Serials Bapt. Cbapel Hlll C. EDITORIALS Return lo Religion Random Shots , Merry-Go-Round WEATHER Slightly cooler and partly cloudy. -Mi VOLUME LVIII Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1950 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 76 v .a. a a k . a - a c mm- luiir r 0 Q--0 -1 1 lit 1 1 III!1.1 V7 r-i rzzr- 1 "V . de l v. ' 1 . : IN V ----- -- i. armrrr " & sx -T" i X J femiMaaM iirl..iiin)ii aiaiiiiiiiai ni 11 m $ AN ARTISTS'S CONCEPTION (lop) shows the new ihree-building plant which will be the future home of the School of Commerce on the site of the Memorial Hall parking lot. Contract for the structure, which will be opposite the Law School building and which will form a quadrangle on the south campus, is expected to be awarded soon. The top picture gives an idea of the train ing program to be followed in the proposed plan for retail educatoin at the University. Top a typical classroom scene where the students will learn from teachers and books, lower left Getting actual experience in the store, a requirement for graduation; lower right The final test of suc cess a satisfied customer. N. C. Merchants Ready Plans For Chair Of Retailing Here A plan that has been undcrgo ins the ordeal of growing pains for the hut 10 years will come of ju,c in North Carolina'ncxt week. North Carolina merchants arc ready to launch a retail educa tion program, the primary pur pose of which is to establish a Chair of Ik-tailing at the Uni- Mackic Funeral GREENSBORO. Jan. 14 (!') Funeral for Ezra Columbus Mackie, 79, Guilford College Roller Mill owner and father of Dr. Ernest L. Mackie of Chapel Hill. Dean of Students at the University of North Car olina, will be held at New Gar den Friends Church at 3 P.M. Sunday. Burial will be in the church cemetery. . ..Mackie. a Yadkin County na tive, worked at his mill Thurs day and became ill that night. He died at 6:40 A.M. today at St. Leo's Hospital here. He had resided at Guilford College 35 years and was a member of New Garden Church and the Junior Order. Surviving besides his son, are his widow, the former Annice Hinshaw; two other sons. Thad H. Mackie of Florence. Ala., and Carl M. Mackie of Guilford Col lege; two daughters. Miss Ge neva Mackie of the home and Miss Florence Mackie of Mocks ville and Guilford College, and five grandchildren. G iOn 'a.a:lHr U i'srl J . - .:',": - x A. k 1 versity. This is regarded by many merchants as the most forward and progressive step ever . taken by them. Tho coal is $200,000 and the campaign will be launched by merchants associations through out the state on Monday, Jan. 16. No time limit is set, but it is hoped to wind up the campaign by May 1. If the response is prompt and enthusiastic the Uni versity promises to set up a full- fledged course in retailing by the opening of the fall term in Sep tember. The principal will remain in tact, and only the income from the fund, estimated at $7,200 an nually will be used. This will en able the University to add to its staff a specialist in retailing and will provide for some field work and instructional material. The University's School of Commerce, in which the new chair will be established, already has courses in marketing and ad vertising end one course in re tailing. This program will provide spe cifically for service to retailing that would otherwise not be available and will enable the Un iversity to offer a strong and well-rounded program in this fifld. Dean Dudley D. Carroll said. The; project will be carried out with the cooperation ot tne nusi ness Foundation of North Caro lina. The agency can receive, hnlH invest, and disburse funds SSf? $ i i t n - - - - fxv. wa -v.ljpf .... way ay; y vsewowww properly authorized by the mer chants and the School of Com merce. To raise the $200,000 endow ment fund, the merchants and others who may be interested are being asked to contribute one- tenth of one percent of their re tail sales for the past year, plus 10 percent of the assigned quota, to compensate for unmet quotas. The contributions are tax deduct ible and will be solicited through local merchants associations of (See COMMERCE, page 4) rrK,:-. . v "a , "m;;WHvj-; 'V V ' ' r 1 , 1 :- V ' - l & : 1 : I. i( a v i if : . raumUmny ...!. , rti MARGARET. WEBSTER (left), discusses her productions lo be shown here Monday afternoon and evening hr Memorial Hall with two of her star actors. Kendall Clark and Louisa Horton. Di Will Hear L. P.McLendon Wednesday Attorney's Talk Slated as Part Of Inauguration Major L. P. McLendon, promi nent , Greensboro attorney and state political figure, will address the Dialectic Senate at 8 o'clock Wednesday night during its in augural ceremonies in New West building, Di. President-elect Banks Talley announced yester day. McLendon is a former member of the Di and president of the Medical Foundation of North .Car olina. He is a trustee of the Uni versity and a member of the committee charged with nomi nating a new president for the University. He. was campaign manager for the late Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus. Talley, who will take over the leadership of the.Di for. the win ter quarter, is a senior in Amer ican history from Bennettsville, S. C. Other officers for the-Di's win ter session are Toby Selby, presi dent pro tempore; Morris Knud spn, critic; Tom May field, treas- uer; Jim Lamm, clerk; , Harry Horton, sergeant at arms and John Schnorrenburg, chaplain. The outgoing Di officers are Artie Murphey, president; Gus Graham, president pro tempore; Toby Selby, critic; Tom Mayfield, treasurer; Morris Knudson, clerk; Jim Lamm, sergeant at arms; and Don Shropshire, chaplain. Two Plays Are Slated -For Memorial The Margaret Webster Shake speare company will give a per-1 formance of "Julius Caesar" in Memorial Hall at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon, and a performance of "The Taming of the Shrew" at 8:30 tomorrow evening, under the sponsorship of the Carolina Play- makers. The featured roles in "Julius Caesar" , will be handled by Louisa Horton, who appears as Portia, Kendall Clark as Mark Antony, and David Lewis as Bru tus. "The Taming of the Shrew" will have Miss Horton as Kath erina, Lewis as Tranio, and Clark as Petruchio. Anthony Lewis, former member of the Playmak ers will appear as Marcellus and Grenio. Reserved seat tickets for the two plays are still available at the Playmaker Business office. Special buses for high school and civic groups in Durham, Raleigh, and 6ther towns in the area have pushed each show, near the sell out mark. This will be the first appear ance of the Webster company in North Carolina this season. The troupe travels by bus with a spe cially constructed truck and trail er for scenery. Twenty-one ac tors and five technicians are in cluded in the group. i, . i i f l 4 t it mri'iiiifaw ' f- For M "v S V-V--; C )) j i J -A pt : f"- - ' v I I f ' r.'i f I !n ffJ H P r f$Ii -if ; tJM. i f: I -11 m Yz, Z SERVING AS SPONSORS FOR MEMBERS of the German Club at the annual midwinters dan ces held Friday and last night at Chapel Hill were the aitracive young ladies pictured above. Music was by Tex Beneke. Top row: Misses Elizabeth Myatt, Goldsboro, .with Roy Holsten, presi dent of the club from Goldsboro, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Jean Roberts, Durham, with James O. Hall, Jr., vice-president - from Raleigh. Alpha Tau Omega; Jean Sloan, Charlotte, with Steve Jones, Treas urer TirdnT Clinton," Phi Gamma Delta; Card Davis, . Dunn, with -Ben Yelverlon, Secretary from Rocky Mount, Phi Gamma Delta. V " Middle Row: Misses Betty Ann Cooper, Greensboro, with Wilson Trotter, Leaksville, Sigma Al pha Epsilon; Pal Shoyer, Wayn, Pa., with Mabrey Bass, Tarboro, . Sigma Nu; Elizabeth Hamer, Marion, S. C, with John W. Underwood, Southern Pines, Alpha Tau Omega; and Marrion Turner, Greensboro, with Bynum Brown, Murfreesboro, Pi Kappa Alpha. Bottom Row; Misses Betsy Ann Barbee, Chapel Hill, with Dick Gordon, Merion, Pa., Delta Psi; Kathleen Van Loan, High Point, with Jake Froelich, High Point, Beta Theta Pi; Rosa Talbort, Lexington, Ky., with Bill Rue, Danville, Ky., Sigma Chi; Nancy Reid, Charlotte, with Bob Morrow, Charlotte, Zeta Psi; and Marjorie Crutchfield, Bronxville, N. Y.. with George Blackwelder. Jr., Hickory, Phi Delta Theta. Benefit Will Star Charlies Clowns Charlie Justice and the Carolina Clowns will headline a benefit basketball double header to be played for the March of Dimes Thursday night in Woollen Gym. The Clowns will play the Link Watson All Stars from Danville in the feature game of the double bill which opens with a contest between Irv Holdash's Linemen and Dick Bunting's Backs. . Playing with Choo Choo for the Clowns will be Coy Carson, the leading scorer in the Southern Conference last year, All-Ameri- can football players Art .Weiner and Kenny Powell and many others. The Link-Watson team will be manned by such stars as Al Mathis, the former Carolina cap tain and basketball star, Lester Hooker of William and Mary, Dale Jones of ECTC, Chet Smoral and Bernie Kerns, of Manhattan, Bill Haley of VPI, and Hoy Issacs of Appalachian, plus others. The opener between Holdash's brawny Linemen and Bunting's fleet Backs has all the earmarks of a real grudge match. Coach Holdash warned, weve been blocking for em all year and we ain't gonna stop now, ex cept this time we're gonna block em right into the stands! Holdash will count on such worthies as Ed Washington, Joe Dudeck, Bill Kuhn, Chris Car penter, Billy O'Brien, Jim Hen dricks, Roscoe Hansen, Julian King, R. L. McDonald and other behemoths. Wily mentor Dick Bunting will counter with such star hoopsters as George Verchick, Skeet Hes eroer Tomorrow mer, Bud Carson, Merl Norcross, Billy Hayes, Dick Wiess in addi tion to other assorted scoring threats. The Clowns will carry a record of 56 straight 'wins going into the game, one of those victories being a one point win over Coach Ha ley's All Stars last year. In addition to this fine display of basketball talent, the popular Sigma Chi quartet will peiform between games. Tickets for the games will be 50 cents for students, and $1 for others and may be bought at the Y Court tomorrow through Thurs day or from any Monogram Club member. . All proceeds will go to the March of Dimes. We Want Women! Girl-Getting Group Set Up By Dance Class A girl-getting committee is the latest, addition to the Monday night Woollen Gym dancing class, and the men ' on the committee are really out to get girls. The committee, , which was formed recently is for the pur pose of getting more girls to at tend the dancing classes which Lib Stoney and John Lehman teach each Monday night in Women's Gym. Girls, so Lib says, are strictly in the minority at the classes. Especially girls without dates. And that's the kind of girls the class needs. "The boys come without dates, P uay Capt. Cooper Gets Duty In Capitol Captain J. Elliott Cooper, com mander of the Navy ROTC and professor of naval science, left yesterday for temporary duty at the Office of Naval Officer Pro curement in Washington, D. C. He will remain at the national capital for about a month, serv ing on an interview board dur ing the processing of applicants for appointments as Naval Re serve Midshipmen. Candidates who are ultimately selected for appointment as mid shipmen in the U. S. Naval Re serve are scheduled to begin their college training in Septem ber, 1950, at one of the 52 insti tutions of higher learning where NROTC units are established. and we want the girls to do the same thing," Miss Stoney said. So tomorrow night a group of boys representing the class wil be in Alderman Dormitory at 6:55, and all girls who would like to attend the class should join them at 7 o'clock. In this way the girls will not have to arrive at the class alone and if the plan is successful, more girls should attend the class. Tomorrow night Lehman and Miss Stoney will teach South American steps such as the tango; the samba and the rhumba. For the first hour of the two hour ses sion they will teach advanced stu dents. Then at 8 o'clock the be ginners will take over. roposals Night Is Suggested CP Dissolve, Join With SP Two Other Plans To Be Presented During Meetings Three merger proposals drawn up by a Campus Party committee, will be considered by the Student Party and the CP at regular meetings to morrow night, party spokes men said yesterday. The proposals include one that would have the CP dissolve and all its members automatically be come members of the SP; one that would dissolve the executive com mittees of the two parties and elect a single group from the un ified party; and one that would have the parties unify, elect an entirely new slate of officers, and appoint a new executive commit tee. SP Chairman Bill Prince urged all members of his party to be on hand at tomorrow's meeting. This is in order that the par ty as a whole, and not just a few individuals, will determine the outcome of the proposals,' Prince asserted. . Bob Clampitt, whose election as chairman of the CP in Decem ber started the ball rolling on the merger proposals, urged the full CP membership to be present at the Party conclave. The CP committee which drew up the proposals, headed by Jim Lamm, was appointed last week by Clampitt after a 12-6 vote of the Party had favored such a group. The SP voted the, same night to allow the Party's executive com mittee to hear any proposals. Student Body President Bill Mackie made the motion to al ow the committee to hear the CP ideas, but former Party chair men Fred Thompson was opposed to the move. The motion passed the party by a 15-4 vote. The Campus Party meeting is scheduled for 8:30 tomorrow night in Horace Williams Lounge of Graham Memorial. The Student Party meets at 9 o'clock on the second floor of the student union. Art Exhibit Opens In GM Today At 4 Paintings and pieces of sculp ture by University students will be on exhibit in the Horace Wil liams Lounge of Graham Memor ial this week in the first Student Art Exhibit to be presented by the student union this year. The show will have its formal opening this aiternoon when Graham Memorial is host at a tea at 4 o'clock. All students, facul ty members and townspeople are invited to the tea. The artwork will be on exhibit through Saturday, and visitors may see it at any time that the building is open. Some of the pieces will be for sale, and the list of the artists and prices will be available in the Graham Memorial informa tion office. Sam Boone, president of the University of North Carolina Art Majors Club, is in charge of the exhibit, r Movie at Y "This Is Their Story," a per irayal of the needs of students in war-devastated countries, will be shown in the Y tomor row night at 7 o'clock. The movie will be a feature of the first general membership meeting of the Y for this quar ter. It is being sponsored as part of the preparation for the upcoming Campus Chest drive. A