Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 10, 1949, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Serials Bept Cfciyel mil, tt. C vfT 'ir off - ONLY 2 Days BEAT NOTRE DAME1 WEATH ER Partly Cloudy VOLUME LVIII Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. .THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1949 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 43 Harriet Elliot Forum To Meet At WC Tonight Professor Vance In Opening Talk At Aycock Hall GREENSBORO, Nov. O (JF) Led by seven experts in the var ious fields of social science, the third Harriet Elliott Social Science Forum of Woman's Col lege will open tomorrow night for a three day exposition of problem, "The Social Science: What We Know vs. What We Do." Unusual in that the forum is bringing together foremost lead ers in the fields of economics psychology, sociology, social economy and history, interna tional law, politics, and philos ophy, the three day program is expected to produce a lively clash of minds with regards tc the nature of society's ills and what can be done about them. The first session, to be held in Aycock Auditorium, will sound the keynote for the entire forum in a discussion of "What We Know, What We Do." First par ticipants will be Louis Hacker, professor of economics at Uni versity of Chicago; Caroline Ware, professor of social economy and history at American University; i Otto Klineberg. professor of so ciology at Columbia University; Quincy Wright, professor of in ternational law at University of Chicago; and Rupert Vance, Ken an professor of sociology at Uni versity of North Carolina. Two other well known experts, Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois and Glenn Negley, professor of philosophy at Duke University, will join the forum for discuss ion3 Friday and Saturday. Sena tor Douglas' address Saturday evening when the subject, "Next Steps for American Democray," is introduced, will be a feature of the forum. Seven sessions will be held during the three days, including two general sessions and a group of round tables scheduled for each day Friday and Saturday Film Club Needs New Subscibcrs A series of films from the Mu seum of Modern Art's film li brary will be shown by the Film Classic Club every other Thurs day night provided the Club se cures enough membership sub scriptions from interested persons to be able to order the films immediately. The films are scheduled to be shown in the .Roland Parker Lounges of Graham Memoria beginning Nov. 17 and continuing every other Thursday night through March 30. The first program will include "Don Juan's Wedding," "Miser understood." "The Golem," and "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. Of the nine films the club wit show all but two will be sound films. On the schedule are such films as a March of Time movie i "The Road to Life." a Movietone News. Walt Disney's "Steamboat Willie," "All Quiet on the West ern Front." "Anna Christie, "What Prim Glorv" and two Marx Brothers films. The club will also present a German psychological movie en ;iri "M" and starring Peter Lorre. The $3.50 membership fee for the club will entitle a member to see all the programs. Subscnp tions should be mailed immed lately to Film Classic Club, Box 1062. Chapel Hill. Coed Senate Votes Not To Call Meet -For Orientation The Coed Senate will not call a compulsory "mass meeting of women students, despite an official Orientation Com mittee go-ahead on the matter, Speaker Pat Stanford said yesterday. ' i Trip Spnatp vntpH tinanimnnslv at its Tuesday night session not j C Of P Fans Want Le Baron For Big Team Caravan Chants : .- - - V At Newspaper On West Coast Pix Deadline For Yack Is Mon. Night Yackety Yack Editor Bill Clay brook yesterday gave students an extension of time to choose their official pictures from proofs, but he warned that the deadline would be extended no further. The time set is Monday night at 9 o'clock, after which all proofs will be sent back and se lections of final pictures will be made by the photographers, Wal ler and Smith of Raleigh. All proofs are available now in the main lounge of Graham Me morial, Claybrook said. Repre sentatives of the photographic studio are on hand from 10 o' clock in the morning until 9 o' clock every evening to .aid students. SAN FANCISCO, Nov. 9-(- EV..... U,, 1 I li : i : to call such a meeting but decid- U""MM?C" ed to hold a non-compulsory pre-1 B on """r election coed rally instead. The J uu-van meeting would have been restrict ed to a reading and explanation of election laws. The rally will irw clude SDeeches bv candidates for k. . j . ' A. . . 10 go 10 tne nose iowl a prize ail VUCU UJ LO UUUCl IklXZ JUt 13 diction of the Senate. today to boom their quarterback, Eddie Le Baron, for All-America. They went further: They sug gested undefeated Pacific ought The Senate had received per mission to call a meeting from the which automatically goes to the Pacific Coast conference cham pion. ' - The caravan of 96 horn-tooting, The desk in the student union will close at 7 o'clock Friday night, however, and will not be open either Saturday or Sunday, Claybrook said yesterday that over 4,200 individual students photographs were taken by the Raleigh photographers. He said this was 500 photograhps short of the 4.700 pictures coal the Yack staff had set at the begin ning of this school year. On the subject of group pic tures, the Yack editor urged all organizations which have signed pictures, contracts and have not had their pictures made to make appointments at the yearbook of-! fice in Graham Memorial imme diately. Any students who have campus snapshots or any pictures of in terests were asked to bring them to the Yack office for inclusion in the 1950 book. Lines at this year's photo sit tings moved faster than any lines on campus they had ever been in, said some students. The Waller-Smith photographers took an average of one sitting four poses every two minutes. UDC Saves Salute NEW ORLEANS. Not. 9 (A1) The United Daughter! of the Confederacy voted today to re lain the present brief alute to the Confederals Flag. II reads: "I salute the Con federate flag with affection, reverance and undying remem brance." Under a barrage of "nays Iho 56th annual convention bur ied a move to consider the ad dition of "no nation lost so pure and white, nor fell so free from stain." , Orientation committee last week, banner-bedecked cars jammed but with the permission came I traffic in front of the Chronicle a plea from Committee Chairman building. Students shouted: "We Al Lowenstcin that it not hold want Leiser." such a meeting because it would Chronicle Sports Editor Bill Leiser was hanged in effigy on the Pacific campus last week because he favors California's Bob Celeri over Le Baron for All America. The students demanded . of Leiser: "What do you think of be "discriminatory" to coeds. He said that the Committee gave its permission only because it did not want to exercise an arbitrary authority over the Sen ate. Under a Student Council Baron? uciaiun, it is up iu me neiua- Vn CA . . . . .1 . v VMU UUb OllJ a,u.i lu UH- otUdie lo cdix cum- Leise,. caUed dQwn from a third puisory meetings for the purpose floor wmdow. 01 orientation. Asked to compare Celeri and The non-compulsory will be Baron, Leiser called back held on Nov 21. At its session, "Eddie'd have a better chance if the Senate sent a request to the he were at California" (because Women's Interdormitory Council it's a big time university). for it to turn over one of the reg- "Politics, politics, politics," the ular compulsory house meetings students chanted. that Students asked they could explain election laws. Doubt Japan Treaty Ready By December WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 &)- Undersecretary of State Webb made ' clear today that all re sponsible departments of the gov ernment are hard at work on the problems involved in drafting a ate who is studying to take his Japanese peace treaty. bar exams, has been appointed But he said in response to ques- manager of the newly-opened tions that he personally doubted carpentry shop in the basement whether a treaty draft could be 01 Graham Memorial, Director. completed by Dec. 1. Jim Rathburn said yesterday u --j 14. The shop, which is open to all Ho cliH nnncitlfidnnc ....41-. 1 1 1 LUliJUH.QVlUUO Willi ULllCi why Leiser didn't get C O. P. a game with a school such as California - or Santa Clara. Leiser replied he had tried and would keep trying Koral Heads Wood Shop -' Dick KoraL University gradu- governments might be held be fore the United States makes its final decisions. Discussion of the Japanese treaty came up at a news con ference. Queen Entries Deadline Set For Friday Parade Entries for the queen of the awards last year. 'Beat Duke" float parade, sched uled to be held here next Fri day, must be in by 6 o'clock to morrow, Charlie Smith, chair man of the parade arrangements, said yesterday. Any organization that enters a float in the annual parade is eligible to sponsor a coed in the queen contest, Smith said. No organization can enter a coed, however, unless it enters a float in the parade. The parade is sponsored by the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and is an annual event of the Duke weekend. The series began 17 years ago as a poster parade, but two years ago was changed to a series of floats. Twenty-eight floats were entered in the con test last year by men and wo men's dormitories and .frater nities and sororities. This is the first year that a "queen contest" has been spon sored. The girls in the contest will be judged Tuesday night at the Pika House by a committee of five judges. The girl selected as queen will ride Friday on a special float, built by the Pika's. The float will carry a placard with her name and her sponsor ing organization. ' Also, for the first time this year, trophies won by the prize winning floats will be retained by the organizations permanent ly. The trophies awarded last year have been engraved with the winning groups name auu wil be returned to the organi zation. Aycock dorm, Smith dorm. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and the Chi Omega sorority won the The parade is scheduled to be gin at 2 o'clock Friday, Smith said, and will leave from Wool len Gymnasium pn a march through Chapel Hill which will cover nine tenths of a mile. The University Marching Band wil? escort the floats. students, faculty members and administration, will be open daily from 3 o'clock in the afternoon until 11 o'clock at night. A charge of 25 cents an hour will be made to help defray costs. No one, however, will be charged more than $10 a quarter. The shop is equipped with pow er and hand tools such as an electric jigsaw, a bench saw, a power drill and a flexible shaft with attachments. "The shop may be used for making anything from tables and bookcases to rat traps," Rathburn said. Wood will be available for sale in the shop, or patrons of the shop may furnish their own. The shop is located in the north end of the basementof Graham Memorial. Polgqr Wows Big Audience; Show Tonight By Chuck Hauser A gentleman by tne name of Polgar, took tne campus by storm, as usual, again last night. FranJt J., his initials are, and his mental telepathy and hypno tism snow, wiuc-n will be given in Memorial Hail again at 8 o' clock this evening, packed some 1,800 persons into the capacity- filled auditorium. The Student Entertainment Committee was the sponsor, and SEC Chairman Charlie Gibson praised- the audience for being "extremely cooperative" as they entered the hall, remembering the near stampede which occurred at the Burl Ives show last month Gibson said students who did not see the show last night may get into tonight's performance by showing their University ID cards and athletic passbooks at the door when they open at 7 o'clock. At 7:40 students who come back to see the show again will be ad mitted, along with paying towns- i people, faculty members, and ' student wives. The price of ad-! mission for those "outsiders" is $1. The show will go on during the day, too, it was revealed last night. Polgar used post-hypnotic suggestion on William Benbow of Winston-Salem, who will get into the act again today. A word to the wise: Be around the back steps of South Building at 12 noon on the dot and join in the fun. Benbow is also scheduled for an interesting pingpong match with the amazing Dr. Polgar at 4 o'clock this afternoon in Wool len Gymnasium. Another favorite of Polgar's last night was Lacy Bell of Cur- rie. The arch hypnotist had him practically jumping through hoops before the show was ove --;Ther highlight' pf-'the. evening was Polgar's ? "x-ra:y ff l asses" stunt. That trick, which was well remembered from the hypnotist's last year's performance, consists of telling his "subjects that the pair of glasses enables them to see through all types of cloth. All the spellbound males on the stage were even more spell bound as they took long and close looks at the audience, especially the female contingents. Benbow took a lengthy glance at a young lady on the stage, then, looking at himself, decided to hide be hind a chair while he took in the rest of the sights. Pep Ral y Set Tonight ND n Warnnup For Airmail DTH Set For ND Weekend; Staff Announced Final plans for the Daily. Tar Heel airmail editions for the Notre Dame game were announced yesterday by DTH Managing Editor Chuck Hauser. A total of 4,000 papers will be delivered to New York by East ern Air Line planes on Saturday and Sunday mornings, and dis tributed to hotels where the es timated more than 2,200 UNC students will be staying. The papers will arrive at La Guardia Field at 7:55 each morn ing and be in the lobbies of the hotels, and at the Times. Square newsstand by 9:30. Papers will also be available, at Yankee Sta dium Saturday and. Penn Station Sunday. The DTH airmail editions will be the only airborn newspapers ever delivered from south of the Mason-Dixon line. - Also announced with the mail ing plans was the setup of the New York Bureau of the UNC paper. Sports Editor Bill Car michael will be in overall charge, Roy Parker, Jr. will head news department and handle circula tion. - in the nation on triday will not Members of sports and news close down New York bars. An sians wno win Dynne press wire stories from the city include Bud dy Vaden, Frank Allston, Lew Chapman, Don Maynard, Zane Good News-. Bars Open, Weather OK (Special to The Daily Tar Heel) NEW YORK, Nov. 9 There's good news tonight! Two things Tar Heels at the University of North Carolina have been wondering about for several days panned out for the best one of them for sure and the other reasonably sure. The one that is reasonably sure is that there will be fair weather in New York City and vicinity for the Carolina-Notre Dame game Saturday. The weather bureau warned, how ever, that the forecast could change in the next three days. : The item for sure is that the celebration of Armistice Day Robbins, Joe Cherry, Andy .Tay lor; Wuff Newell, Bill. Johnson, Jo Taylor, Ronald Tilley, Larry Fox, and Glenn Harden. Headquarters for the DTH Bu reau will be the Statler Hotel. ugly rumor Hrculating in Chapel Hill, N. C, and through out the state told a misleading story to that effect. A number of prominent local bartenders contacted made as surances that their establish ments, as all others in the me tropolis, will be open all day Friday. Chungking Position Threatened By Reds CHUNKING, "Nov. 9 (Chi nese Nationalist troops today re coiled from Red attacks about 150 miles east, of Chungking and many were saying this gloomy city's days as a Nationalist capital are short. x Furthermore, Chungking's po sition was being undermined by a rapid Communist drive into Students Can Not Use Durham Street Parking Durham police yesterday re peated their warning of a few j weeks ago that no parking ; will j be permitted in the streets of Durham by students who intend to drive to Durham prior to catching their train to New York for the football weekend. Cars will be ticketed and mov ed, if they are found parked for the weekend, the police depart ment said.. In view of this warning and the resulting inconvenience to stu dents, the University Club has reserved space at the Downtown Service Center in Durham in which automobiles may be parked. There will be a flat rate of $1 charged for the entire week- Kweichow province to the south. ! end, a University . Club spokes- Freikoerperkulturbewegung Split Russian Zone Nudists Wanf To Talk Communism t While Enjoying Nature; Others Just Play Bare BERLIN, Nov. 9 (JP) Now the cold war has split German nud ism in a political chill. Seventeen thousand Berliners agree on mixed recreation with out even a fig leaf. But they squabble like the U.N. Asembly over East-West politics. During the fall and winter they meet twice a week for swim-fest? and gymnastics at a westefn in door sports center, from which non-nudists temporarily are barred. Allied officers and civilians who have membership papers in nud Ai..k. u: u Ten-thousand nudists in the'ist clubs in their home countries i I Allied sectors want to exclude all arp wplmmpH hv th wim At ideologies from their hobby. Seven-thousand in the Soviet sector -want to aid Stalinism at the same time as their physiques. So the 49-year-old Freikoerper kulturbewegung Free body cul ture movement looks like hump- least a dozen have attended nud ist events here in the last year. Old rules of the Freikoerper kulturbewegung, when it was founded in Germany in 1900, are strictly enforced by Helios. No age limit is set, but old ty dumpty. Split into pieces, its sters must promise to engage unity is gone. -actively in sports. Carrying on in West Berlin is- . , , , . , the. Helios Club, with an all-' Mamed couples are admitted year program of sports in a birth- ;nly after both partners sign the d it 'application. If a couple is sep- araieu, aumissiun is atuayeti un til after a divorce. Minors must Until October, German nudiste of both sexes and all ages frolick ed on a tree-ringed playground in the Gruenewald in the British sector. have written permision of their parents. The aim of the movement is officially described as "to free limits. ourselves .from antiquated views! and to seek new ways for a life which promotes public health." Quoting the poet Goethe on the superfluousness of clothing, nud ists claim that "for a man who is healthy, both inside and out, there is nothing to hide." "Our supreme law is respect for humanity, especially women as the bearer of future life, and veneration for the pure beauty of the human body," they say. "We are no remote sect of queer minds, but stand firmly on reality with both feet." Most West Berlin nudists are married. Four weddings took place recently in the unclothed younger set. The outdoor playground is lo cated deep inside Berlin's Green Forest, but has no fence to keep out the curious. Signs warn that the area is reserved, and it is respected by Allies troops as off Track and field meets are a regular summer feature. But girl contestants do not engage in races longer than 100 meters. Winter swimming is highly re garded by nudists. They pay 50 pfennigs each (12 cents) for com munal use of a pool. Club dues are only 1.50 west marks (36 cents) a month. . - A membership committee sol emnly watches over group con duct. Men having "too high blood pressure" are made to leave. Nudists from business and pro fesional classes usually are shy about their identities being made public, so club rolls are kept secret. Helios officers, however, claim that even a clergyman is a member in good standing. They add: "We wish to destroy the illusion that sports in the nude are for dangerous political radicals. We are respectable people." man said yesterday. Police will be present at the Southern Rail road station to direct students with their cars to the parking lot, located at 401 McMannen street, a block and a half from the station. Attendants will be waiting at the lot to receive cars as they arrive, tne spokesman saia. j door-to-door service is operated by the parking lot management, he said, by which students and their baggage will be taken to the station, dropped off, and the car returned by the attendant to the parking lot. ND Poster Parade To Begin at Noon Parade Chairman Jerry Stern berg yesterday said the 21 or ganizations entered in the New York poster parade and contest will form in line at noon at 164th and River Street according to their numbers which he assigned. Each poster , should be plainly marked with the name and num ber of the sponsoring organiza tion, Sternberg said, so that pa rade judge Kay Kyser may iden tify the winner. The entering organization and their numerical position in the parade are: (1) Mangum Dorm, (2) Chi O,' (3) Beta, (4) Phi Delta Chi, (5) Kappa Sig, (6) Phi Kappa Sig, (7) Phi Gam, (8) ATO, (9) TMA, (10) Chi Phi, (11) DKE, (12) Tri-Delt, (13) Lambda Chi, (14) Pi Kappa Phi, (15) Chi Psi, (16) Manley Dorm, (17) Sigma Chi, (18) AD Pi, (19) ZBT, (20) Theta Chi, and (21) Alpha Gam. Pledge Bids May Be Picked Up Today - Pledging bids for campus so cial fraternities may be picked up from today on at the Dean of Students office, second floor of South Building, for those men who failed to pick their bids up in Gerrard Hall yesterday. Torch Parade, Team Sendoff Also Scheduled Students to Follow Team to Durham For Farewell Rally A pep rally, torchlight pa rade and a rousing team send off are on today's agenda of activities drawn up by the University Club for the Caro lina - Notre Dame football week. Head Cheerleader Norm Sper and his crew kicked the lid off the pre-game activities yester day afternoon on Navy Field with a warm-up pep rally to cheer the Tar Heels in practice. Another rally is slated for to night at 6:30 in front of the Monogram Club where the team will board the bus that will take them to Durham to entrain for New York. After opening the night's spirit- raismg activities, all students with cars will follow the team's bus to the Durham station. Here the torches will be handed out and an abbreviated parade cen tering around the station and im mediate vicinity will begin. More cheers will follow. as the team boards its train at 7:30, and starts the long journey to Gotham. A huge banner has been prepared by the University Club and will be placed on the side of the Tar Heel sleeper. On its arrival in New York, the team will go directly to the Concourse Plaza Hotel where the players will be quartered throughout their stay in the Big Town. Another pep rally will be stag ed at Times Square at 8 o'clock Friday night to further kindle the Tar Heel fire. Following the rally the Carolinians will move to Greenwich Village for an in formal party that has been plan ned at "Nick's." Alumni Booth In NY Hotel Alumni Secretary Maryon J. (Spike) Saunders yesterday re vealed plans for a registration booth for University alumni in the Statler Hotel, New York. Saunders issued his statement along with other information concerning the alumni plans in New York. He said that the booth will be on the mezzanine of the Statler, and added that no formal plans have been made and 4hat no reservations are re quired for any phase of the ac tivities set up by the . Alumni Association. The alumni secretary said that Acting President Carmichael, Chancellor House, Business Man ager Teague, and other University officials will be on hand to greet the alumni in an informal get together. . . - The University Club will prob ably set up a general information booth in the Statler in conjunc tion with the Alumni Associ ation's booth, Saunders revealed. Saunders also announced plans for a smoker meeting of the Washington, D. C. Alumni As sociation on Thursday night in Washington's Willard HoteL Sec retary of the Army Gordon Gray of Winston-Salem, is president of the Capitol City association and will be master of ceremonies. Buses to N.Y. - Students riding on the Uni versity Club sponsored, non stop bus to New York were re quested to be al the Y court al 7:33 sharp tonight by UC President Jack Holcombe. "Don't hesitate to come down lo the Y," Holcombe said. "Ihere's plenty of room for everyone."
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1949, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75