Serials Dept.
Chapel Hill, "if. c.
8-3X-49
EDITORIALS
The Last Picture
Atomic Power v
. Old Well "
WEATHER
Fair, warmer in afternoon.
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-r."Ct-.
OLUMfc, LVUI
CHAPEL riliU s. C SUNDAY, APRIL 16, 1950
PHONE F-3361, K-3-m
NUMBER 144
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IT WASNT A DREAMfwhen Min Jean Anne Lambeth (top left) was pinned by the entire Pi
Kappa Alpha chapter and given a bouquet of ore lids as her badge of office, the "Dream Girl of
PiKA." Chosen by secret ballot. Miss Lambeth received the honor at the fraternity's ball held in
the Carolina Inn ballroom. Mtmbers of her court are (top. m'ddle) Helen Humphrey, (top, right)
Fanchon Hinrichs. (bottom, 1-r) Peggy Russell, Marion Turner, Winifred Harriss and Joanne
Turnbull (see story, page 4).
Inauguration
To Hear Talk
By Graham
WINSTON-SALEM, April 15
!') Dr. Dale H. Gramley,
Pennsylvania native, former ed
itor and educator, will be in
stalled as the 13th president of
Salem College and Academy in
special exercises here next Sat
urday.
The day's activities will include
tho installation proper, a lunch
eon and the laying of the cor
nerstone of the new college
science building, in addition to
other activities in honor of the
new prcbident and special guests
and dignitaries who will be
present for the occasion.
Senator Frank Graham will
b? principal speaker at a lunch
cm following the inauguration
ceremonies. Collets from
throughout the south and from
many parts of the nation will
be represented by faculty mem
bers and alumnae in the inaug
uration ceremonies, the first for
mal installation of a Salem presi
dent in the history of the 178-
y-rar-old institution.
i The installation ceremonies
iill take dace at 11 o'clock
,'laturday at Home Moravian
Cliurch, preceded by an acad
vn' lie procession of the college
m. fl ac-adenn' faculties and the
representatives of other institu
!. ps.
-h-'rank F. Willincham. Jr., of
V jinston-Salcm, chairman of the
l-.ecutivc committee of the
lJUiid "f trustees of the college
Mid academy, will preside. Dis-
Mn J. Kenneth I'fohl. also of
Uiis city, will formally install
Dr. Gramley, and the new presi
dent will make his inaugural
address.
WO Are Due This Week
For Photography Course
Plans are being completed for the first Southern Short
Course in Photography which will bring some of the nation's
topnotch photographers and 'photography executives here
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
. t Upwards to 100 photographers
Grail Initiates
Perform Antics
in Y Tomorrow
Thirteen To Give
. Zany Talks, Dress ,
In Foolish Outfits
A half-dressed sailor, the frock
coaw.a liiiav: oi jjuj. ounaay
an bveiauea mountaineer lead
ing seven ciogs, anu ten otner
iiiiprotau.ie chaiactcrs will ap
pear in tne Y court tomorrow
at one o'clock to give the annual
initiation speeches ior new Grail
members. .
Sample topics for the speeches
are "It's a Dog's World and
Look at All the Trees Being
Planted;" "The Evils of Drink;''
and "Why the Navy Did Away
with the Thirteen Buttons."
Campus bigshbts, littleshots,
and also-rans will be among those
present in the attire of sun
bathers, babes in arms, toga
covered orators, men on horse
back, thugs, football heroes, and
one man dressed in an Arab
thingamajig.
I Dr. Clyde A. Erwin, of Ral
lHh, stiite superintendent of pub
itc in..truction. will make one
,of the addresses of greeting.
At o clock the cornerstone
! for the new science building
will be laid in ceremonies on
Jhc upper campus. Bishop Pfohl
will preside.
Job Talk
Discussion of qualifications
employers look for will be Ihe
subject at 7 o'clock tomorrow
night in Bingham Hall of Carl
Buffington of the Personnel
Department of the Vick Chemi
cal Co.
Buffington will be introduced
by Professor Richard Calhoun of
lhe School of Commerce. Rep
resentatives of several depart
ments of lhe chemical company
will participate in the informal
discusiion following the main
talk.
Graham Club
Set To Meet
Monday At 7
The UNC for FPG Club will
meet in Roland Parker Lounge
1 in Graham Memorial tomorrow
night at 7 o'clock, Jack Potts,
chairman of the membership
committee, yesterday said.
The Club is an organization
of Senator Frank Porter Gra
ham's followers.
Graham is seeking the Demo
cratic nomination for North Car
olina's Junior Senator seat in the
May 27 primary.
Potts said the meeting is to
familiarize student workers with
the procedure followed in prc-
voting drives. He said he planned
to distribute campaign literature
at the meeting.
All students joining the . club
now will be considered as char
tcr members, Potts added.
The former University prcsi
dent was last spring appointed
bv Governor Scott to fill the
imovnirfH term of the late J.
Wti-'f-'
Melville Broughton.
Fire Near Golf Links
Brings Little Notice
l Blaze Near Pines Restaurant Is Second
In 4 Hours; Negligible Damage Is Done
By Don Maynard and Wuff Newell
As Saturday aiternoon golfers unconcernedly putted on
the university goii course, a woods fire blazed no more than
iUd yards westward, sending acrid smoke rolling across tne
nnKo out tney piayed tne game through.
- 1 'lne nic ran through the grass
- I behind the Pines, restaur ant
Orientation
Hears O Neil
Tomorrow
about one-mile out on the Ka
ieigh highway, but was limited
to damage of approximately fivt
acres, according to Orange Coun-
from most of the -.southeastern
states have already indicated they
will attend the course which is
being sponsored by the Carolina
Press Photographers Association
with the cooperation of the Uni
versity Extension Division, the)
National Press Photographers
Association and the North Caro
lina Press Association. ,
Among the leading photog
raphers who will conduct the
courses in various phases of the
field will be Harold Blumenfeld,
New York, editor of Acme News-
pictures; Lawrence Laybourne,
chief Washington correspondent
for Life Magazine; Joe Costa,
chef photographer for the New
York Sunday Mirror Magazine;
Alfred- DeLardi, Holiday Maga
zine photographer, and Robin
Garland, former photo editor of
the Saturday Evening Post, now
manager of Garflex' photo journ
alism department.
Five "faculty" members will be
featured each day, and on Satur
day night the course will be con
cluded with a banquet. The pre
sentation of certificates will be
held Saturday afternoon in Me
morial Hall. Friday night the
group will attend a special show
in the Morchcad Planetarium.
A photo contest will be open to
all those ,registererd for the
(See COURSE, page 4)
Each year the Order of the
Grail selects thirteen' rising jun
iors and seniors to become
Knights. . : . ., . '
Donald Peery
Piano Recital
To Be Tonight
Donald Pccry, piano instructor
at, Saint Mary's School and Jun
ior College in Raleigh, will pre
sent a concert here , tonight at
8:30 in Hill Hall. It will be spon
sored by Graham Memorial,
v -Peery received both bachelor
and masters degrees in music
from Columbia University and
Oberlin College. Later he studied
under Rosalyn Tureck and Frank
Sheridan in New ' York.
With the exception of a year
when he was absent on leave of
absence, Peery has been on the
music faculty at Saint Mary's for
a number of years.
His program tonight will in
clude number by Bach, Haydn,
Brahms, Chopin, and Debussy.
For several years he has play
ed with the Raeligh Chamber
Music Guild which is composed
of outstanding musicians in the
! Raleigh-Durham area.
J. T. O'Neil of the Commerce
School will be the chief speaker
at the second "orientation train
ing lecture tomorrow night at
7:30 in Gerrard Hall.
O'Neil 'will speak on "Why's
of Student Orientation."
Dr. Joseph G. Dawson of the
psychology department will also
speak at the meeting which is
for students who . are interested
in being councelors or advisers
to incoming students next fall
"All men who ar interested in
being orientation councellors
should attend the meeting,"; Ori
entation Chairman Harry Sher-
rill said. Attendance will be
taken. .
The purpose of the lectures is
to train councelors and advisers
not only in what to say but in
how to say it to the new students
They will learn what to do to
make next fall's orientation pro
gram a success.
The idea for the program
which is consisting" of three
meetings was conceived by
(See ORIENT, page 4)
'SUV '
RALEIGH, April 15 (P)'
The state ioresier has issued
orders that no more brush
burning permits are to be is- ,
sued "until the present situa
tion is relieved by a good
rain'
W. K. Biechler, state forester,
sent ihe order out yesterday to
the service's 10 district of
fices. County forest wardens
come under the stale forest
er's supervision.
In Wake County, Forest
Warden H. E. Shaw announced
today all brush fires are being
prohibited immediately, re
gardless of whether permits
have been issued.
With University Bond
Pair Of Musicians Have Own Work
' .
Being Premiered This Afternoon
By Wink Locklair
When Harold Andrews and
Robert MacDonald walk out on
the stage in Hill Hall this af
ternoon to appear with the Uni
versity Band in its first concert
of the spring season, they will
be ready to give the premiere
performance of a new symphonic
band transcription of the open
ing movement of Schuman's Pi
ano Concerto.
Andrews, who - made the
transcription, will conduct the
70-piecc organization, and Mac
Donald, who, has been heard
here numerous times, is to play
the piano part.
Unlike.' the usual situation
when the guest artist arrives
several days-before concert time
to coordinate his part with the
already rehearsed orchestra,
MacDonald and Andrews, as so
loist and conductor,- have worked
together on the Schuman con
certo from the beginning.
Since the . two. boys are room-
mates, MacUonaia was aDie 10
follow the development of the
arrangement step by step and
had a chance to learn the score
the hard way by helping copy
parts. . -
Andrews, a piano major him
self, was able to understand the
problems of the piano interpre
tation and MacDonald, a bas
soonist in the band, was at all
rehearsals since the first sight
reading of the manuscript.
The ensemble of piano and
band is one that has been com-
Worship Set
To Be Held
Here In Aug.
One of the 10 national work
shops on the improvement of
professional laboratory exper
iences in the education of teach
ers to be sponsored by the Amer
ican Association of Colleges of
Teacher Education will be held
here August 13-19, it was an
nounced yesterday by Dean Guy
B. Phillips of the' School of
Education, Director of the Sum
mer Session.
These workshops are to be
held at widely, scattered points
throughout the country, and it
is estimated that some 40,000
persons are expected to partici
pate. Leaders at the various
points will be 30 outstanding
educators engaged in teacher
education.
The three leaders at Chapel
Hill will be Witt Blair, director
of the School of Education, North
Texas State College, Denton,
Texas; Dwight K. Curtis, head,
Department of Teaching, Iowa
State Teachers College, Cedar
Falls, Iowa, and Allen D. Patter
son, director of student teaching,
State Teachers College, Lock
Haven, Pa.
Dr. Samuel -M. Holton of the
University School of Education
will be in charge of local ar
rangements, and other members
of the staff will assist.
ty Forest .Warden W. R. Fitz
gerald. The blaze which started
about 3 o'clock and lasted nearly
three hours, was the second in
24 hours in the area, owned by
the University and Dr. I. R
Coker.
The Mason Farm Road on one
side, the Raleigh highway and the
new University links now under
construction on the other three
sides kept the fire from moving
any further. No property damage,
other than that done to the tim
ber, was apparent.
The warden stated that the
fire was apparently started by
sparks from a-small fire burning
in a makeshift incinerator set on
the fringe of the woods. Thq fire
began behind a group of trailers
(See FIRE, page 4)
HUGH R. POMEROY
Dinner Opens
Workshop
Here Tonight
More than a dozen states will
be represented at the Institute
and Workshop on Public Health
Agencies and the Community
Housing Program which opens
here tonight "'with a dinner ses
sion at the Carolina Inn at 6:30.
Dr. W. P. Dealing; Deputy
Surgeon General of the U. S.
Public Health Service, and R. U.
Ratcliff, Director, Division of Re
search, Housing and Home Fi
nance Agency, . will address the
opening session. .Dr. E." G. Mc
Gavran, Dean of the University
of North Carolina School of
Public Health, will preside, and
Chancellor R. B. House will give
a welcoming address.
Sponsored by the School of
Public Health with the coopera
tion of the State Board of Health
and Public Health Service of
the Federal Security Agency, the
Institute will continue through
Tuesday afternoon.
The principal speaker tomor
row will be M. A. Pond, Chief,
Division, of Engineering Resour
ces, Public Health Service, who
will give an address in the morn
ing, and . Hugh R. Pomeroy, Di
rector, Department of Planning
of Westchester County, N. Y.
Symphony To Continue
Extensive Tour Of State
paratively- neglected. Andrews,
a senior music major, was con
sidering projects for work txK
wards an honors program in
music,- - when, at Transylvania
Music Camp last summer, he
heard Eugene List perform the
Grieg Piano Concerto, with the
Transylvania Concert Band
When Harod Returned to Chapel
Hill and learned that his room
mate was working on the Schu
mann A-Minor Concerto, it was
decided to make an arrangement
for band and piano.
Another soloist is scheduled
for this afternoon's program, ! One member of the University
also. He is Carl Baxter who will education
play the adagio movement from
Haydn's Cello Concerto as
transcribed for trombone and
band by Harold Byrns.
faculty, Dr. C. M.
Clark, has been assigned to
teach in the workshop to be
held at the Teachers College
i in Lock Haven, Pa.
The North Carolina Symphony
Orchestra under the , baton ' of
Benjamin Swalin is continuing
its tour of eastern Carolina as
nine concerts are scheduled for
the coming week.
The Orchestra, which spent the
weekend at Wrightsville Beach,
after playing concerts at Camp
Lejune on Friday, will open the
week with two concerts in
Wilmington tomorrow. A child
ren's matinee will be played in
the afternoon and at the even
ing concert Miss Josephine Cun
ningham, young soprano of
Asheville, will be featured solo
ist. The Wilmington ,drive for
Symphony members,' headed by
Mrs. Eric Norden, was held in
March.
From Wilmington the group
will - move upstate to Washing
ton for two concerts on Tuesday.
Miss Jayne Winfield, young
pianist of that city will be solo
ist at the concerts there. T. H.
Patterson is chairman of the
Washington Symphony com
mittee.
Wednesday, the North Carolina
Symphony will play its annual
concerts in Goldsboro. Neil Jos
eph is chairman of the Symphony
Society chapter there which
raised the funds to make these
concerts possible. Miss Gertrude
Weil was chairman for the
membership drive last Novem
ber. ,
The Music Club of Roanoke
Rapids and Weldon will sponsor
a special children's . concert in
Roanoke Rapids on Tuesday. An
evening concert will not be pre
sented there this season. Mrs.
C. J. Sawyer is club chairman
(See SYMPHONY, page 4)
Chem Frat
Playing Host
To Conclave
Delegates from Clemson Col
lege, Georgia Tech, and the Uni
versity of Tennessee are in
Chapel Hill this weekend as
guests of the Rho Chapter of
Alpha Chi Sigma, professional
chemical fraternity.
Budget Group
Presents Bill
To Committee
i
Debate Council
Requested To Use
Huge Surplus
Hie Debate Council yester
day was asked .to operate on
surplus for the next fiscal year
as the Budget Committee
president proposed 1950-51
student government budget
totaling $97,227,45 to the
Student Legislature's Finance
Committee.
The proposed budget, which
represents a $5,915 decrease in
appropriations over the 1949-50
budget, is expected to go to the
floor of the Student Legislature
Tuesday night.
The Debate Council cut was the
striking change in the proposed
budget. The Council, which was
appropriated $3,750 last year, had
asked for $3,730.10. 1
The Budget Committee cited a
I $4,679.44 surplus on hand in the
Council's name at the end of the
1948-49 fiscal year, and turned
down . the Council request. "
"The.CommiUee feels that, al
though it does not have the power
to liquidate the holdings of the
Debate Council, it is not fair or
proper that we should appropri
ate nearly $4,000 to an' organiza
tion which has nearly $5,000 in
the bank, when the money is
needed badly for organizations
that are not alloNved to have a
general surplus," the budget body
declared in its report.
The budget Committee headed
by Acting Treasurer Dick Gor
don, has been hearing requests
and preparing the budget for
about three months.
The Student Legislature Fi
nance Committee has been work
ing since last night on the Budget
Committee's proposals, will an
nounce the official budget meas
ure that will go before the Le
gislature sometime tomorrow,
committee chairman Ben James
said last night.
The Student Entertainment
Committee fared the best of any
organization in the proposed bud
get, with a proposed appropria
tion of $8,635, up $1,385 from the
1950-51 appropriation, but $1,315
under its $10,000 request.
Several re-arrangements of
budgeted items were incorporat
ed in Jhe proposed money bill,
most of them in publications.
The Publications Board was giv
en a $2,523 appropriation, includ
ing repair items and depreciation
costs, which were in the past di
vided among the three publica
tions. Major student fee appropria
tion items in the proposed budget
included:
(1) Executive branch of stu
dent government $1,120.
(2) Legislative branch of stu
dent government $1,195.
(3) Judicial branch of student
government $300.
(4) Carolina Forum $510.
(5) Graham MemoriaU-$2 1,000.
(6) Men's Interdormitory
Council $164.
(7) University Club $105.
(8) Yackety-Yack picture and
class organization fund $7,725.
(9) Yackety Yack $25,925.
(See DEBATE, page 4)
The chapter here is playing
host to the southern district reg
ional conclave.
Also present is Clyde A. Hut
chinson of Sandersville Ga.,
national president of the frater
nity. The list of activities for the
delegates includes a special dem
onstration in the Morehead
Planetarium, business sessions in
the university chemistry build
ing, and a banquet in Durham
! tomorqw night. ,
Visitors Today
Two bus loads of government
officials from Washington will
visit lhe campus this afternoon.
Th7 are scheduled to arrive
here at 3:30 from Raleigh and
stay for an hour. Student body
president-elect ..John ..Sanders
and Daily Tar Heel editor-elect
Graham Jones will conduct the
lour around campus.
The visitors have been par
ticipating in an annual bowling
tournament in Raleigh.