street, at 7:30. All mn;brr.; of thr f'Tor. A went on da. 1:1 zict;, tt th Univerr.ihv thi v.i v,. invited io performance. A- hoir wh-. i fc-.-tvre of ' will be fh pr? 'CiMphrr. Chrir. wtil take pit turr ; the rlub- -.pTVP of a Andrews, of couple'- or p nlie ; M the lihks. l it" ( b:b hou:,e vi'il. be CD' ii every r.i-ht at C:3'J. Thi.; aftc -noen it will bo open at 2 oVlock for tfi'' ronvenirner of members Graham, Hocy Vote WASHINGTON. Oci. 7 3sn ator, Graham and Hoey of NnMh Carolina voted with the rojoriiy today , as the Senate ''"jetted an amendment by Scn 'orr, Ycung (R-N.D.) and Rus- H (D-Ga.l lor mandatory price 93 per cent of parity farm crops, cotton. i corn, tobacco, rice nu A Wayfaring Stranger 'Guy Who Sings Burl Calls Self; 'Mightiest Balladier Say Others Greenwood team which captured first place honors in the Carolina Folk Festival in June, will do the calling. Several expert dancers from the western part of the state will be on hand to give instruc tional exhibition dances. Before the dancing begins plenty of corn meal will be spread on the court so that the dancers will slide easily. Jim Rathburn, director '6f Graham Memorial, expressed the hope that everyone would attend the dance, which will be the same as the ones which drew crowds of several hundred this summer. Presbyterian Square Dance To Be Tonigh 270 "I'm I'm , J support at 1 on basic wheat, cor By Charlie Gibson Burl Ives, whose 8 o'clock Me moiial Hall concert Thursday will optn the Student Entertainment Coivmittec's series for the year, i.- as email in modesty a? he is . large in nam-. Although the friendly, pound man explains that T,ot an arafemic folklorist just a guy who sings," Carl Sand burg considers him "the mightiest I ballad smccr oi any ceiamj. i Since 1349 Ives has become one of lite newest successes in the (entertainment world. The public, in night clubs, theaters, and on the radio ana rrcuiuj. naa lirhted in hearing the American folk tunes which the guitar strumming troubadour has fathered during his wanderings up and down the land. Born in Jasper Country, Illi nois, exactly forty years ago, I Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives is not sure why he was 'given his un usual first name but remarks: "Webster says it's a knot in a stick of wood. That suits me all right." A descendant of tenant farmers and an "occasional preacher", young Burl learned to love music on the knee of a pipe-smoking, tobacco-chewing grandma who sang "a-plenty". And at four the lad made his first public appearance at an old soldiers' picnic and was given a dollar for singing "Barbara Allen," a ballad which still ranks among the most popular in the Ives repertoire. Education meant self-help employment in high school for this , lad, and he aban doned table waiting once he found that he could earn $25 by singing and playing for the local Rotary Club. College ambitions to be first a preacher and then a football coach were sidetracked after he "never did take to studies." In stead he discovered the joys of bumming all over America in the summertimes, playing and sing ing to earn food and lodging from one end of the country to the other. Finally he settled in New York, the big city where he says most of the modern hillbilly music is composed synthetically "by guys who never saw a hill." Here his wanderlust was replaced by an urge to go on the stage, and since 1933 he has appeared in eight Broadway shows. Not until 1944 and the historical musical pageant hit "Sing Out, Sweet Land" did Ives once carry a gui (See IVES, page 3) The second in a weekly series of square dances will again be held in the Presbyterian Church tonight at S o'clock, featuring instructions in the highland fling and other Scottish dances by Jim Wilson, University student from Scotland. "The dance last Saturday night was a terrific success," said Rex Reckendorf, dance publicity chairman, "there were just crowds of students on hand." The series met with satisfying said, and explained that the series .iuccess last year, Reckendorf this vear will be continued with an innovation. Instruction in different dance step North Carolina mountain dances, New England dances. European folk dances, end this week dance steps of Scotland will be offer ed every SaturdajT. Dance sponsors hope to make the square dance festivities an annual affair on campus. All previous dances have proved to be huge successes, the novelty bringing even the most stout hearted Yankee to the scene. Navy Airman Brands B-36 As 'Blunder' WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 ) The Navy's No. 1 airman today oranded the proud B-35 atom oomber as a "billion dollar blun der" and charged that the de fense high command is freezing the Navy out of decisions vital to victory in any future war. , ...No. sooner, had Admiral Arthur W. Radf o'jrdv Pacific Fleet com mander and noted Naval avia cqiv made, his. charges before the House Armed Services Committee than a move sprang' up in Con gress to curb Secretary of De fense Johnson's powers. All the long-smouldering un rest in the Navy exploded in a flat charge by Radford that the Air Force is "trying to elimin ate'' the Navy's air arm. Yack Official Warns Groups Yackety Yack Business Man ager Doug Smith yesterday warned all campus organiza tions, fraternities, clubs and so rorities that unless they sign a contract w7ith him for space in the Yack by next Friday the organizations "will not be in cluded in this year's Yack." Smith declared the Yack's pol icy in a letter to all organiza tions which explained the neces sity of this move to insure the yearbook meeting its early May publication date. He asked to know immediately j each organization and suggested the number of pages desired by that a representative from each student group be appointed to Carolina Set As Favorite In Loop Tilt Kickoff Slated For 2 O'Clock I This Afternoon i J vipeciui to lite u-x-ij air tteet) j UU.UUMm.rt, a. U., Oct. 7 -' Hie uiiivcia.ii v oi iNoiin uaro Uma's Ciiuuuii warriors. 44 ieaay ana anxious lootoaiiers, arrived nexe iaie trus aiter noon oy piane ana immedi ately upon lanum, erauamed to tneir notei m ur iicui ox uiis ioutn uaioiiiiv. v.v w up tor tomuuu i ciasn witn tuc w. couth Carolina s mcs. Tomorrows spectacle nas aroused a great aeai ox mitres t among the citizens oi tne Pal metto State ana reports tnat tne local .population inaicate that the Gamecocks are pointing to the far Heel tussle as the highlight of their season and are promis ing the powerful and undefeated Carolina squad, ranked sixth m the nation at the present, plenty oi trouble come kickoff time at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Coach Rex Enright's lads, given a pretty good rating by the pre season dopesters despite a three up and five down slate last year, haven't quite lived up to their advance billing. In the season's opener two weeks ago, the Gamecocks drop ped a 20-6 decision to the potent Ba3rlor "Bears of "the Southwest conference and last Saturday suc cumbed to pint-sized Furman in an upset, 14-7. From Furman to North Carolina is a big jump. It bodes ill to all Tar Heel par tisans who feel that tomorrow's fray is a breather for the gridders from the Old North State. Despite the poor start, the Gamecocks have the potential that can deal the Tar Heels a worrisome after noon from the opening kickoff to the final gun. Coach Enright, a former Notre Dame fullback under the im mortal Knute Rocknt?, has molded his starting eleven together large ly with promising sophomores, the same ones who, in last season's yearling game between the two schools, gave the Carolina fresh a terrific battle before losing to the 1948 Tar Babies in a tingling 27-26 contest. All who recall that thrilling freshman game last year must re member the young, red-headed giant John Boyle, who flooded the air of Kenan Stadium with deadly passes and made life dismal for the Tar Babies. Well, that same 205 lb. sophomore from Brooklyn handles the pitching chores for the varsity now and folks of this section are pulling for him to coordinate its activities with the ! duplicate this amazing 60 com- Yack. .. . . "-fr.l ji i ' i urn i. - - - .-ifii.rtwnwin-j.. pletion average that he compiled last year as a yearling. Another headache for the Tar Heels in the Gamecock camp will be one of the directors of the (Enright T formation, Bo Kagen t Hagen is regards" a- an all around threat a:.-. .:. ball-handling oil tiv- I t : (See GOOD isAiZZ. v i 1 WITH BINOCULARS TRAINED on the thrilling spectacle. President "Harry Truman watches members of a battalion of the famed 82nd Airborne Division as they float to earth in a mass jump demonstration. The big show was staged at Ft. Bragg where the Chief Executive reviewed 20,000 troops of the U. &. Army Field Forces. W. D. Speaks RALEIGH. Oct 7 UP) Act ing Greater University President W. D. Cannichael was one of the speakers today at a meeting of the committee of the N. C. State Grange to raise money for the Moss fellowship in tobacco re search at its meeting here. The committee decided to start solicitations for the schol arship .fund next Saturday. If will be set up at N. C. State College in honor of the man who directed the Oxford tobacco ex periment station from 1912 un til his retirement about a year ago. Peanuts.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view