U N C LIBRARY SERIALS DEPT. CHAPEL HILL, H. C, 831-49 BASKETBALL Carolina's game- with the Grand Rapids pros last night. Read Bill Peacock's page 3 ac count. . WEATHER Considerable cloud in css vith scattered light showers. VOLUME LIX Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1950 United Press NUMBER 27 Indo-Chirialirie Falls; Rebels Get Firm Hold - Langson Fortress Abandoned To Reds In Frontier Zone SAIGON, Vietnam, Indo-China, Oct, 21 (.P) French abandon ment of the headquarters fortress city o Langson was , announced today, signaling the fall of the Indo-China-China frontier zone to firm control of the Communist led Vietmin Nationalists of Ho Chi Minh. A French Army communique disclosing this development vow ed that the French will assume WASHINGTON. Oct. 21 (UP) United States arms aid is moving to Red-Menaced Indo China at the "fastest rate and, in the largest volume possible," a military spokesman said to day. the offensive after regrouping as mobile units and "no further withdrawal of our troops is fore seen." But the evacuation of Langson, part of 9 gradual re treat from border positions, end ed French chances of a decisive military victory anytime soon in the struggle for domination of this gateway country to southeast Asia. Five French posts had been yielded previously. Abandonment of the remaining French positions, at Loakay in the wert and Moncay in the east, is regarded here as on.y a matter of time. The French defense line in north IndoChina is being shifted an average of aboue 75 miles southward to the northern fringes of the rich Red River delta. Florida Blow Knocked Out By Cold Air MIAMI, F)a., Oct. 21 (UP) A Gulf hurricane that threatened the heavily populated West Flori da coast fizzled out today int squally weather as it swept in land north of Tampa and spread out over South Georgia. The Miami Weather Bureau said the once powerful storm with 90 mile an hour winds lit erally had its sails knocked out by a mass of cold dry air that descended from the north. . This spared Florida its second big blow of the week. The mere 50-mile an houi winds were a relief to the 900 residents of Cedar Key north of Tampa who were battered by 125 mile an hour winds for 14 hours It st month. That storm left only two houses intact in Cedar Key. killed two - persons and caused .S3.000.000 damages on the West Coast. Grid Scores Pennsylvania orru ll 7 Williams 21 ' Army 40 Nwv 27 M;iine JR I.chiuh lfi 1'1'frimtnn li ''lte 23 KcjiUickv 34 KiiiCors 42 r'm ilhritn Columbia 0 Valp 0 B'wdoin 13 Harvard " Southern Cal. 14 Connecticut 7 T-lartinmjl.il 14 Brown 0 Buckncll i Villanova 7 New York Uni. 0 wt ir&nia 2.' Western M.rylanl 29 T V -1 ' r-, - nii.lincnn 1.1 ' :wwf J f:'h 11 Allegheny iMi.'irn 7 ..iu.i ii.,!. Tpai1 hers o Davidson 12 1 id . . 1 1 ... VIVU ! Mil hiL-an State 34 "no Stat- 43 liiiple 26 rMllic.-Hn 21 ,;''iiEia Ttcli 20 I"'il.-mc 27 ' '! ifla 31 N'-'ii-a-ka 19 Wicluta 17 Missouri 21 Kansas 40 Wtroit 13 H.-iVlor 26 Oklahoma 53 Wavne 0 The Citadel 7 An hum o v Mississippi 20 Vanderbilt 27 norm State 0 Drake 14 Iowa oi-ti.c - -Oklahoma A&M 7 Tulsa 13 (Tie) Texas Tech 12 Kansas State 0 W'uke Forest n George' Washington 0 N. C. State Hi Maryland 13 Di.kr 4 Rich.-riona o 'I'li.ma 20 Notre Dame 7 Jnv.-i :;; Purdue ni)..flin r2 Hamilton 9 Illinois 20 Washington U Tlihip;.n fj Wisconsin 1.5 viri'iin.'i ?ll Minnesota I) f f i Irlf THE ROMAN COLOSSEUM IS WELL LIGHTED at night for flock yearly io the ancient structure of the days of gladiators. M pry I and Surprised By N.C. State, 16-1 3 By Ken Barton COLLEGE PARK, Md.,,Oct. 21 Maryland's favored Ter rapins outplayed and outrushed a fighting 4eam of football players from N. C. State, only to lose to the Wolfpack, who capitalized on fumbles to win, 16-13, a game that produced a thrilling finish here today before 24,502 homecoming fans. All the scoring in the first half was done within the first six min utes, a's State, through some lucky breaks was able to grab nine quick points. On the second play of the game, Bob "Shoo Shoo" . Shemonski fumbled a lateral from John Scar bath and defensive Italf back' Jack Tencick of State kicked the ball out of the end zone for a safety nd two points for State College. Elmer Costa, State tackle, re covered a fumble in the Mary land backfield on the Maryland 20 after State had putthe ball in play again. Ed Mooney drove to the 15 for a first down arid then fwo plays later went off right end on a bootleg play for the touchdown. Ray Barkouskie onverted. After that the game became all Maryland, who despite the fact hat they were three times" within he 10 yard line of State, they vere unable to score. With Costa nd Jim OTiourke leading a solid lefense, the Terrapins were turn ed back each time. , Late in the first period, She monski took a kick frorn his own (See STATE, page 4) Gifts Asked For Veterans University students are being iked to contribute gifts to Vete am Hospitals that men there inable to shop might pick out resents to send loved ones for 'hristmas. ' In making the appeal yesterday, member of the American Legion Hospital Committee asked those interested in giving, to bring the iifts by Anclrew-IIenninger Fur niture Company tomorrow. A box has been placed in the store! to accomodate the gifts. The lo- al drive will last only through -oon Tuesday. ' , The spokesman pointed out that gifts should not be wrapped. In stead, they will be wrapped at the hospitals after selection. Gifts suitable for men, women, nd children are being accepted. ' Big Army Crushes Weak Harvard, 49-0 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 21 (p) Mighty Army, the nation's no. 1 college eleven, overwhelmed Harvard, v 49-0, to add another blotted page to the Crimson's 77-year-old football history today before a 26,000 crowd at the sta dium. I , It was the third straight set back for the Crimson of the sea son and the first time that it ever had been shut out by sugh a one sided margin. .', C v:.u 4. fe. x :: Purdue Loses To Iowa In Big Ten Tilt IOWA CITY, la., Oct. 21 (P) Iowa shocked favored Purdue, 33-21, today in a Big Ten football thriller that had a homecoming crowd of 51,521 in a tizzy from start to finish. It was a sizzling duel for Iowa came out swinging with a ven geance. All week the Hawks had been reminded of a remark by Purdue Coach Stu Ilolcomb that "I promise you well beat Iowa if it is the last thing , we do." That was a version of a state ment made by Ilolcomb in a flush of Purdue's victory over Notre Dame. He made it at a pep session while discussing Pur due's opening conference game. But Iowa was ready to contra dict the Purdue head man and his boys. The Hawks shot into a 7-0 lead on Glenn Drahn's 33-yard fourth down pass to Don Commack with only four minutes gone. ..Purdue roared back on the ex pert arm of Sophomore Dale Samuels who completed six straight passes in the remainder of the period. One, a nine-yarder to Darrell Brewster, was good for the first Boilermaker score. Then a six-yard toss to Leo Su gar Accomplished another touch down. Samuels' second conver sion made it, 14-7, Purdue. Part Of World Wide rf 5- Flag-Raising Ceremony To Highlight UN Day Celebration Here Tuesday United Nations Day, Tuesday, will be celebrated in style here at Carolina. t Highlighting the joint University-town celebration will be a special flag ceremony starting at 10:45 a.m. on the steps of South Building. Two U. N. flags will be presented, one each to the University and the town, by .the Orange County Home Demonstra tion Club. Club members made the flags. The merchants of Chapel Hill will close up shop at 10,35 a.m. so employees may join in the world-wide tribute to the U. N. At 10:45, church and University bells will begin ringing to sum t i ;. tr- ' j; p. the benefit of visitors, Thousands Rulings Spur Negro Effort In Georgia ATLANTA,- Oct. 21 (UP) Faced with the uprooting of its 75-year-old doctrine of raci al segregation in education, Georgia is mapping its biggest public school expansion pro gram in history. Threatened Federal Court ac tion and an awakened social consciousness have spurred the state to. play for its Negro citi zens "separate but equal" edu cational facilities with the eni phasis on the "equal." Georgia for years let its re sponsibilities to its Negro school children slide. The emphasis in the past has been on "sepa rate" not "equal" schools. But recent Supreme Court decisions, two suits filed by Negro citizens in Georgia, and an , awakening of the white citizens to their responsibilities, have led to two positive pro grams to correct the situation. The most recent court action was brought by a group of Ne gro parents seeking equal- ed ucation facilities in the Atlanta public schools. The suit, .filed in Federal District Court, also asked an end to segregation. When the Georgia Legisla ture meets in January, it will be asked: 1. To finance a "Minimum. Foundation Program for Edu cation," which would ear-mark $100,000,000 a year for public and university education. 2. To initiate a multi-million dollar school building program to be financed through a state school building authority. Sooners Top Kansas With 58-0 Victory NORMAN, Okla., Oct. 21 I?) After two weeks of last minute victoxies, Oklahoma enjoyed an afternoon of relaxation today in whipping Kansas State 58-0 to open defense of its Big Seven football title. Tribute mon students and townspeople to South building for the ceremony. U. N. ' flags will be flown throughout the' Chapel Hill, busi ness district. They will be erect ed by Boy Scouts under the su pervision of Elizabeth ' Branson, a member of the town U. N. Day Committee, of which Dean Henry Brandis is chairman. More than 30 foreign students from 23 foreign countries will participate in the ceremonies commemorating U. N. Day. They will appear at the flag ceremony in American-style clothing with banners showing the colors of their national flags. They will lent Car Parking Rules Relaxed Here Survey Reveals Lots Not Used To Full Capacity For the first time since the war, University parking rules have been relaxed in favor of student car owners, the Traffic and Safe ty Committee announced yester day. Chairman Larry Botto said that the parking lot behind Peabody Hall, known as the "arboretum lot," has been opened to both red sticker holders as well asj blue. Also opened to red sticker- j holders was the parking space along the third base line on Em erson Field. The new moves came after a survey by the Dean of Students office showed that the arboretum lot was being used to only about one third of its capacity. The lot will hold about 100 autos. . Red sticker holders are those living outside the "walking zone" There are about 600 of the stick ers. The Traffic Committee has urged those who have the stick ers, but who live within a short distance of Chapel Hill refrain from using the newly opened space, since long-distance com muters usually arrive late and cannot-find parking space any where. The Traffic and Safety Com mittee also announced new mea sures to deal with those who vio ate the existing, parking regula tions. From now on, all those vho receive three tickets will be ubject to "administrative action" y the committee. The control '-ody is empowered to deal with iolators after town police action io taken. - University Folice Chief P. L. 3urch announced that approxi nately 400. tickets have been :iven out to violators since the nesent regulations went into ef "ect at the beginning of this quar 'er. Episcopal Rector Joins Staff Here The Rev. Levering Bartine Sherman, rector of Saint Andrews Church in Charlotte, will join he staff of the Episcopal Church n January, 1951, as chaplain to Episcopal students living here. Mr. Sherman, 29 years old, is i graduate of Princeton Univer sity mnd Virginia Theological Seminary. . Today's schedule of services: Holy Communion. 8 a.m.; Bible ;tudy meeting in the Parish House, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Prayer ; nd sermon, 11 a.m.; Canterbury Club, 6 p.m.; and Evening "Prayer 1 8 p.m. " appear in native costumes and do native dances at a party to be held at 8 p.m. in the Rendez vous room Tuesday night. A short movie, "Structure for Peace How the U. N. Works," will be shown as part of the re gular movie program at the Car olina theater Tuesday. The University library has set up a display featuring the special agencies of the .U. N. Included are the Food and Agriculture Organization and UNESCO, and the reports of various U.N. com missions such as the Korean Com mission. These documents will be on (See UN DAY, page 4) Stud Change Of Locations Noted For Two Lectures By Kagawa By Don Maynard Dr. Toyohiko Kagawa, Japa nese evangelist and Presbyterian clergyman, scheduled to deliver his two lectures tomorrow in Me morial Hall, will instead speak in the auditorium of the Baptist Church on S. Columbia Street. The times of his lectures, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.. have not been changed however, the Rev. J. C. Herrin of the ' Baptist Church said yesterday. . Dr. Kagawa will speak on "The Problem in . Asia" in the morning session. He will present "A Christian Message in an Atomic World" at the evening program. Following a University ruling that the Memoral Hall gathering could not be unsegregated, the Korean Reds Unleash New Guerrilla Warfare TOKYO, Saturday, October 21 (UP) The Communists launched a guerrila war throughout Korea today as their government retreated to the Manchurian border and the Allied avalanche swept to within 75 miles of Chinese Com munist territory. ' The once mighty Communist Peace Bid By Truman Seen Tuesday WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (P) President Truman probably will deliver a new world peace plea to' the United NatiohsTnesday, following up his Pacific confer ence with General Douglas Mac Arthur and his foreign policy speech in San Francisco this week. -r The United Nations speech is expected to steer clear of highly controversial subjects since the Chief Executive will speak as head of the U. N.'s h'ist nation on a ceremonial occasion United Nations day. The President will deliver it, nevertheless, against the back ground of his Pacific flight and his repeated warnings to Russia against further Red aggression. Thus the speech will serve to sharpen' the dilemma developing in the policies of the Western powers this weekend as the Ko rean war draws to a cloe. For the impression among well informed diplomats in Washing ton now is that Russia is trying to take advantage of this Korean development to lull the world in to a false sense of security. New Lutheran Church To Be Ready By Easter Chapel Hill's first Lutheran Church, Holy Trinity, will be ready for worship by next Eas ter, the Rev. E. C. Cooper an nounced yesterday. Costing $98,000 and seating ap proximately 300 persons, the church is located at the corner of Pickard and Rosemary Lanes, opposite the Lambda Chi Alpha house. Construction on the church has reached the first floor level. Freedom Bell Arrives Safely In U.S. Berlin BERLIN, .Oct. 21. (UP) The Freedom Bell arrived safely in U. S. Berlin today after a secret, overnight dash through 100 miles of Russian territory and Com munist agents who reportedly had orders to delay it. Cautious U. S. Army Engineers gently hoisted the 20,000 pound bell, symbol of the hopes of free men, from a railway boxcar and eased it abroad a flattop truck for its final journey to the West Berlin City' hall. ! n DR. TOYOHIKO KAGAWA Ministers' Association of Chapel Hill voted to move the lecture army of 200,00 had been reduced to 35,000 men, fighting, only spo radically as they retreated north. But a spokesman for Gen. Doug las Mac Arthur said in Tokyo that harrassing guerrilla fighting was underway throughout Korea particularly in South Korea. One band of Communist attackers to talled 2,000 men. With organized resistance prac tically at an end, there was no indication the Reds were going to sur render, as Mac Arthur has twice demanded. Instead, they apparently plan to fight in small bands which will keep United Nations forces on the firing line throughout the bitter Korean winter. The North Koreans were heard from by way of a radio broadcast from Sinuiju, just across the Yalu l iver from Antung, Manchuria. The radio, heard ih Japan for the first time at 5 p.m. (a a.m. EST) Saturday, broadcast an announce ment by the "permanent commit tee of -the People's Republics Su preme People's council" that the capital had been established there. The broadcast, monitored in Fukuoka, Japan, said in the fu ture, radio Sinuiju would be the People's Republic "central radio station." Military sources regarded the announcement with suspicion. They thought the Red govern ment might already be in Man churia, where it will direct guer rilla activity. In describing the building, Mr. Cooper said: "The church will have a traight-hne nave and chancel of the same width. The choir stalls 1 and the organ console will be placed in the chancel. The pulpit; and lectern will be placed in the front. The organ, chancel furni ture, windows, and pews, are all to be memorials. They will be in keeping with the architecture of the building." The church will have a stu dent's lounge and work room, classrooms, recreation rooms, and a children's chapel in the base ment. There also will .be modern kitchen and dining room facili ties." - Funds for the building have been supplied by the State Broth erhood of the North Carolina Lutheran Synod, as well as by individual contributions. The Lutheran congregation here was organized in 1946 by Mr. Cooper. At present the congregation in cludes 50 members with 160 Lu theran students in the University. Services are held in Gerrard Hall every Sunday at 11 ajn. . m mm i-j - - f irr.it to the Baptist Church. The text of the resolution as adopted by the Association: "Recognizing the responsibility of the University officials in ad ministering the policy of the Uni versity on meetings in its build ings, and regretting that the Min isters' Association did not make it sufficiently clear in scheduling Memorial Hall that the invitations to the Kagawa meetings were being extended to the general public without racial discrimina tion, we move that the public Kagawa meetings be moved from Memorial Hall and held in one of the Churches." In interpreting the resolution, Mr. Herrin, Acting Chairman of (See KAGAWA, page 4) Vols Snatch J4-9 Win From'Bama KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 21 (UP) Tennessee's sophomore powered Volunteers refused to aqcept a great Alabama goal line stand as final today and snatched a 14 to 9 victory in the last two minutes in the South's traditional "bowl-maker" classic before 50, 000 fans. Sophomore Andy Kozar, main spring of a Tennessee offensive that ticked only sporadically, crashed across from the one-yard line on fourth down. And it was another yearling, Wingback Ed Morgan, recaptur ing the "flaming sophomore" ;pirit-joJL. Coach Bobby- Neyland's heydey, who set up the score with a wide break-away run of 23 yards. Three minutes before, the Alabama line had hurled Ten nessee back from the Crimson Tide two-yard line. It was a breathtaking climax to a game that had been adver tised as a dress rehearsal for the Sugar, Cotton, or Orange Bowl and it was in the best tradition of the Alabama-Tennessee rival -ry. Navy Scuihes S. Cal., 27-14 BALTIMORE, Oct. 21 fUP) Navy's embattled doormats, tired of being kicked around all season, arose from lowliness biday to do a little trampling of their own, outplaying heavily favored-Southern California all the way to win a 27 to 14 triumph, their first of the season before 11,000 fans at Babe Rutli Memorial Stadium. Showing talent that had been hidden in oilier games, the mad dened Midshipmen outrushed end outpassed the visiting Trojans who had been rated a t wi-:.ouc.h-down edge to repeat their triumph of 1949 over Navy. In the first burst of offensive power of their previously disap pointing season, the admirable young admirals popped loose for two touchdowns in the second period and another in the final session. Pass The Sefr TORONTO, Oct. 21 (UP) Kissing no m-siter what Freud said started out as pure and simple chemistry, a chemist said today. It started over a craving for salt not love. Doualas Walkington, chemist for Canadian Industries, Lid., told purchasing ggenjg rneeting here this history of the kiss: The cave men dircovereH that salt helped cool ihem in the hot summer. So j;isi as cows gel salt by lickisg each other's chops, the cave roan foutiH he could get salt by licking his neighbor's cheek. Then be d'rcovcred i' pro cess was much more interest ings if the neighbor was of the opposite sex. And then, everybody forgot about salt.

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