. ct-?u cm, xu a. . a . TODAY'S NEWS 1340-51DTH Policy, Page 2 Duke Crowns UMC. Page 3 , Monroe's Moormen. Page 4 WEATHER Cloudy with possible thwer. VOLUME LVIII Associated Press Chapel Hill, N, C. SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1950 Phone. F3361 F3371 NUMBER 151 ' ' ' , ' ' , , ' ' , " : t -.: 7 4 -: .Wilt - . V J. , ? , 1 " ' 't : I." '''' '; . J ' I - I ' ',".'";!: - I 'I Jj ' ' '-1 , i i ! s : : k I i . " . : - .! f " i : 1 ' ' ,, , ...vvr. w$ - , ; -1 THE SMILIIIG YOUNG FELLOW WITH THE GRIN is missing a great chance at the moment this picture was iakon. He is Laddie Terrell, president of Sigma Chi fraternity. Now. ihe younf thing with ihe legs ard smile i .Vce Richert. a Pi Beta Phi frrm Raleigh, who is receiving from Laddie ihe award as "Miss Modern Venus." Why is Laddie missing a great opportunity? Because, he. unlike you, is not looking at Joyce. All of this was part of ihe annual Sigma Chi derby held in Kenan Stadium. ' Ever Get Lost Around Campus? You Need NewServicesOf APO By Art Milton J H to(hiy yon hear sonic guy .Mpoutinn; "IIyy;i, hyya. step this way and srr t!i' hundred and one MUhts around the University," us you wander past the Y court, don't drop your fahe teeth. He won't he offering to show you a hundred and one coeds, he will be offering to take you on a trip about the campus as a part of the newly or.inicd Alpha Phi Omca ;;uide : ervke. "For the fu- t time in the his tory r the rnicr;ity," said Ch-irlie Cailictt, fraternity presi dent, "former stud-nt ;,' visitors, and students will he able to tour the campus wilh guides who will know and he able to point out the many interesting places and tilings on the campus." By how- you're probably won-, derin- how thi . whole thing got started. Well, a little brain wave hit Dean Willi ni Friday some weeks uko and hv passed it on to A. P.O. who in turn, with the neip of Acting President William Car michael, did the spado work to put the service in operation. Now if you luppen to want to so lomcthing other than a snazry Loyalty Oath DAVIS. Calif.. April 22 (A) The long controversy over a special non-Communist oath for employes of tha University of California was settled by the University Board of Regents to day: No oath. but. instead contract letters disavowing Communism. Faculty leaders expressed gen eral satisfaction with the re gents decision. looking toed, you can drop by tlie Y court on Sunday afternoon between the hours of one and six c ither in groups or singly and an A. P.O. guide will do his darn dest to show it to you. Of course you may not be in terested in art, but if you are, Groves Marriage Meet Begins Here Tomorrow The 13th annual Groves Con ference on Conservation of Mar riage and the Family will be held in the University tomorrow , , Wednesday with a com- pu.hcrLsive schedule of . general sessions and special events. I Mrs. Gladys H. Groves of the c,MpsK UiU is director of Conference-, which was inaugu rated by her late husband Dr. Ernest R. Groves. Chancellor Robert' B. House will welcome the visitors Mon day morning and general ses sions on personality and marri age are scheduled for the re mainder of the morning. Leaders for the general sessions include Dr. Weiton LeBarre of Duke University; Dr. William L. Kolb, of Newcomb College, " Tulane University; and Dr. David Mac'e.jWHey and Sons, Publishers, said of Duke University. Tuesday night at 8:30 Jacob T. Zuckerman, Executive Direc tor of the National Desertion Bu reau, New York, will address the 1 .tT. 11 1 L i group in uerrara nan on ine UNC Photo by James Mills the $30,000 art collection of one the literary societies may be just your meat. A number of places, including the Dialectic and Phil anthropic Literary Society halls and Graham Memorial, will hold open house during the toiu; hours. topic "Contrasts Between Lower- Class and Middle-Class Family Patterns in Meeting Life's Ciiees." Gertrude Cox Authors Book . Special To The Daily Tar Heel j NEW YORK, April 22 Profes sor Gertrude M. Cox, director of the Institute of Statistics at the University of North Carolina, is co-author with Dr. William G. Cochran, former associate direc tor of the Institute, of a new book "Experimental Designs," yesterday. The new book is a comprehen sive account of ' a, new field in which statistical methods are employed in the. design of com parative experiment. Y Officers Installation Is Today Ceremony Includes 80 New Officials 1 Of Cabinet, Council The annual candlelisrht instal lation service of the YWCA will be held this afternoon at 5:15 in Genard Hall, Jean Scrpell, eut-i going secretary ot tne i ona chairman of the-committee which arranged the program, said yes terday. 1 , All students, faculty, and "interested- persons are invited to attend the program, which will include the installation of some 80 newly-elected officers, and members of the Executive Coun cil, Cabinet, anrl Membership Council of the YWCA. Dr. Syd Alexander, former president of the YWCA and now on the staff of the University In firmary, will deliver an address to the group.- Also on the pro gram will be a solo by Barbara Young, accompained by pianist Janet Lewis. After an invocation given by Ruth Whalen, outgoing treasurer of the YW, Anne Chandler, out going president, will proceed with the installation. The newly-elected officers are: Frances Drane, president; Jean Bloom, vice-president; Sally Cox, secretary; Grenelda Snyder, trea surer; Ann Birmingham, member ship chairman; and, Winifred Harris, program chairman. Newly elected Cabinet . mem bers are Arden Boisseau, Helen Bomar, Dodie Boyer, Ann Burnett, Evalyn Harrison, Nancy Her, Margo Kuhn, Alice Laughlin, Jane Lindsey, Nancy McNab, Pam Miller, Tiny Morrow, Jane Neigh bors, Nanc,' Norwood, Lu Over ton, Lila Ponder, Betty Prior, J. K. Rishardson, Lila Robinson, Judy Sanford, Jean Schaefer, Rusty Simpkin, Winston Smith, Joyce Spear, Carolyn Stallings, Ruth Saunders, Boots Taylor, Bobbe Whipple, Cathey Wilwy, Mary Wood and Rosalie Varn. Newly , elected membership Council includes Pat Ambrose, Mary Barden, Pat Bowie, Ann Brewer, Kitty Bruce, Nancy Bur gess, Ann Campbell, Tish Coley, Phyliss Costner, Margorie Crutch field, Jackie Curry Madge Craw ford, Kash Davis, Jo Culler, Beth' Ellen Edwards, Betty Dudley, Jean DeWitt. Jano Faisnn. Pat George, Virginia Glasser, Mar garet Gwaltncy, Jean Hoffner, Helen Hamilton, Pat Jewell, Sue! Joyner, Miriam Jones, Ann Lide, Dot Manss, Faye Massengill, Karyn Mereness, Frances Minter, Ellyn Pell, Ellen rRixey,' Cathe rine Shaw, Princess Stellings, Mary Suratt, Frances Sweat, Ann Townsend, Jose Theisen, Louise Walker, Marie Withers and Betty Ann Yowell. Region Plan For Education Ruined Ivey ATLANTA, April ' 22 (fl-r-A spokesman for the Southern Re gional education program said to day a Maryland Court of Appeals decision has blocked f an attempt to extend segregtion through "mis-use" of the regional plan. DrJobn E. Ivey, Jr., Director of the Board of Control, referred to the court's reverse Friday of a'Balitmore City court decision. The Appellate Court ruled in favor of Esther McCready, a ne gro student seeking admission to the. University of Maryland School of Nursing. "This test case rips off the 'segregation' label given by some critics implying that the primary purpose of the program was to Extend segregation," Ivey de clared in a statement. Training In Leadership Is Tomorrow 1 Planning Is Subject Of Miss McCuskey; Program Starts At 7 Miss Dorothy McCuskey, member'of the University faculty, will be the principal speaker at the first session 'of the Coed Leadership Training Program which begins at 7 o'clock tomor row night in Graham Memorial. . Miss McCuskey, who will speak in Roland . Parker Lounge, will speak on , "Planner or Plodder. At 7:30 the commissions for organization officers will meet, Armecia Eure will conduct one in Roland Parker Lounge 1 for presidents an$ vice presidents. Advisers will be Fran Golden and Betsy Ann Barbee. Jean Serpell, leader, and Twig Branch, adviser, will instruct the secretaries of the participating organizations. .This commission will meet in the Grail Room. Treasurers will meet in Roland Parker. 2. They will hear a dis cussion bv Emily Sewell and Betty Denny. Gloria Jackson and adviser Ann Trimble Dozier will discuss the duties of social chairman. Their commission will meet in the Wo- j men's Council Room. Publicity Chairmen will meet in Roland Parker 3 for a discus sion led by June Crockett and Sue Stokes. Mina Lamar is chairman of the program. Local Profs Are Experts At Chi Meet The ' American Council of Learned Societies has asked two professors from the University to be among 12 experts on Ameri can civilization to take part in a special conference in Chicago starting today through Tuesday. They are Dr. Rupert Vance, Kenan professor of sociology , and Dr. John Gillin, professor ofl anthropology and research pro fessor in the Institute for Re search in Social Science. They wiU Present papers on "Religion m American Culture, Irom the sociological and anthropological points of view, respectively. Together with 10 other papers prepared by experts in other disciplines, these will form parts of a published volume on re ligion in American life. The last invitational conference on American civilization put on by the Council was held at Princeton University in 1948. Those Cracker State Coed Georgia 'Secedes' From Union, Jells Truman By Pigeon; 'Dixie' Is Played ATLANTA, April 22 P) Georgia seceded from the federal union again today all in fun and dispatched the news to Pres ident Truman by carrier pigeon. . Boys in gray and sideburns and bustles paraded proudly down famed Peachtree Street. Rebel yells rent the air. The Stars and Bars of the Confederacy replaced the Stars and Stripes of the union in the chilling breeze. 'Bands played "Dixie" again and again. Cannon boomed and planes flashed overhead. The-hi-jinks were all part of Old South weekend being cele brated by Kappa Alpha members at Emory University, Georgia Tech and the University of Geor ce 99 Valkyrie Cup To Be Given To One Coed Recipient Of Cup Will Be Member Of Senior Class An outstanding woman in the senior class will be honored at the Valkyrie Sing tomororw night when the annual Valkyrie Cup is presented. ' Although the cup is given each year, this will be the first time Late permission for ihe Val kyries' Sing tomorrow nighi has been granted coeds by action of the Inierdormiiory Council and approved by ihe Dean of Women. All girls attending must sign out. returning immediately af ter ihe close of ihe program, ihe Dean of Women's office yesterday said. it has been awarded at the Sing. Last year it was presented to Helen Boulding during Awards Wight. The Sing, with 13 groups com peting, will follow the tapping by s . the . Order of the Golden Fleece. Doors of Memorial Hall will close at 7:35, and the tapping will begin immediately. The Sing, according to co chairmen Sally Osborne and Helen Eppes, is expected to be bigger and better than it has been in the last two years. Last year's winners Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Chi frater nity will again compete in the Sing. Other groups who will par ticipate in it are Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, Delta Delta Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Alder man Dormitory, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Pi Kap pa Alpha, Pi Kappa Phi. Old East and Mangum Dormitories Most of the singing, according to the chairman, will be along the lines of the famed barber shop quartet numbers. The groups arc allowed to wear cos tumes and use any kind of stage lighting they wish. Groups have been having dress rehearsals in Memorial Hall all week, and most of them have been rehearsing for several weeks for the Sing. At the close of the program the Valkyries will present a loving cup to the winner in the women's division and the men's division. KA's gia. Occupying a place of honor in the parade was 104-year-old "General' William J. Bush of Fitzgerald, Georgia's sole living veteran of the South's "lost cause." With him. were his wife, his step-daughter, Mrs. Charles Law, and his bewildered, bright eyed granddaughter, -Sharon Sharp, four. . The secession-proclaiming cli max came on the lawn at the state capitol. Mention of Gen. j William T. Sherman, who put Atlanta to the torch, brought hisses and boos. Ear-splitting cheers were sent up for Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jack- - ' son and Confederate President "5HOI n 2S8 M Scheduled Tomorrow ESTTS3 l ap Debaters Set Meet Here During Week High school debating teams which were success! ul both in the State-wide triangular com petition of March 31 and in the district contests held at six host colleges recently will en ter the 38th annual final con test of the North Carolina High School Debating Union for the Aycock Memorial Cup in Chapel Thursday and Friday, Secretary ( E. R. Rankin, said yesterday. The list of high schools whose teams will enter the final contest includes: Wadesboro, affirmative, and Rocky Mount, negative; Ap palachian of Boone, affirma tive, and Brevard, negative; Richard J. Reynolds of Winston-Salem, affirmative, and James A. Gray of Winston Salem, negative; Oxford, af firmative, and Perquimans of Hertford, negative; and John W. Hanes of Winston-Salem, affirmative, and Mount Holly, negative. A general meeting of all the debaters and coaches will be held at 2: 30 Thursday in Ger rard Hall. Welcome will be extended by Dean E. L. Mackie and py representatives of the Dialectic Senate and the Phil anthropic Assembly. A draw ing will be conducted for sec tions and pairings in the pre liminary debates. The visitors will take a tour of the campus after the meet ing and will then attend an open house given by the Di alectic Senate and the Philan thropic Assembly. The final debate for the Ay cock Memorial Cup will be held at 3 o'clock Friday after noon in Gerrard Hall. Phone Strike Is Seen For Nation Monday NEW YORK, April 22 (P) An isolated dispute in the Mid west threatened today to spark a coast-to-coast tieup of telephone installation services on Monday. The threat came from Ernest Weaver, President of division 6, CIO Communication Workers of America, representing 10,000 in stallation workers in 43 states and the District of Columbia. He said the strike would be called unless Western Electric Co., adjusted in Indiana. .Jefferson Davis. ! Georgia Secretary of State Ben Forston, Ga., and Atlanta Mayor William B. Hartsf ield eloquently j proclaimed: "There is open re-j bellion in this state today." j Gleeful pallbearers carried John Brown's body in the. pa-1 rade. A squadron of "Yankee prisoners" dressed in long-handle union suits were kept under close guard. A pigeon was released with a message to President Truman de claring that the Empire State of the South had once again kicked loose from the Union. Widows of Confederate vete rans had prominent seats on the reviewing stand at the capitoL Doors Of Hall To Be Closed During Ritual Initiates' Names Are Kept Secret Until Ceremony Tomorrow night at 7:45, the doors of Memorial Hall will be closed to latecomers and the 47th annual tapping ceremonies for the Order of . the Golden' Fleece, the Uni versity's highest honor society for men, will get under way. A spokesman for the Fleece said yesterday that students who wished to vitness the ritual should.be in their seats by that time, for the doors will be locked to prevent tardy spectators from' coming in and disturbing "the solemnity and suspense of the program." W. T. Polk, Editor of the Greensboro Daily News, will ad dress a private banquet for. the old and new members at the Car olina Inn following the ceremon is. The annual Valkyrie Sing will follow the tapping procedure. I... Prior.,, to the tapping ritual in the Fleece's only yearly public appearance, the names of the newly selected members are kept secret. Choice of new members is made on the basis of self-sacrifice, service to the University and character. Black-robed figures with fleece across their shoulders will stalk the aisles of the auditorium, searching for those men who have been selected at secret meetings of the organization. During the tapping, the Fleece officers for the year 1949-50 will be revealed for the first time. An nounced will be the names of the Jason, the Grammateus and the Christopher. Present members, tapped last year, include: Harold Andrews, Billy Carmichael III, Dick Gor don, Page Harris, W. S. Harrison, Charles Johnson, Jr., Ed Joyner, Charlie Justice, Robert Kirkland, Joe Leary, Al Lowenstein, Bill Mackie, Sam Magill, Roy Moose, Vic Seixas, David Sobel and Richard Walker. Also tapped last spring was faculty member Dr. Walter Recce Bcrryhill." Re-tapped at the cer emonies was Judge John J. Par ker of Charlotte, guest speaker for the evening. Among the distinguished mem bers tapped since 1903, when the Fleece was organized here, are: President-Elect Gordon Gray, Sen. Frank Porter Graham, the late governors O. Max Gardner and J. C. B. Erringhaus. and Chancellor of the University at Chapel Hill Robert B. House. Others include Phillips Russell, E. R. Rankin, H.-G. Baity, E. L. Mackie, C. P. Spruill, Ed Lanier, Fred .Weaver, Bill Friday, C. E. Teague, Bill Shuford, Kay Kyser, and Thor Johnson. On The Air! WNCU, Carolina's own radio broadcasting through facilities of Durham' WDNC-FM. will offer an hour and a half of music and news every afternoon Monday through Friday begin ning tomorrow from 4:30 until 6 o'clock. From 4:30 until 4:55 there is "Music for You:" from 4:55 until 5 o'clock ihe news and sports; from 5 o'clock until 5:30. "Con cert Matinee." and from 5:30 until 6 o'clock. "Intermezzo." The FM station is on the dial at 105.1 Megs.

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