TODAY'S NEWS Th Summer Christian, Pagt, 2 Local Lady Golftr Wins. Page 3 Klruey Report. Jr.. Pag 4 VOLUME LVIII Alumni Group Puts Students On Board Sanders, Jones, Dowd Arc Elected To Fill Positions For the first time in University j hitory, three students have been' Hctd t the noard of Directors' of the Alumni Association. Kheted to membership on the Board (it the annual Alumni As MMnbly here Thursday night were John Sunders of Four Oaks, pres ident of the student body; Gra ham Jones of Winston-Salem, ed itor of The Daily Tor Heel, and Ned Dowd of Dunn, president of the senior class. James S. Fieklen, class of '19, of Greenville, and J. Harold Linc berger, class of '26 of Belmont, were nominated ' for the presi dency of the general Alumni As sociation. They will be voted on by mail ballot among dues paying members. Nominated for first vice presi dent were Arch Davis of Winston-Salem and Joe C. Eagles of Raleigh and John P. Stedman of Lumberton were nominated for second vice president. Grady Pritchard of Chapel Hill and John Fleming Wily, Jr., of Durham were nominated for the alumni representatives on the University Athletic Council. Two dircctors-at-large elected Bt the meeting were Charles Shacfer of Greensboro and Clai borne Carr, Jr., of New York. Following the nominations talks wire heard by Alumni Sec retary J. Mayron Saunders, Chancellor Robert B. House, Act ing President W. D. Carmichael, Jr., and Robert O. Huffman of Morganton and Dr. I. G. Greer Members of tlin Co!inrp'litan Club Con cert group should meet in front of Graham Memorial at 2:30 today to go to Greensboro. Then will probably be room for a few members or friends who may wish to go along.' There will not bo n meeting of the Club on Sunday. Wesley Foundation S'li'lnt rln;:r. will mt tomorrow morning nt 0:Vt. Sunday night supp"r at, six will be .followed by the installation of new officers. Hev. William M. Howard will address the newly elected of ficers. Meeting to discuss reorganization ' ne "oapr Hill Chapter of the Amer can Veterans Committee: will be held in the basement of the Presbyterian Church on Moncfay night. May 1, nt 7:30 p. m. Former members of the chap ter as well as former members of other chapters of AVC and other interested persons arc in vited to attend. No formal pro gram has been arranged. , Art Exhibit The annual meeting ot the Noflh Carolina Chapter of the National Association of Teache of Spanish and Portugese will he held here today. Highlight of thft meeting will b? an art exhibit of paintings by Latin American artists. Included in this exhibit will be drawings by Osvaldo GasparirU, a noted Argentine folk artist. The paintings were recently brought from South America and this is their first showing in this counlry. ' Campus Briefs Associated Press Ay. V"", V V r X, , -r ' V, J - j THE SPONSORS FOR THE SPRING GERMANS are. lop row. left io right: Beisy Anne Barbee, Chapel Hill, with Dick Gordon. Merion. Pa., treasurer of the German Club: Jean Sloan, Charlotte, with Steve Jones. Clinton, president; Patricia Bass. Tarboro. with Mabrey Bass. Tarboro. vice president; Nadia Daughtriuge, Rocky Mount, with Ben Yelverton. Rocky' Mount, secretary. Middle row: Sue Geitner. Charlotte, with George Blackwelder. Jr.. Hickory; Janie Pollock, Winston-Salem, with Marvin Farrell. Jr.. Winston-Salem; Iris McCewen. Burlington, . with Bill Rue. Danville. Ky.; Mary Strickland. High Point, with Jake Froelich. High Point; Elizabeth Hamer. Marion. S. C with John W. Underwood, Southern Pines. Bottom row: Jane Shoaf. Lexington, with Jimmy Hardison. Wadesboro; Marion Turner, Greens boro, with Bynum Brown, Murfreesboro; Nancy Reid. Charlotte, with Bob Morrow, Charlotte; Dot Arrington. Rocky Mount, with Fred Deans, St. Paul, and Irene Jeffries Goldsboro, with Jim Corn well. Charlotte. Concert Are Monroe Features German's weekend rolls into its second day of fun and music to day, and bandleader Vaughn Monroe and company are still primed for plenty of music at three separate affairs today. Job Advice Blow Your Own Horn If You Want To Work "When you try to get a, job, don't be afraid to blow your own horn. If you have a good tune to play, play it," This advice was given to University job secker,s recently by Carl II. Buf fington. a representative of the Vicks Chemical Company, the Placement Service said yesterday. Buffington spoke to a group of University students recently in the first of a series of programs being sponsored by the Place ment Service to give advice to students interested in getting jobs after graduation. In his talk Buffington outlined eight qualities a person trying to get a job should have. "The first point," he said, "is idea ability. By this we do not mean an atom bomb or H-bomb or a million dollar idea. Think about it in terms of any om- World, Nation, State News In Brief By The Associated Press CAMP LEJUNE Six thousand American Marines clung tenac iously lo two beachheads on San Lejuno Island last night in the face of enemy gunlire and trickery in Operation Crossover. NEW YORK Thousands of shouting, shoving high school pu pils clashed repeatedly with police yesterday in a fourth day of rioting that brought expressions of alarm from judges and other civic leaders. VIENNA Soviet Authorities yesterday rejected a Western proposal that all travel restrictions within Austria be abolished. WASHINGTON The House Ways and Means Committee yes lerday voted to slash excise taxes on night clubs, telephone bills, telegraph and travel tickets. The new cut brought to $967,000,000 . the reduction approved thua far. Radi Show o Last night Monroe and . his ; nationally-famous music mob op ened the weekend in fine style, playing for a three-hour formal dance in Woollen gymnasium. Today, festivities continue with pany.' Any business must com pete, and competition is based on how well you do the job. Ideas in business arc simply better ways of doing the job." Buffington also listed an in quiring mind as an attribute to a job-seeker. Ideas, do not sud denly pop into a person's head, Buffington explained, but are the result of hard work. . The third quality the speaker listed was expression. "We believe that you may pos sess an inquiring mind which helps you to come up with an idea," he said, "but unless you have the ability to convince pome one that your idea is worth try ing out, we don't believe that the idea is going to get very far." Other attributes listed by Buf fington are intelligence, drive, pcrseverencc, interest, judgment and executive caliber. auto it lie el Chapel Hill, N. C. SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1950 0 pflpWSBW-59W-5MK-:-: W.-fSSSSf a concert, radio show' and anoth- er dance .tonight. The concert expected to pack Memorial Hall starts at 4:30. .Vaughn and th boys will play for an hour. knocP off for lunch and roar back a 7:30 in the same ball for "Camel Caravan." national-hookup radic show. The program lasts for 3C minutes, and Monroe is expected to salute the University with several traditional sonss. The dance, to last from 9 until 12 o'clock, will, wind up the of ficial weekend festivities. After wards, Monroe is to attend ; morning breakfast being given by Theta Chi fraternity, of which he is an alumnus. The Dance Committee warned yesterday that all committee rules will apply at both the con cert and the radio show. In addition to the official Ger man Club program, -nearly every fraternity on campus has planned extensive social activity for the weekend. Novo! Faculty Gets Orders For Summer Staff instructor? of the Uni versity Naval ROTC staff . have been tentatively assigned by the Bureau of Naval Personnel for t temporary; duty in connection : with midshipmen summer train- ing cruises, according to Comdr. j W. J. Manning, Executive Officer of the NROTC unit here. Upon completion of the sum mer assignment, they will return to their regular duties as instruc tors at' the Naval unit. Captain Cooper is scheduled to be Officer-in-Charge of naval reserve officer candidate training at Newport, R. I., from about the middle of June until the first ofi September. Major B. W. McLean, U. S. Marine Corps, has been ordered to the Marine Corps Schools at Quantico,' Va., to assist in the summer training of Marine Corps officer candidates at that post, Dance Today Put On Those Straw Hats, Dowd Croons Juniors To Hold Hogan's Mass , Turnout Today . I "Put - on your straw bonnet ' with the '51 on it and we'll take to Hogan's for a feed," junior class president Ned Dowd was singing yesterday as he com pleted final arrangements for the class picnic set today. Busses wil be on band to con vey, the juniors to the picnic this morning, Dowd said, and will re main on campus until they have been filled and enough students are oh their way to the affair. - Beginning at 10 o'clock thir morning, the busses will load for the event, and when they are nearly filled, wil pass by the coed dormitories to catch any late coed risers planning to attend. That is, if any coeds plan to attend. According to Dowd, the response from the coed popula tion has been "almost nil," and he called for them to take part in the junior class activities "just as much as the men will." , The straw hats, which sold for 50 cents in the YMCA court and Lenoir Hall, were sold at cost. Dowd said. "The Junior clasp made no profit on their sale," he said. Yesterday was Straw Hat Day on campus, and juniors could be identified by their "hayseed chapeaux" with the numerals 51" embossed on the front. . The idea of Straw Hat Day and. the Hogan Picnic, Dowd ex plained, is to bring about closer class unity and to add prestige to the class of '51. He issued a plea to the coeds, however, that they participate. "Coeds are members of the class just as muck as the men are," he pointed out, "and the committee feels that the girls should take part in this special junior day." 4 Y Members Give Service Four representatives from Car olina's YMCA tomorrow will tra vel to Fayetteville where they will conduct the weekly Sunday night young people's group for the Highland Presbyterian Church there. The deputation group will con sist of Ed McLoed, Jack Prince, Niels Lassen, and Hugh Cole Lole "will conduct, tile service while McLoed, Prince, and Las sen will speak on three aspects of "How We Live as Christians." McLoed will talk on Christian ity with ourselves, Prince on Christianity with others, and Las sen, the world aspect of Chris tianity. 'Near-Beer, Chicken 'Those Were The Good Old Days Honeycutt, Class Of '23, Reminisces By Don Maynard Times were fun. back in the "old days" at Carolina back when the rule was wine, women and song, not "near-beer, chic ken and jazz," as it is today ac cording "to Gilbert M. Honeycutt. class of '23. Those were the times when The Daily Tar Heel was known as The Tar Heel, came out twice weekly and "was just a sheet. . .everybody read it. . . nobody paid it any attention." Honejrcutt, who hails original ly from Chapel Hill and now calls home Fayetteville, received ' his B. S. in Commerce in 1927, but he calls the class of '23 his Phone. Men's Council Issues Report On Work Of Court, 1949-50 Council Hears 108 Honor Code Cases; 36 Suspended Students Arc Reinstated A total of 194 cases came be fore the Mrn's Honor Council for the year period ending April 27, former Clerk Pete Gerns ; and present Clerk Buddy Vaderv an Acut Water Is Plaguing Chapel Hill r By Rolfe Neill A sudden water shortage in the Chapel -.Hill-Carrboro area yesterday brought : protests from irate and parched citizens and a plea for conservation from a university of ficial. ." ' , ' ' - The official last night .said the shortage is partially being caus- ed by.. the "qnusually heavy de mand - on ; our reservoirs at this time of year. More so, it is com- A slight possibility of scat tered showers tomorrow after noon and again Tuesday is all the United . State! weather bu reau at Raleigh-Durham Air port can p'romise sun-burnt Chapel Hill. Early this ' morning, officials said: "We've got little hope." ing from the fact that our new filter ; plant in Carrboro is not yet in operation. And it is not supposed to be working for at least several more days. "We -would like for everyone to use as little water as possible none for watering their yards or washing cars. The most acutely hit areas are the high spots around town where the pressure is insufficient." The new filter plant is ' sup posed to handle 300,000,000 gal Ions of water a day compared to the 1,300,000 gallons the present system is made to filter. Also, a new reservoir will increase It-he reserve capacity from 300.00C gallons to 1,500,000 gallons. Water comes from University Lake fed by Morgan's Creek. Meanwhile, townspeople from various sections complained bit terly because of the shortage. "Today's shortage is nothing new," yesterday said Mrs. Thelma Lloyd, a housewife. She lives on High Road, jusf" outside of Carr boro, one of the hardest hit sec tions. "We've not had water at all from 3 o'clock in' the after noon until 8 o'clock or later at night for the last week. When we call them at the plant (the filter plant) they say 'it's just running out before it gets to you.' " A neighbor across the. street W. A. Tillman, substantiated Mrs. Lloyd's pomplaint. He said: "My family has had to drink Cokes because of the shortage. Some service stations around (See WATER, page 4) And Jazz' own. He left the University m 923 with a few courses uncom pleted, returning in '27 for a quarter to finish" and carry away his sheepskin. - Another reason for his fidelity for the younger class may be be cause he considers the '23 group the "greatest class of athletes" in history, as the 1923 Yackety Yack will bear out. That was back in the days when the Alumni Building was the Administration Building and South was a men's dormitory. Back when the Playmakers Theater was the law school and Spencer Dormitory was known as the "frau house" and the "hen F3361 F3371 . nounced -yesterday in a joint statement reviewing the 1949 1950 activities. ' A total of 103, Honor Code cases were brought before the : " Hill To Speak On Marriage Tuesday At 8 Dr. Rueben Hill will speak on .'Personality Factors in Mate Se- lection" in the opening session of a conference on Courtship and Marriage which will begin Tues day night. The meeting, which will begin at 8 o'clock, will be held in the YMCA. Following the talk by Dr. Hill and a discussion period there will be a movie entitled "This Charm ing Couple." Dr. Hill will speak at the se cond meeting Thursday, and Mrs. Arnold Nash will speak at the next Jt wo meetings which will be May 9 and May 11. So far 20 students have regis tered ' for the conf erence, which will be limited to 30 students. Persons interested in the confer ence should contact the YMCA office. Parker Gets 2 Awards At Press Convention Special to The Daily Tar Heel GREENSBORO. April 28 Daily Tar Heel Managing Ed itor Roy Parker. Jr., swept two awards for excellence in writ ing here tonight at the annual North Carolina Collegiate Press Association conference. He was awarded the best feature article title for his ac count of the Notre Dame pep rally and best news story for the disbandment of the Cam pus Party. Buddy Vaden and Zane Rob bins got sports writing awards. Tarnation's humorous take off on New Yorker won it the lop award in its field. house." And when the Morehead Planetarium was just a dream and its location a tangle of shrubbery and collector's items. It was in 1923, Honeycutt says, that the Old Carolina Inn w?s where Graham Memorial is now, when chapel was required for e(very freshman sophoinore stu dent, and the- old Memorial Hall was the "biggest building in the world without a supported roof. "It was so ugly, it was attrac tive," he claims. v . There was once a white frame house on the lawn now in front of GM, Honeycutt reminisced. One day, as he tells it, the build (See OLDTMER, page 4) Shortage WEATHER Fair and warmer. NUMBER 155 11 man council. Of these, 54 were found guilty and 54 exonerated, of those judged guilty 44 were suspended, three with the recom mendation that they never be al lowed to return to the University and 25 with a recommendation of leniency upon application for reinstatement. Sixteen students were suspended indefinitely with no recommendation. Of the 23 campus code cases brought before the Council, 20 of the defendants were found guil ty. Three .students were suspend ed indefinitely for Campus Code violations, one was put on per manent probation, three on in definite probation, and one on bad check probation. Four students were officially reprimanded for Campus Coda violations and eight more were handed unofficial reprimands. Applications for reinstatement to the University were received from 42 students. These students had been suspended previously by the Council for Honor or Campus Code violations. Of the 42 applications, 36 were grant ed. The majority of the applica tions for reinstatement came from Honor Code offenders, 34 of those being granted were hon-" or code cases. One honor rode ' violator was denied reinstate ment. Seven applications for rein statement were received from Campus Code offenders. Five of their applications were denied by the Council. Applications for removal of probation were received from 16 students.. Only two of the appli cations were denied. . Four cases were reopened by the Council. One individual in volved was put on indefinite suspension, one on permanent probation, and two on indefinite probation. One case involving a violation of election laws was turned down for lack of original jurisdiction. The most serious penalty met ed out by the Men's Council is suspension with the recommen dation that, the defendant never be reinstated at this University. Persons may aluo be suspended indefinitely with or without rec ommendation that leniency be shown upon their application for reinstatement. A first offender suspended be cause of Honor or Campus Code violations may be reinstated by the Council if the student has proven to the Council that his actions during his suspension merited reinstatement. The Council may also penalize offenders by putting them on probation. When a student is put on probation he is, by action of the Council, withdrawn from any and all student activities. The student on probation is not al lowed to participate in any activ ity as a member" or officer in any campus organization. He is" prevented from participation in intramurals, and cannot repre sent the University or the stu dent body in any way. A viola tion of probationary provisions results in automatic suspension from the University. A Ftudent, according to the se verity of the crime, can be put on three types of probation: permanent probation, to last dur ing his entire stay at the Uni versity; indefinite probation, to last until the Council sees fit to (See COUNCIL, page 4) Off The Air The radi.o broadcasting from Swain Hall will be idle today, student station assistant man ager Buddy Vaden, yesterday said. But it is not due !o any tech nical difficulties, according to Vaden. "We only broadcast through the VDNC-FM facili ties five days a week " he said. "Monday well be back on the air with our regular hour and a half of news and music" The station may be tuned in at 105.1 Megs.

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