-1 . 1 - V It K n ? !! I 1 I A K 1 r 11 J 4 .it f V. i 4 I ! 4. i k J i i !i . C . Library Serials Dept. Chapsl .Hill, ri, ' 8-31-49' BACK HOME Coach Jim Gill, after one year at State, is coming back to UNC. Story "on page 3. VOLUME LIX (Jr (o) Gfoy Rob erf Shaw Chorale To In Memorial H a 1 1 XBjiwiiii.wiij mu i in j.. in n r '!' n i - i 1 t - r i iiiTyn ir niiTri nm n 1 nun nu ixm . r S V s ROBERT AROT CM en Exempt From Army Draff x The commandant of the local AROTC yesterday issued a clarification of the draft status of the unit's 397 members. Lately there has been talk that freshman and sophomore members of the Air Force group are not deferrable from the Se lective Service Act. Li. Col. Jesse J. Moorhcad, PAS&T yesterday announced that all cadets enrolled in the program have been deferred from the draft, with the exception of those who are not deferrable because of underage or membership in a reserve component. The deferment of junior and senior cadets is automatic, Col. Moorhead pointed out. He ex plained that for sophomores and freshmen, a deferment quota is assigned by the Fourteenth Air Force which has jurisdiction over the" AROTC in this geographical area. v At present.jjdue to a large num ber of cadets being dropped for academic deficiencies and others for underage - registration, or not deferrable because of membership in the National Guard or other reserves, it has been possible to defer all eligible members of the cadet corps, Col. Moorhead added. If in the future it should hap pen that the deferment quota would not cover all eligible ca-i dep, the selection of those to be deferred would be based upon (See AROTC, page 4) Ring Sale Bob Hutchinson, Grail ring chairman, will be in the Y lobby from 1 p.m. lo 4:30 p.m. tomor row lo accept orders for class rings. Hutchinson advised students to place their orders- early as there mlg'nt be some delay in delivery. The Grail is the sole campus representative of L. G. Balfour Co.. makers of the official Uni versity ring. Associated LziU fires s sx n i SHAW Gray Leaves To Address Association President Gordon Gray left 3'esterday ior Atlantic City, N. J., where he has accepted an invitation to address the opening session today of the Association of American Col leges. Gray, Chairman- of the Com mittee on Manpower of he American Association of Uni versities, will share speaking honors with Raymond Walters, president of the University of Cincinnati. ' Gray will have as his topic, "The Colleges and Military Services." Cold Wave To Continue Frosty The Snowman s Icy Breath Gives Sunny South Taste Of Winter By Don Maynard Only Frosty the Snowman could tell us where the Canadians get all their cold weather, or why they manufacture so much of it that they have to ship it across the border in such quantities that it reaches Chapel Hill. But gripe as you will about the sudden cold snap, whish ap peared over the weekend and sent the mercury scurrying down from an abnormal high of 68 last Wednesday to an equally abnorm Press UJ UALZ3 XA ZJ LntZSJU ZS U UUULTU U U VUU J 1 it r jr a, ,m . - a -i r, ii it mi it mr jr 11 i 11 Be To n i g h t Doors Open At 7 O'clock For Students By Charlie Brewer Sponsored by the Student En tertainment Committee, the 32 voice Robert Shaw Chorale, aug mented by a chamber music en semble, makes its first appearance on campus tonight at 8 o'clock in Memorial Hall. Doors will be opened for the free admittance of students with ID. cards at 7 o'clock, tickets for any remain ing seats will go on sale to non students at 7:40. The chorale is the third presen tation of a six-program series arranged by the Student Enter tainment Committee this school year. They will offer a program of classical music, folk songs, hymns, and spirituals. ! , - Robert Shaw, who learned how to conduct, by conducting, is re cognized . by the New York Her ald Tribune as "having no equal in the choral field today". His choristers have repeatedly won the highest praise from discrim inating musicians for the accur acy and clearness of their ensem ble, the delicacy and expressive nicss of their interpretations and their wide range of dynamic levels. A specialty of the Shaw sys tem is diction. When choruses trained under Shaw perform one can understand the words. As a rule this is unheard-of in choral i work. Robert Shaw has been closely affiliated with choral work since his college glee-club days at Pomona College, California, in 1938. lie has worked extensively with the Fred Waring radio "glee club. During the war he organ ized and trained a chorus at the Sampson Naval Training Station while in the service. Shaw, in addition to his radio work, trained choruses for Billy Rose's Aquacades in New York and San Francisco, and also for the Broadway shows, "Carmen Jones" "Laughing Room Only", and "The Seven Lively Acts." Appearing on their second na tional tour, the Robert Shaw Choral will demonstrate to Caro lina students the outstanding achievement of a conductor cap able of combining the perfection ism of a young Toscanini with the uninhibted gusto of a college (SEE SHAW, page 4) al 18 this morning, . it's going to be with "us for a few days at least. According to the Raleigh-Durham office of the U. S. Weather Bureau yesterday, North Carolin ians are experiencing a cold wave which originated in Central Can ada, and which will continue through this week, it seems. Forecasts were available only until Wednesday, but that day's prediction of "cold again" can only mean one 'thing. It's going to e - -"n. v CHAPEL HILL, N. C. Complied With Athletic Aid Requirements Suggests Group Return To Status Of Advisory Only By Zane Bobbins In a recent letter to Clar ence P. Houston, chairman of the Constitutional Compliance Committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Associa tion, President Gordon Gray again stated Carolina's stand on the controversial "Sanity Code," and declared: "We have complied completely with the NCAA 'Sanity Code' in the ad ministration of all scholarships and financial aid controlled by our Faculty Scholarship Committees." President Gray wrote. Houston last Saturday and 'yesterday re leased to the press a complete copy of the letter. He indicated that colleges and universities must, under the sanity , code, choose Joetween hypocrisy an frank admission of' and non-compliance which must eventually lead to non-membership." "We believe," Gray stated, "that a university's educational integrity may be most effectively safeguarded against any threat from professionalism in intercol legiate athletics by: (1) rigid ad missions requirements; (2) high academic standards; and (3) a high quality student citizenship." Gray asserted that " 'Sanity Codes' are not new to the South ern Conference," and described the ' 1936 code drawn up by thq conference and later modified after a few months' trial. That .code was highly similar to the present NCAA code, Gray point- ci out, and was modified by the . . . asserted that morally it makes no difference whether a student's expenses are paid by his parents, the state, the federal government, an endowed scholarship fund, a (See NCAA, page 3) University Party Will Meet Today The University Party will hold a combination steering committee meeting and caucus today at 2 p.m. in one of the Roland Parker Lounges , of Graham Memorial, Party Chairman Bill Craft said yesterday. .The meeting is for steering committee members and UP-en-dors'ed Student Legislators only, Craft added. be ear muff weather for. some time. Reports from Chapel Hill coal yards and fuel Oil distributors in dicate that residents will keep warm, however. Unlike early March of last year, there is no Coal strike and stockpiles are re ported in "pretty good" shape. The University's power and heating plant now has a six week's supply on hand, and coal shipments are coming in to meet (See COLD, page -4) rife T&i TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1951 nrollment Is Down 800 Since Fall Director of Admissions Roy Armstrong estimated yesterday that University enrollment had dropped by some 800 stvtdents since the beginning of tie fall quarter, and probably between 500 and 600 of that number left because of the international sit uation. Approximately 300 students left for the armed forces over the Christmas holidays, Armstrong figured. Since enrollment was listed at 6,860 in the fall, the present en rollment is around 6,000 students. The ' registration drop will hit hardest, in the fieldof finance. Defense Post Forthcoming For Graham, WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (P) Dr. Frank P. Graham, former Senator from North Carolinawill soon be named to an imporfofhtf defense post by President Tru man, according to White House officials. Officials, who asked not to be named, told a reporter today that Graham soon j&ill be named to a position in the organization of Charles . E. Wilson, Director of Defense Mobilization. Mr. Truman previously was re ported to be planning to appoint Graham as Director of the Na tional Science Foundation, an or ganization created by Congress to promote scientific research. However, it was learned that the foundation board had several other choices for the job. The board was said to object to Gra ham on the grounds that he was not a scientist. Decision Is Reversed On Student's Cheating The Student Council reversed so on the grounds that the evi- the Men's Honor Council" on a ruling that a student had cheated on a final math exam last quarter and exonerated him of the charg es. second student found guilty by the Men's Countil was dis missed from the University. The student who appealed did School Here To Be' Sued Officials of the Chapel Hill Public Schools said yesterday that thev had not been notified of a discrimination suit reported to be filed against them by 10 Negro parents living here. Raleigh attorney for the Chapel Hill Council on Negro Affairs, Herman Taylr. explained yester day morning that he intended to file the suit today in the Middle District of North Carolina Federal Court headquarters at Greens boro. . He, added that he had intended to file the suit yesterday but was diverted by some business' in Superior Court in Raleigh. United Says Admissions Present student government bud gets were set up on the basis of an average enrollment for this academic year of 6,800, while the University budget for the present biennium was based on an aver age 7,000 enrollment. Cither , schools of North Car olina's Big Four also suffered drops in registration, but Car olina and N. C. State suffered most since they operate on the quarter system. W. L. Mayer, State's Director of Registration, reported yester day that approximately 200 stu dents eligible to return to school Eighth Abandons Osan, Wonju Area 'TOKYO, Tuesday, Jan. 9 () The retreating Eighth Army abandoned two important towns on, east and west sides '6f the front in South Korea Monday while Allied warplanes liigok. a heavy toll of the invading Chinese and Korean Com- munists In the west, Osan, almost GM To Originate Theater Group Since many students have shown the desire of participating in shows just for the fun of it, Graham Memorial is interested in offering as part of its winter program opportunities for acting, directing, and working with lights and scenery. The general organization will be that of a laboratory theater. All interested in this project are invited to attend a meeting this afternoon at 4:30 in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memorial. dence presented was insufficient to convict. The appeal was grant ed and the complete trial as con ducted by the Men's Council was reviewed. The Student Council decided that- the evidence available was insufficient to convict and the student was exonerated of the charges and the decision of the Men's Council reversed. Larry Botto, Charman of the Student Council, made the report for his group. Runaway Vt. Freshman Returns With Parents A 19-year-old ru n a w a y freshman from Norwich Uni versity, Vt. who was taken into custody here Friday with a bottle oi poison and several suicide notes among his pos sessions, returned home yes terday with his parents. Paul D. Lubarsky of Quin cy, Mass., was released by police yesterday morning to his mother and step-father. Police said the family left im mediately for their Northern home. Larbarsky, a quiet, nice- Press for the , winter quarter never showed up. At least half of these were attributed to the national emergency. Some Wake Forest students left school to enlist, college officials said, but there was "no flood oi withdrawals." R. B. Cox, Dean of Undergrad uates at Duke, said only 15 stu dents withdrew there over the Christmas holidays. He added that others have discussed with him plans to leave at the end of the current semester. The students generally are "up set and are wondering what to do," Cox said. 60 miles south of the 38th Parallel and 28 miles below Seoul, was given up without a fight. It is on the old "heart break highway" down which Americans and South Koreans first- retreated before the North Korean invaders last July. In the east, United Nations troops quit the burning road and rail hub of Wonju after a valiant delaying action that brought time for preparation of defenses farther south. More than 1,750 Reds were es timated killed, wounded or cap tured in ground actions and air strikes during Monday. Pilots reported the roads south and southeast of Seoul and north of Wonju were jammed with Reds pursuing the Eighth Army southward. "I've never seen so many people on the roads up there," said one veteran airman. "They were all moving south." While B-29 Superforts concen trated on the Seoul area, smash ing the runways of Kimpo Air field with bombs, jets and piston engined fighters and light bomb ers swooped on troop concentra tions near the Han River. Newman Talks Today At Faculty Lunch Dr. William S. Newman of the Music department will speak to the men's faculty today at I p.m. at the Carolina Inn. After the faculty luncheon, Dr. Newman will 'talk on- "Some Musical Satire." looking youth, came here over the weekend to visit a Caro lina coed whom he met about a year and a half ago. How ever, police picked him up at the Carolina Inn hours after his arrival. They had been notified by the Vermont school that Lubarsky was a runaway and his roomates had found a suicide note left by him. The coed said she only had known Lubarsky for three weeks. She said she did not see him while he was here. WEATHER Continued fair and cold. NUMBER GO U U mJ J WouidCperate Local Branch For Two Years $1 Million Under Sum Asked Here; Up To Legislature Special to The Dally Tar Heel RALEIGH, Jan. 8 Gov Kerr Scott and the Advioi Budget Commission tonijzb'l, asked the 19 5 1 Gem Assembly to' appropriate 917,748 to run the University at Chapel Hill for the next two years, an increase over the present biennium appropriation but more than a million dollars under the figure requested by the University. The University is operating under a $3,256,9Q9 budget for this fiscal year. It requested $4,380,- Special to The Daily Tur lU-el RALEIGH. Jan, 8 A $300,000 psychiatric wing to the new UNC hospital al Chapel Hill was among the $11,500,000 in permanent improvements at state institutions called for to night by Governor Scott. 020 for the 1951-52 fiscal year; the recommendation tonight was for $3,908,189. The request for 1952-53 was $4,729,117, while the recommendation was for $4,009, 559. For the Consolidated University and other state-supported col leges some $13,049,510 . was rec ommended for the first y-;u ;, r i $13,131,460 for the second of the biennium. A total of ahout (Sec $8 MILLION, pog,: AArs. E. Rive s Born Here, Dead At 46 GREENSBORO, Jan. () Funeral of Mrs. E. Earle Rives, 46, of 405 West Green way North, who died early today, will be held at the West Market Street Meth odist Church at 3 p.m. Wednes day. Mrs. Rives was the wife of Judge E. Earle Rives of Municipal County Court. Mrs. Rives, the former Mary Wheaton Tankersley, was bom in Chapel Hill. She moved to Greensboro shortly after hei marriage to Judge Kives, woo was then a student at the Uni versity of North Carolina. Survivors in addition to her husband include one son, Edwin E. Rives, Jr., a graduate studer!. at the University of North Caro lina, and two daughters, Mary Rosella and Frances Adelc of Greensboro. Sunday Papers Most students went out Sun day looking for their Daily Tar Heels from force of habit. But because of a budget cut necessitated by a drop in stu dent fees, the Publications Board last fall was forced to eliminate all Sunday issues of the campus paper for the rest of the school year. Students are reminded lh.ii those who usually bring notices of meetings and similar news up on Saturday should now bring it on Friday for Satur day mornins publication