Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 27, 1950, edition 1 / Page 1
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u.iu Library Serials Dept. Chapel Hill. N. C. 8-31-49 EDITORIALS Views of Elder Statesman Debating Makes Comeback On Segregation WEATHER Clear and slightly cooler. Mr VOLUME LVIII Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, JANUARY. 27, 1950 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 86 State siarure ays i Continuance 1 ' In Negro raca remenrs oraTure 'A ( t it - fit II . II Granted Student e Requi IT i Case t r -, , J ' I p r vc ' n STRIKING CONTRASTS prevail in the varying weather Winter is dealing out lo North Ameri can areas. Left: a train (center) stands nearly buried and completely stalled in Fraser canyon 120 miles east of Vancouver. British Columbia. This scene is not very far north of the United States Canadian border. At the same time, the warmest January day in the history of the weather bureau was recorded at St. Louis, Mo. The mercury went up to 75 and three student nurses at Washington University School of Nursing went io a St. Louis park to cool their heels in the lake (right). Left lo right: Shirley Burnett and Bobby Anderson, both from Washington. Ind.r and Dorothy Feigenspan of Jefferson City, Mo. . v . - " Summer Weather Prevalent AH Over Nation Say Reports Ma Nature Plays Tricks In January By The Associated Press A stringing summer-to-winter Di Defeats Recognition OfChinaReds . The Dialectic Senate over- Cold Front Is Moving In Say Reports Summer school-like weather that has brought a Florida at on the Way" but," according to told front rolled deep into the i ir . mosphere to the campus may be frnidwest yosterdv. Gales and IZl drenching rains accompanying . . . , . I the Weather Bureau. the change damaged property and ... 4. 0.. A cold front, which is causing raised new flood threats. ' raMytinn w floods and below-zero tempera The winter's fourth cold waveL, ,.... . n tures in the midwest, will prob in soutnern amornia sirucK-i ... . n . na5t r. au1' UC5'" 1,ullu another blow at that state's cit- ,..J .v., TT-r e ' Carolina tonight and tomorrow. rus crop, but summerlike tern- nQ longer recognize the govern The week-long winter heat peratures prevailed in the East. It o Chiang Kai.shek as be. wave which brought tempera- The weather was on a ireaK tha triIO -rtornmonl. t tho aa ,u "iujr binge that produced these con- le o China and that the and 75 yesterday, has yet to set traaU: c:t3toc oiva Aa fai.tn, any new tempe.rat.ure records It was 14 degrees colder in reco2nition of the Mao Tse-tung f0r ,J anuary. however.. Last -year Los Angeles than in Toronto. Los government as the government n an' mercury climbed Annn no hnH an fivprniPht lOW - -u: ail " nidi, iidu ueeil ,.r i whilo it nvpr riinnpd under , .... , .reached several times before w "'" -r-i i no vhto nt inn mpmnprc rjT 0 in me canaaian cuy. ni was ix fnr th solution Guymon, Okla., in the north- . 22 affainst it' A vot of both west part of the state recorded L. Di members and the visitors 2 degrees, while Idabel, Okla., recorded sjx for "and 32 against in the southeast section sweiterca reC0gniti0n in Hfl fftrnrc I . in w 1 i c i. u Mor,.r thopmnmMPM froze in auFpui..uiii ni ture dropped'to -46. But in Wash- J government of China were i no 1 (All c l uunii juiiuv.ik) I A1nvini-1nr TStv T ninm Dnrl T'nViV I degrees wanner at 77, noon-day . stratlon' the Board Trustees, strollers were hatlcss and coat- """" , " and the faculty met with stu- lcss. nU r r.rtr dents three hours Wednes iiinii. J. J. uiiiv liu iwn. u viui iv, 1.1 : i i a i In Chicano. where the mcr-i ' , . '. ..j ' Udy ni8ni lo map pians lor a curv hit an all time hich January T ' T ... 'uninea,, study of the curriculum rcadinc of 67 Wednesday, a sea- """ ' at the University son's low of zero was forecast for At its last discussion meeting Over 20 people, including Vic last nicht tnc Dl votcd unanimously for tor J3ryant, a member of the The coldost weather of the sea- a resolution aenouncing any ei- ooara oi lrustecs, attended a son criDDod the Dakotas. Minnc- fort to promote the organization dinner given at the Carolina Inn sota. Iowa, Missouri and Kansas, or me m iviux ivian m uuu oy nanceiior nouse io aiscus: But more heat records ,were naruimd. x. iwwuuuh kuuhs mc- pusbimmy ot setting up a broken in the East and South- 14 ij uov. v-j. jwmi, smutm-idLuiy uunmiiuee east. The mercury shot up to 70.5 the president of the student body for the formulation of a report i niur w Vo,U markincr was iduiuu iwiuw siuujr. uu uie cunitutuiu oi me uni CI b V A A A lit 11V II v-' . I the hfttest January weather in Admissions Battle Deferred Until April By Judge Johnson GREENSBORO, Jan. 26 (re petition for continuance until April in two civil rights cases" slated for the February term of middle district court in Durham has been granted by Judge John son J. Hayes, it was learned here today. Request for delay of trial in the cases filed by Negro students charging discrimination , on the part of school officials was made by Attorney General Harry Mc- Mullen who will appear for de fendants in both suits. One suit is being brought against the State Board of Edu ficials by students in Durham who charge facilities provided them are not equal to those pro vided for white students. - The second suit, filed by Harold Epps and Robert Davis Glass, law students at North Carolina College in Durham, seeks an in junction to keep the University of North Carolina from further discrimination by . denying them admission to the UNC law schoo because of their race. Gee Gee Still Aground Off Va. Beach VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., Jan 26 (iT) The schooner Gee Gee III remained hard aground off False Cape today after five at tempts by Coast Guard cutters to pull her off the beach. The 1 craft's owner, John P. Hazzard, of Chapel Hill, auto mobile dealer, plans to , stay aboard until 'the 103-foot yacht either floats or breaks up. i She bounced in over sand bars during a northeaster last Friday and. the Coast Guard and Haz zard are hoping for a repitition of the storm, as such a wind might push in water enough to I float her back across the bar. Dr. John C. Brauer Appointed m ...... Dean Of New Dental School Curriculum Committee, Faculty Hold Meeting Representatives of the admini- thc city's history. The Rocke feller Center ice skating rink had to be shut down because the sun melted the ice. The temperature hit an all time January high of 79 in Baltimore. Japanese beetles, a June-to-August problem, appeared near Frederick. Md. Contest Ends GrahamGives Youth Boost versity. Chancellor House began the dinner by pointing out to the group, "There are as many ed ucations as there are people to be educated." He added, "It is time for us to abandon the idea that' any four-year course can bring a man abreat with the day, Assistant Dean of Students Ray Jeffries, Student Welfare Chairman Claiborne S. Jones? Dean Henry P. Brandis of the Law School, Dean W. R. Berry hill of the Medical School' , and Dean D. D. Carrol of the School of Commerce. Dean W. S. Wells of Arts and Sciences; S. A. Stoudemire, head (See CURRICULUM, page 4) Dr. John C. Brauer, Dean of the Scho&l of Dentistry at the University of Southern Califor nia, has accepted an appointment as Dean of the New School of Dentistry here, it was announced yesterday by Acting President W. D. Carmichael, Jr., Chancel lor R. B. House, and Dr. JE. G. McGraven, Administrator . Pro- Tern of the Division of Medical Affairs, whose recommendations were recently approved by the Trustees' Executive Committee. The Dental school was estab lished by the 1947-49 State Leg islature and will hold its first classes with the opening of the fall term this year. Dr. Brauer will move his family to. Chapel Hili March 1. Brauer has had broad exper ience in dental education. Born in Sterling, - Nebraska, little more than two-score years ago, he received his A. B., MSc and DDS from the ... University of Nebraska. After that he practiced for two years. In 1930 he went back to the University of Nebraska, this time as instructor in oper ative dentistry and pedodontics and preventive dentistry. Six years later he went to At lanta, Ga., as director of the De Los L. Hill Jr., Memorial Child ren's Dental Clinic "and as pro fessqr of pedodontics, 'orthodon tics and preventive dentistry in Emory University Dental Col lege. In 1938 and until the war, Brauer was head of the depart ment and professor of preventive dentistry and pedodontics at the State University of Iowa and di rector of the Bureau of Dental Hygiene of the State Department, of Health. ' ' During the war he was a lieu tenant colonel, assistant to Maj. Gen. Robert H. Mill's, Dental Di vision and Chief Dental Stand ards branch, Surgeon General's office. He received the Legion of Merit from the U. S. Army. Brauer was at the University of Washington as head of the Department of Pedodontics and Director of Postgraduate Educa tion where he organized and started a new school in post graduate work in dental cduca tion. From the University of Wash ington he went to Southern Cal ifornia as Dean of the Dental School "where he has made an outstanding record of organiza tion and administration and en deared himself to the practicing dentists of that State through the broad postgraduate program Is Former Dean Of Dentistry School At University Of Southern California of that institution. ..;' Brauer has held many import ant positions in national profes sional organizations and has been honored and exerted his leader ship as president of the Ameri can Society of Dentistry for Children, Chairman and Secre tary of the Section on Dentistry for Children of the American Dental Association, Chairman of the American Board of Pedodon tics, President' of the Advisory (See DR. BRAUER, page 4) if A 3- f 5 31 ix Li. T 1lW1l-ll t Dixie Leaders Gather Sat. For Meeting Three Governors, 2 Cabinet Members To Attend Parleys C O. PEARSON, Durham Negro attorney, will speak here tonight at 7 o'clock in the base ment of the Presbyterian Church. Pearson is the lawyer handling the Harold Epps Robert Glass suit demanding that Negroes be admitted lo the University Law School. Pearson will speak on the facts in the controversial case. College Man Given Medal For Heroism PITTSBURGH, Jan 26 (P) A Gambier College student who saved two lives in an Ohio dor mitory fire today was one of 15 heroes given awards by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commis sion. - Bronze medals were distribut ed among men,; women and child ren in nine states. Five heroes lost their lives in the acts which won fund recog nition. Pensions of $2,400 a year were granted in three cases. Death benefits of - ,$500 were 1 awarded in another. RALEIGH, Jan. 26 (P) Three Southern Governors, and possibly five, are expected to at tend a Southern Regional Con-1 Body President Bill Mackie Bill Becomes Law March 21 Of This Year Sieber Approved As NSA Chairman, Daye to SAB Job By Roy Parker, Jr. A scholastic requirements bill, setting up minimum grade requirements for stu dent office-seekers, passed th Student Legislature last night the third try at such k;is lation. The biH, a combination of two bills introduced last quarter, will go into effect on March 21, and apply to nominees in the spring general election, schedul ed for April 4. The solons also approved unanimously a bill "respectfully requesting" the University lib rary to keep Sunday night hours, rather than Saturday night, heard a report from , Faculty Evaluation Committee head Bill Prince, and approved several appointments made by student Playwright Paul Green Glad To See 'Tread The Green Grass' Presented ference here Saturday. Party officials said today gov ernors definitely expected to at tend are: James E. Folsom of Alabama, Sid McMath of Arkan sas, and Kerr ;,Scott, of. North Carolina. They said that gover nors Gordon Browning of Ten nessee and Roy Turner of Okla homa may attend. Governor Her man Talmadge of Georgia an nounced yesterday he would be unable to attend. The conference, which will in clude morning and afternoon sessions at which two cabinet members and four other high government officials will speak, will precede the annual Jefferson-Jackson day fund-raising campaigh of North Carolina Carolina Democrats. , Vice President Alben Barkley will speak at the dinner Satur day night. He will be introduced by Governor Scott. Cabinet members on the con ference program will be John W. Snyder, Secretary of the Treas ury, and Charles F. Brannan, Secretary of Agriculture. Other speakers will include: Leon Keyserling, acting Chair man of the President's Council of Economic Advisers; Budget Director Frank Page, Jr., Army Secretary Gordon Gray and Un dersecretary of State James E. Webb. , Oklahoma U. Student Bld'g Is'ShowpIace RALEIGH. Jan. 26 (P) U. S ' i i Senator Frank P. Graham de- woria. clared today that the future of Charlie Sellers; chairman of Amprica deDends uoon her youth. ine present student group, Drougni me representatives up- Qnnatnr r.raham mnnp thp mm- I . , . . . . .. . . . . j vv...w. io-aaip nr wnat tma etnripnt 1M jpeciai memDenmp am r . Ktatement released , . j w ,l, Caro- . , , , commuiee nas aone. students contest sponsored by the uaro- Pndnrsine National Youth L tt: c, :J lina Young Democratic Club for V"" " . t "T fcaiu; the past 10 days ends at 9 o'clock Week- are beginning a questioning' of YOUtn WECK Will ue uuseivcu mk cuutauuu, a qutsiiuiiing all over the United States and which has been prevalent in ali Canada beginning this Sunday educational institutions land continuing through next Students are concerned," he week. It is sponsored by the went on, "and out of this con tonight. Acting President Gra ham 'Jones announced yesterday. Jones said early returns in dicated "a highly successful " u. all eoliri results lo lunitea vnrisnan iuum muvc- v- Ht tors lo report lheir 313 Grimes or lo at the Sigma Nu House. Winner of h contest will receive a ticket lo the $50-a-plale Jeffer ton-Jackton Dav Dinner in i Raleigh. .j j mpnt and the International Pointed by Bill Mackie last jess uruiiiunu i i ,, Council ot rieligious iaucaiion. ""s- Senator Graham said that Representing the administra "Upon America largely depends tion and faculty at the dinner the course of history in our were Chancellor R. B. House, time." J Dean of Students William C. Fri- By Mark Sumner 1 North Carolina's Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, Paul Green, whose symphonic drama, "Tread the Green Grass," is to-be staged by the Carolina Playmakers here tomorrow and Sunday, expressed pleasure yesterday that the1 Play makers were staging the elabor ate play. "I am very happy to see the play presented," Green said, "and I agree Avith the basis on which director Foster Fitz-Simons is staging it." , ' Fitz-Simons, ! former profes sional dancer and author of the novel, "Bright Leaf," recently said. that he was directing the play on the basis of its show ing the effect of the forces of good, evil, and practically .upon innocence. Green, who has just completed . MMMjjjiujiiijijiisiiiiwn'-Mfm r .v w - PAUL GREEN a modern adaptation of ' Peer Gynt" for New York production and is now hard at work on new outdoor production to be staged at Washington, D. C, this summer, took time off to talk about "Tread the Green Grass." Although a man of international literary reputation busily at work on two projects, the play wright is an extremely sincere and friendly person to talk to about his work. . . . . He gave a tip to beginning writers by explaining how he al ways managed to find time to write, although he is engaged in managing his farm, Greenwood. "I commit myself for a writing project," he smiled, "and then I have to finish it." . "I visited Thomas Hardy's home in England just after he (See PLAYWRIGHT, page 4) Special to The Daily Tar Heel NORMAN, Okla., Jan. 26 The University of Oklahoma's new student union building will be the "showplace of the south west," according to the opera tional director of the $2,000,000 project. W. H. Freeland, who heads the work on the building, says that it will be 'unequaled by any other present-day college union." The union will be an enlarged, improved edition of the present Oklahoma union building. In a north wing it will include a 175 person dining room, with a ter race adjoining; a ballroom cap able of being divided into three The scholastic requirements bill came out of committee .with the operative date changed from Sept. 1 of this year to-the March 21 date, and an amendment by John Sanders (SP) that would have"put' the date' back" at Sept. 1 was defeated, 28-8. Prince, in his Faculty Evalua tion report, said the group would probably have all its plans com pleted by the first of the spring quarter, and explained some of the methods that will be em ployed when the student body grades the faculty. Herman Sieber, junior from Hendersonvilie, was unanimous ly approved as chairman of the campus National Students As sociation Committee. Also ap proved were Anies Daye as chairman of the Student Audit Board, Ross Lane as member of the SAB, and Daye as a member of the Budget Committee. Speaker Ted Leonard an nounced that the Legislature would meet two weeks from last night, rather than three, so that work on budget and finance leg islation could be expedited. The solons are supposed to lay off for two weeks before convening again under the by-laws, but OK'd the Speaker's request be cause of the situation. Bills introduced included one setting up a "New Student Un- . ion Building Planning Commit tee," and one appointing a three man committee to work with ad ministration officials to "make dormitory janitors make up beds." A resolution respectfully requesting" the Graham Memori al Board of Directos to spend up to $300 on a television set was also introduced. All were re ferred to committee. Thirty-nine legislators were on hand for the session. A full list of committee meetings were called by chairman for next week. Magazincd sound-proof rooms by modern folding doors, and a cafeteria seating 375 persons. In a south wing will be the auditorium with a seating capa city of 575, 10 100-person meet ing rooms, and a ro6m with 200 seats for film-showing. Mrs. Gordon Gray, who will become the first lady of the Greater University of North Carolina, is featured in Ike fashion section of the February Ladies' Home Journal on sale today in an article entitled "There's Something About Her." The two-page spread in color shows Mrs. Gray in eight dif ferent outfits ranging from a Iweed skirt and cashmere sweater to a formal evening dress. "She likes- her clothes best when they are old." the article says, "And she doesn't have too many because 'it's hard lo keep up with them.' "
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 27, 1950, edition 1
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