Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 11, 1950, edition 1 / Page 1
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V n tOJxxi hill, n. c. EDITORIALS Tribute lo SEC, Playmaktrs Shakespeare Productions Record Shop WEATHER Cloudy and mild wilh showtrs. Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1950 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 72 -- '4 -? V r r .y w-r- ,: . 2." " M-- - ''' , f . - - ' i ' 0 ' - i ' .. t , ; i " I L SMILING CROWELL LITTLE, former Carolina freshman foot ball coach and now head coach at Davidson, had a good time at a party thrown' in Dallas over, the Cotton Bowl weekend. The young lady is Magician Gloria, who was part of a floor show presented during the affair. Little just played stooge. Coach Little Scores In Dallas Festivities By Frank Allston, Jr. One of the more amusing de velopments and a hitherto untold story of the Tar Heel football trip to Dallas and the Cotton Bowl was an unexpected per formance by former freshman oach Crowcll Little, who took over the head coaching job at Davidson College this week. Little, who was making his lat official trip as a member of the Carolina coaching staff, was the hit of the gigantic party which Col. D. Harold IJyrd, wealthy Tex; n, staged for the Car- ts oiima olina party and North Carolina pres.--. Durin:: a floor show which fol lowed the feasting at Col. Byrd's exclusive Dallas ranch, an at tractive lady magician called for a "mamed volunteer" from the audience to assist her with her d r thD coaching stair and players Little to "volunteer for the p and th- - magician, called Little onto the floor. "Ch'-stf r," as Little gave his name to the girl and which turned out to be .his actual first name, fitted into the show like a size nine hand into a size nine glove. Beaming from ear to ear, the new Davidson coach assisted the magician through several minutes of her act and lie tarried out his part so well that she was prompt ed to comment, "You'd make a pretty pood magician yourself." New Students All students who enrolled in the University for the first time for the winter quarter must at tend an Honor and Campus Code orientation meeting tomorrow night at 7 o'clock. Men's Honor Council Chairman Rog Holsten said yesterday. The meeting will be held in the Men's Honor Council quar ters on the second floor of Gra ham Memorial. The three-score new students must sign Honor Code pledges. noisien aiso asKa on uucm who have not signed the pledges lo drop - in during the meeting and sign Photo by Hugh Morton Shelley Rolfe, sports writer for the Richmond Times Dispatch and one of the press members who accompanied the team to Dallas, cracked for the benefit of the audience, "He'll have to be one next year to win at Davidson." Tar Heel blocking back Joe Kosinski was another of the. fe male magician's straight men. Kosinski's dead pan expression and reluctance to cooperate dur ing a trick brought howls of laughter from the guests. This act by the magician was just one of eight which was part of the big eight-act floor show staged by Col. Byrd. The show was complete with spotlight, band and m.c. An unexpected event consider ed more amusing than the planned enit'lw"ll,K"1 uccullc ... tackle and champion extra point kicker ADie wimams fell into helped I the private lake and was soaked men Mel Steinberg, Francis Sow he part! from ncad to toe- ers or Marie Nussbauip.- Timid Optimism Creeps Into SB I Hair, Report f S v V i RAYMOND D. HAIR Student Party Names Prince New Chairman CP Elects Smith Vice-President; Wilson Gets Post Bill Prince, sophomore from Rochester, N. Y., is the new chair man of the Student Party, party spokesmen said yesterday. Prince, former SP student Leg islature floor leader, was tops in more than a dozen Student and Campus Party organizational personnel changes announced yesterday. Other SP officers named were Bob Evans, vice-chairman, Jean Serpell, secretary, Julian Mason, treasurer, and Graham Jones publicity chairman. Named to the Executive Committee were Pat Bowie, Jackie Burke, Bob Litten, John Hazelhurst, and Jim McLeod. New CP jobholders are Bob Smith, vice-chairman, and Bill Wilson, publicity chairman Named to the Steering Commit tee are Hal Darden, Ed Best, Toby Selby, Bill Wilson and Jim Lamm. Israel Film, Talk Slated For Tonight .To better, f amiliarize , Univer sity , students with Israel and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem; and in conjunction with the pre sent textbook drive, ' a techni color film entitled "Israel's House of Learning" will be shown at 8:45 tonight in Caldwell 105 fol lowing a lecture by Judge George E. Holt at 8 o'clock on the new state of Israel. Judge Holt, president of the Circuit Judges' Association of Florida, recently visited Israe as a member of a study tour of the American Christian Palestine Committee. He will conduct a seminar in Caldwell 210 at 11 o'clock tonight sponsored by the University Political Science De partment. Shown under the joint sponsor ship of the YWCA and Inter collegiate Zionist Federation of America, the movie will be part of .the current book drive to re place volumes lost by the.' He brew University in Jerusalem and the Technion through bomb ings during the war. ,. , ; The current, drive, which will run through this week, has so far. gathered in over 200 books of all kinds. . . i Rebate tickets fr.om the Book Exchange are acceptable, and may be ' placed in the collection boxes or given to drive chair , RALEIGH, Jan. 10 (P) Op j timism ' crept timidly today into the SBI's latest report of .the search for Raymond D. Hair.'; " Director Walter F. Anderson talked .faintly like a man ' who felt something might break soon To newsmen who have called at the State Bureau of Investiga tion offices regularly since Hair vanished, Anderson said .the na tion-wide net his agency has spread may produce a catch. "We "may be about ready," he said, "to pull the net in." Hair, 23-year-old Wake Forest College senior, has been hunted 26 days for the murder of. Roy Coble, 20-year-old former stu dent and Oakboro resident. Coble was found mortally wounded last Dec. 15 in Hair's car on the Wake Forest" campus: Hair' fled before police discovered the- shot arid -bleeding -Coblet I - '' ' ; ' .,.,. tf.f I ii ir- ...Hill ,i KERR CRAIGE RAMSAY J ' 'i Kerr Ramsay Talks To Phi On Assembly Speaker's Wife Gets Last Word During Evening Speaker Kerr Craige Ramsay of the North Carolina House of Representatives addressed the Philanthropic Assembly last night. But Mrs. Ramsay had the last word. After Ramsay had concluded his talk, Mrs. Ramsay took the Speaker of the House Kerr Craige Ramsay and Acting President W. D. Carmichael, Jr., of the Greater University were acclaimed honorary speakers of the Phi Assembly-, at a dinner in the Monogram -Club last night. floor and remarked, "My husband says that I am speaker of the house." After inauguration ceremonies at which Herman Sieber was sworn in as the new Phi speaker, Ramsay discussed the position of the North Carolina General As sembly in the state governmental set-up, and also commented on executive powers. "As everyone knows," he com mented, "we are the only state in the union which does not gives its governor the veto power. The early assemblies of state so re sented the royal veto used before the power and succeeding as semblies have followed suit." Dr. Franck Slates Talk Dr. James Franck, professor of physical chemistry in the Univer sity' of Chicago and a Nobel prize winner in physics, will speak at 8 o'clock tonight in 206 Phillips Hall at the joint UNC-Duke phy sics colloquium. His topic will be "Use of Ex citation Energy in Complex Mol ecules and Electrilytic Ions." Dr. Franck was born in Ham burg, Germany, in 1882 and re ceived his Ph.D. degree at the University of t Berlin in 1906.- Samuel Selden, Starlet Have Point By Mark Sumner ' Louisa Hortoh, youngf star who will portray Katherina in "The Taming of the Shrew' and Portia in "Julius Ceasar" when the Mar garet Webster company presents the two plays in Memorial Hall here Monday, has something in common with Playmaker head Samuel Selden. Both were born in China. Selden, who worked in the nrnfftSsional theater before ioin , the Piayrnaker staff in 1924, was born m Canton, China, and liver there for most of the early part of his life. Miss Horton, who reached theatrical stardom with her per formance rin the New York pro ductkn vof "The Voice of the SP Merger CP Committee Is Appointed To Investigate Leaders n Favor; Date Not Named For Initial Meet A Campus Party Committee charged with investigating the "possibility" of a merger with the Student Party is working on proposals to present to the SP Executive Committee, spokesmen for the two campus political out fits said yesterday. The CP group, appointed by Chairman Bob Clampitt after a Monday night meeting of the party had voted 12-6 to name it, has set not definite time for "presenting" of proposals to the SP committee, and newly-elected SP boss Bill Prince also asserted that no time was mentioned for a get-together at the SP meet ing the same night. CP leaders, from Chairman Clampitt to former Student Body President Jess Dedmond all voiced statements favoring the "possibility" of merger. Clam J pitt also threw a barb at the University Party, asserting the CP and SP split each other's vote and the UP walks away with the elections." ' - In presenting the proposal for a committee, legislator Ed Best asserted that the party, formed when certain people broke away from SP, "has served its pur pose." The Student Party voted 15-4 in favor of Student Body Presi dent Bill Mackie's motion to al low the Executive group to hear proposals by the CP committee. Opposition to the decision tame from former Party chairman Fred Thompson and legislator Sol Kimerline. mi . r I xnompson saia ne was in ravor of a merger, but opposed to any committee , meetings because it is not wise to sit down and bar- gain.' Kimerlmg said he feared such a get-together because "con- cessions might be made." Mackie asserted' that he be heved the Campus Farty was acting "in good faith," 'and party chairman Prince promised that "no compromises will be' made." t: t! .n hpad thP rnmmittPP Spt un to iiiii i jri 1 1 1 1 1 1 . ,ir lctiiaiaiui. inM;,u 4V, mrr cc;k;i; tips ThP SP Kvpriitivp Cnmrnit- Prince. Other members of the CP ffrnun arP Ed Rost. Ranks TsIIpv Rnh riamnitt and Rill Wilson The CP moved confirmed cam- pus political speculation over merger possibilities mat moved to the fore when Clampitt, an avowed merger man, was elected chairman of the party in Decern ber. In Common Turtle," was v born- in Peking, China, where her father was . . .. .. serving as a Colonel with : the Ii Marine Corps. She spent -the , An instructor in history at Jef first 10 years of her life'.accomr ferson School of Social Science panying her parents to Marine and Naval bases from the far East to Haiti. At 14, back in America, she saw Eva LeGalliene in "L'Aig- Ion" and was so deeply impressed that she decided to become an ac tress.' "I can even remember that my seat number ws row P seat 20," she says, adding; "It was wonder ful." . After high school, Miss Horton attended Bryn Mawr, where she appeared in: numerous produc . (See SELDENt paQC i) Father Of All-America Choo Is Glad Football Days Over ' ii '"in mniimj t i. "Js : V-'-U I VV:" -: i I ' !- 1 j i. ii-nm .MJ. A:Jaf- - - JUJIij. . P. W. POLLY". JUSTICE, America halfback, is shown standing in the Southern Railroad yards at Asheville where he has had one comment to make on glad if was over. Curriculum Report Will Start Today By Bob Hennessee Tho work on the second Lnd final University curriculum report will get underway at 4 n'Hnrk this aft.prnnnn in the Grail m , rtrsii,am Mnri,! whPn Lhe 12man cdmmittee takes up the subject of "Philosophy of the Mission of the University." 1 Dr. Edgar Knight of the De- partment of Education will aid the group in finding answers to such questions as "What is the University for? What are the universities achieving 'today? wnai ao we warn uiem 10 acuievu tomorrow? All meetings of the newly ap- Ulieu luuumi "lua iai liavc Cea wltn organizational proD f lems, ' so the meeting this after noon win mars uie uegmiuiig ui i 1 1 i 1 1 i. : : . r the actual work on the report which is expected to last several months. Work is being done by both Dr. Aptheker To Speak Ih Gerrard and historian df the Negro people, will speak at 7:30 tonight in Ger rard Hall on "The Roots of Negro Oppression ; The talk is being sponsored I i xi ir i -bit i o : oy ,ne xva marx ouuy ouuxe. in New York, Aptheker received his PhD degree from Columbia University and was a Guggenheim Fellow in history in 1946-47. Among the books he has written are "American Negro Slave Re volts," "Essays in the History of the American Negro," and "The Negro People in America." He is the associate editor of Masses and Mainstream, a Marxist cul turual monthly magazine. Serv ing in the field artillery in. the last, war, Aptheker rose from the rank of private to major. V . ;)S; .. (See APTHEKER, page 4) Mo ves Photo by Hugh Morton the father of Carolina's All- worked for 37 years. Mr. Justice Charlie's football career; he was ' the students on the committee and the administration to get faculty committee appointed to work with the students in the formulation of a new curriculum for General College. There is nothing definite on the faculty committee thus far. The study committee was start ed last spring when Student Body President Bill Mackie appointed a. group headed by Charlie Sel lers, still the chairman, to draw up a preliminary report on cur riculum. This report is being used by the new committee as a basis for the final document. All meetings of the committee will be open to the general pub lic, and Chairman Charlie Sel lers has urged everyone who is interested in the study to attend the meetings and take part in the discussion. Only those on the committee may take part in the voting. Hall Tonight 2 A- Sy S f 'f j f DR. HERBERT, APTHEKER . i t , , n x ,-. -.it- Closer Medical Job No Surprise To Pa Justice By Chuck Hauser The news this week that All- America gridiron star Charlie Justice was taking a job with the Medical Foundation of North Carolina didn't surprise a tired faced gentleman in Asheville. All P. W. "Polly" Justice, Charlie's father, had to say was, I'm certainly glad his football- playing days are over." It was one week ago today that Mr. Justice made that re mark. The scene was the South ern Railroad yards in Asheville, where he has been working for 37 years. Sports Editor Frank Spencer of the Winston-Salem Journal, photographer Hugh Morton and I walked about a mile out into the yards to interview Mr. Jus tice. It was during an hour stop over on our way home from Dal las and the Cotton Bowl. "I wonder," Charlie's father pondered, "with all the beating he's, taken, whether Charles will be in as good shape as T am when he's my age." He referred to Carolina's triple-threat back throughout as "Charles." "Charles didn't have any riick names in high school," he said. "But when coach Joe Maniaci saw him tearing down the side lines at Bainbridge he said, 'That looks like a little locomotive coming down the tracks,' and the name 'Choo Choo' turned up and (See MR. JUSTICE, page 4) Y Retreat Is Open To All The third annual Midwinter Conference to be held at Mon treat on the weekend of Feb. 10-12 is a campus-wide confer ence, open to all students and faculty members who wish to at tend, Conference co-chairman Mac Copenhaver said yesterday. She added that last year's re sponse was so enthusiastic that accomodations for 150 people have been reserved at Montreat. While primarily a religious conference, ample time is -set , aside for recreation at Montreat, including a jaunt to nearby Mount Mitchell, highest in the east, dancing and banquets. Eth-' ical and religious discussions will be held in the mornings and for a short time in the afternoons, and the remainder of the time is free for recreation. ' The theme of the Conference will be "The Meaning and Role of Christianity," and the Confer ence will be led by Dr. Paul Weaver, Dean of Religious Life at Stephens College, Columbia, Missouri. Traffic Case W. E .Lindsay bought his first car when he was 40 years old. Thai was back in 1908, and lhe vehicle was the first automobile in Chapel Hill. Yesterday Lindsay, 82 years old, appeared in Recorder's Court on a traffic charge. He was pinched for driving without a license. He explained lo Judge John Manning thai he had never been called into court in the 42 years he had been driving. But his plea was lo no avail. Found guilty, he paid court costs and was ordered lo pro duce a license al lhe next court session or make his 42nd year of driving his last one .
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1950, edition 1
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