fe-Sr-"Ss VJ.'?i;7'ii?? iltefe- rifj4r?-- Library e.hapel' Hili, 8-31-49 C, THE WAR The war and its effect on college manpower will be dis cussed by the CPU tomorrow night. See "Roundtable," page 2. f WEATHER Partly cloudy nnd continued warm. Ill VOLUME LIX Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1951 United Press NUMBER 77 mrnwm mm imn I nim im. "U" Lb LSUXj IT I I Gray Soys WV1 7s Not Inevitable . . By Andy Taylor ; University President. Gordon Gray put himself on record ?SSdoSdbS2f n0t read' to the inevitability of 1 the North Carolina stitute at a luncheon at the Caro- lina Inn, Gray also said that the United States should not consider withdrawing to this hemisphere "unless all else fails." He listed four goals that the United States should strive for in order'to keep the peace. Gray said that he was "quite aware" of the drift in the minds of people today toward passively accepting the only solution to world 'problems asa military one. He termed this tendency "very dangerous." "For my own part, I am not ready to make that assumption myself," the formed Secretary of the Army said. But, he empha sized, this view does not put him against the course now being taken in Washington. To put ourselves on equal terms with the Russians by building up our military might may enable us to talk peace "in the only terms those men in the Kremlin are able to understand," he said Gray listed as the four objec tives to be kept in mind in form (See GRAY, page 4) M. Bernstein Will Present Recital Here Pianist Melvin Bernstein will present a recital in Hill Hall Thursday night' at 8:30. Bernstein is an instructor in the Music Department. Originally, he studied music at the University of Michigan under Joseph Brink man. He received his master of music degree at that university. Later he transferred here to work on his master of arts degree in musicology. During a sojourn in New York, Bernstein studied privately with Irwin Freundlich. It was during his stay in Manhattan that he did solo and ensemble work at the Manhattan School of Music. Last spring Bernstein made a tour of the southeastern states. It was on this junket that he pre sented a series of Joint recitals with James Byerly. Bernstein is at present under the management of the Young Artist's Association of Memphis. Col. Shepard Leads CPU Talk Sunday Col. F. Carlisle Shepard, vete rans advisor for the University, will lead the discussion of the CPU Roundtable at 8 o'clock Sunday night in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. The group will discuss the cut rent manpower problems, the draft situation, and the world conditions of the present. The meeting of the CPU Houndtable is open to all students &f the University. Workshop An all-day Worship Work shop will get underway this morning at 10 o'clock in the Episcopal Parish House with an opening worship service, fol lowed by an address by J. C. Herrin on "The Essence of Wor ship." Other events of the program, sponsored by the YWCA. will luncheon for the delegates. ird panel discussions. Anyone on campus Interested U studying the essence and techniques of worship, is urged ,0 attend the Workshop. Solons Shout 'Brand Reds' In Resolution WASHINGTON, Jan. 19, (JP) An aroused House of Repre sentatives shouted approval today of a resolution urging the United Nations to brand Red China as an aggressor in Korea. In a terse 28 words, the resolu tion declared: "Resolved, that it is the sense of the House of Representatives that the United Nations should immediately act and declare the Chinese Communist y authorities an aggressor in Korea." Only a few "no" votes were audible as the members apprpved the policy statement by a voice vote. ' In the brief pre-vote debate, however, some Republicans con tended the resolution was tanta mount to a declaration of war on the Chinese Communists. However, Rep. Martin of Mas sachusetts, the Republican leader, said he did not construe it that way. Architects To Hold Meeting Tomorrow The North Carolina chapter of the American Institute of Archi tects will hold its annual sessions here tomorrow through Tuesday noon. In conjunction with the meet ing, the University Art Depart ment will show an exhibit in the Person Hall Gallery of the in ternationally known Miller Col lection, "Painting- Toward Archi tecture," which includes paint ings and sculptures by such ar tists as Picasso, Henry Moore, Al exander Calder, Georgia O'Keeffe, Lipschitz, Paul Klee, Theo Van Deesburg, Ben Nicolson, Leger, Kandinsky, . Gris, , Tamayo and Moholy-Nagy. There will also be a display in the Morehead Planetarium Gall ery of student work from the State College School of Design lor the benefit of the architects. Both 'Of Thee I Sing' : Talent - Laden Directors Leading Current Play makers Production By Charles Kellogg rrl trio of direc- tors is laboring all day and far into the night to get the Carolina tuneful showing of Gershwin's "Of Thee I Smg ready for its opening Jan. 27 at 8-30 in Memorial Hall'. The play will be repeated the following night. , . - . Director of the musical, and in charge of the entire production, is Bill Macllwinen, visiting lec- turer on orama. .... -- Fayetteville, he was active for many years as actor and director with the Red and Black Masquers of 'Davidson College After his graduation there, he was em Allied Forces Stabbing Deep Into Red Lines Wonju Reoccupied By 3 Tank Patrols; No Red Opposition 'TOKYO, Saturday, Jan. 20 (P) United Nations forces stabbed deep inside Red lines on three frozen sectors of the Korean front today in the face of an expected third all-out Communist offen sive. Three sizable Allied patrols, led by tanks, reoccupied Wonju on the central front Friday without opposition. The battered key rail and highway center had been abandoned by the U. S.' Second Division Tuesday. About 10,000 Allied troops jumped off across the snowbound east-central front Friday near Yongwol, 30 miles southeast of Wonju, and, with airpower help, killed an estimated 1,000 North Korean Reds. On the western front, where a marauding band of tank-supported doughboys has been harassing Red lines all week, brief skir mishes were reported near psan, 28 miles southeast of Seoul. Small, sharp patrol fights flared at many points along the Korean no-man's-land. A U. N. division staff officer said the Reds will strike "when they are damn good and ready." exhibits will be shown through February 25. The architects will convene at the Morehead building at 3 p.m. tomorrow when faculty mem bers of the School of Design will give brief talks. At 4 o'clock in Person Hall Serge Chermayeff, head of the Chicago Institute of Design, wijl discuss the pictures in the Miller , Collection. Both talks are open to the public. The. F. Graham Williams Com pany will show slides of last summer's Myrtle Beach meeting of the State chapter at 5:45 at the Carolina Inn, after which there will be a reception and a Dutch dinner. Monday morning at 9:30 there will be a business meeting in Ger rard Hall and at 11 o'clock an il lustrated talk by D. L. Chaney, engineer for the Portland Con crete Company. ployed as a leading performer with the famed Barter Theatre of Abington, Va. Macllwinen is an extremely gifted musician and composer. During the last war, while serv ing as a beachmaster in the Navy, he met actor Louis Hayward of Hollywood and his wife, Ida Lu pino. A close friendship resulted, eventually leading to their collab oration on the Playmaker musi cal "Apple Tree Farm," she writ ing the book and lyrics, he com posing the musical score. Most recently, he has directed with great success the Playmaker summer productions of "Born Yesterday" and "Twelfth Night." Iplt llllillllilillll ;'-- j - - - j III llliifcilllii y ' I - f i ' - - f- " -- -? mm ' , - s : ( s - , mf- iftimmftifrWinrwv,Ti'iMin " TMiirrrm' nirt"Tf'i'f f DR. U. T. HOLMES French Give U.T. Holmes Legion Honor M. Pierre Dupont, the French Consul in Washington, D. C, will present the medal of the Cheva lier of the Legion of Honor, one of the highest awards of the French Government, to Dr. Ur ban T. Holmes, Jr., Kenan profes sor of romance languages, at cere monies in the Morehead Building tonight at 9 o'clock. Notifying Dr. Holmes that he was to receive the medal, the French Ambassador, Henri Bon net, said the award was being made "for the eminent services that you have never ceased to render to the cause pf, the French language and culture by your researches in literature of the Middle Ages and by your teach ing in the University of North Carolina." Preceding the presentation cer emony, to which the public is invited, there will be a banquet in honor of Dr. Holmes and M. Dupont at the Carolina Inn at 6:30. Dr. Rene HarHfe, professor of French in the Woman's College at Greensboro, will preside. Spon sors for the banquet will be mem bers of the French community of Chapel Hill. Dr. Holmes, who received his A.B. degree from the University of Pennsylvania and his Ph. D. from Harvard, came here as full professor in 1927. Since that time Ball To Talk To Geologists Dr. J. R. Ball, retired professor of paleontology at Northwestern University, will speak on "An Old Student Talks to Young Students" at New East on Mon day night at 8 o'clock. Dr. Ball is being presented by the Sigma Gamma Epsilon fra ternity. He has joined the staff of the Geology Department here temporarily as professor of pa leontology and stratigraphy. John Lehman, who operates the Lehman Dance Studio in Cha pel Hill, is doing the choreog raphy, and dancing the leading role. A junior student in the dra matic art department, he, worked with the Raleigh Little Theatre before entering the service. Assigned to the Far Fast Com mand, he put in a lot of time as actor, dancer, and director for the Ernie Pyle Theater in Tokyo. It was Lehman who created the dances for "The Lost Colony" at Manteo and the Playmakers' "Spring For Sure." The massive chorus, comprising (See PLAY - page 4) McGrath Says Students Must Get Deferment f Proposes Leaving : Half Of Frosh, All Others In Classes i WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 (JP) Earl J. McGrath, U. S. Commis sioner - of Education, roused a storm today with a proposal that Congress defer from military ser vice half the college freshmen and all the sophomores, juniors and seniors to finish their studies. McGrath told reporters that the Senate Preparedness .Subcommit tee, which gave the proposal a hot reception, had completely missed his point. "I intend to ask to be heard again, and I believe I can show them this is not so very much different from what they already are considering," McGrath said. In his testimony, McGrath es timated the suggested deferments would apply to about 836,000. Of this number, he figured in a later statement, 500,000 are in reserve officers' training, are draft exempt or are physically un fit, leaving 336,000 who he says should be allowed to complete their college studies if at all pos sible before entering the armed forces. Senator Chapman (D-Ky) asked McGrath whether he wasn't pro posing something like "a pseudo aristocracy of intelligence" which would "bring down on that fa vored class the maledictions of those not in that class." Senator Johnson asked Mc Grath, "Where are we going to get our army if we do that?" Mc Grath said he could not under stand how the draft age man power pool should be so small. Heart Conference At Medical School More than 100 doctors, nurses, social workers, State Department members representing public and health"- instruction, teachers and laymen will assemble here today for an all-day Heart Conference. The meeting is being sponsored by the North Carolina Heart As sociation and sessions will be held in the auditorium of the Medical School. . ' ' One of the principal speakers will be James H. Stone, program field consultant of the American Heart Association who will ad dress the final general session at 4 p.m. Chief purpose of the conference is to discuss possibilities for im proving facilities and services for sufferers from' diseases of the heart and circulation. Pointing out that this is the first conference of its kind in this state, Dr. E. , A. Stead, Jr., Durham, president of the North Carolina chapter, said "its effects can be of far-reaching signifi cance if, as we anticipate, it will lead to a concrete program grow ing out of actual needs." The opening general session will begin at 10 a.m. with a wel come from Dr. Stead and a state ment of the purpose of the con ference and methods of proce dure. Lutheran Students Will Hear Dr. Nash Dr. Arnold Nash, head of the Department of Religion will be guest speaker at the Lutheran Student Association tomorrow evening at 6:30 at the Lutheran Parsonage, 300 East Rosemary Lane. N Postponed' Collegians Now Don't Have To do Into Army Compiled From Wire Services of The' Daily Tar Heel WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 Defense Secretary George C. Marshall today announced a new enlistment policy for draft age college students under which they will be given a chance to choose the service they want to join. - Students now will be permitted to enlist in the service of their choice in a period start ing 90 days before the end of the school year and ending 30 days before graduation. They will be allowed to finish the school year before being inducted. Under the old regulations, the armed services could not accept a voluntary enlistment from a man who had received notice to report for a pre-induction physical examination. Students now may enlist after receiving the notice. ; : ; ; : : Under the old plan, the student H ike In M an power Might Be Required WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 (UP) Adm. Forrest P. Sherm an, Chief of Naval Operations, said today the present military manpower goal 3,462,000 men and women probably will have to be raised again before it is reached. "I believe that unless international conditions improve, we may well have to. set a new tar get as we approach this target," he told the Senate Preparedness Committee. The Defense Department plans to have 3,462,000 soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen -in' service "as soon as possible" after June 30, 195i: Sherman told the Com mittee he considers this a . "very useful first objective." Sherman appeared before the Committee to endorse the admin istration's .universal military training and service bill based on a proposal to draft 18-year-olds for 27 months of service. Other top military leaders are to testify later. t Sherman said the bill would provide the force needed now plus "badly needed" reserves" that could be mobilized in case of all out war. The Navy, he explained, will continue to base its recruiting on voluntary enlistments as far as possible. - ' Dr. R. L. McMillan, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, will preside over the group of physi cians in attendance, and Dr. Eliz abeth Kemble, Dean of the Uni versity's School of Nursing, will preside over the second group composed of nurses, social work ers, teachers and health educators for the purpose of discussing their respective professional education al methods. Branded 'Atrocity' Murdered GIs' Bodies Found Frozen In Korea By William Chapman EAST CENTRAL FRONT, KO REA, Jan. 19 (UP) An Ameri can patrol today discovered the frozen bodies of eight American's and one South Korean who ap parently had been murdered by their North Korean captors. "I would say It is definitely a case of a war atrocity," said .Lt. Col. S. J. Newsom of San Diego, Calif., a Division surgeon. Newsom said the men had been killed with a Russian "burp gun," a small caliber submachine gun. All had suffered many wounds, and two bodies showed signs of severe beating about the head. All the murdered men had been shot in the head. , "There was every evidence -that they were shot at close range," Newsom said. The nine bodies had been dis Rev. Jones Will Deliver UNC Sermon x "... Unto Caesar . . .and . . . Unto God ..." will be the Uni versity sermon that Rev. Charles Jones, minister of the Presby terian Church here, will deliver tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Hill Hall. This will ' be the second n a series of non-denominational ser vices presented by the University Sermon Committee to bring out standing speakers to the campus. The first sermon was given by Dr. Benard Boyd last quarter. Mike McDaniel, chairman of the committee, will preside over the sermon, and introduce the speaker. The music for the service will be provided by Will Headlee of the Music Department who has become the regular organist. Richard Cox, also of . the Music Department, will lead a volunteer choir in a program of music which includes a chorale from "Sleepers Awake" by Bach. The sermon will be conducted on the order of a regular church service of about an hour's length. An offering.. will be received to go in a special fund for the per petuation of the University Ser mons. Maurice Kedder of the Religion Department will deliver the ser mon next week. For future ser mons in the series outstanding men in throughout the state have been engaged to speak. - covered in a group in the snow covered mountains of the east central front. The men, incjuding one officer and two enlisted men, had been on patrol in the hills five days ago. '- Surrounded and cut off by en emy guerrillas, the men apparent ly had surrendered. Their fate was not known until today. Apparently the North Koreans i lined up the United Nations sold iers and shot them from the back. Some of the bullets had entered from the side, indicating the GI's had tried to run or fight for their lives. Some of the bodies had been robbed of their warm clothing. Nine pairs of shoes and most of their trousers had been removed. Their jackets were bloody and bullet-torn. getting a draft call automatically was destined for the Army. As a result, the Defense De partment said, numbers of them Consolidated University Pres ident Gordon Gray said last night the change in student draft rules ought io "pretty well eliminate the unrest on various college campuses rising out of students' desire to choose the branch of the service they prefer." Gray said he was "very pleased tht the Defense De partment has clarified the stu dent situation" and that he hoped that the students would once again be able to turn their attention to their studies. dropped out of school to volun teer and get their choice. The new order permits them to wait until near the end of the college year before signifying their choice. Specifically, the ser vices will accept enlistments in the two months prior to the final month of the term. Therf the en listees will not be called until the term is over. The rule is effective immedi ately. Officials said, for example, that if a college student got a draft notice tomorrow he will have an automatic deferment un til March or April and then can enlist in the service of his choice. Meanwhile, education leaders meeting' here spoke out for let ting college students complete their courses before taking their military training under the ad ministration's proposed new uni versal service law. Views on the bill, which would , lower the draft age from 19 to 18 years, were expressed at a con ference of representatives of or ganizations belonging to the American .Council on Education. James B. Conant, president of Harvard University, called for support of the bill on the grounds the educational process can most conveniently be interrupted for military service at the age of 18. However, he urged that under (See DRAFT, page 4) Student Party Meet Monday The Student Party will hold its regular weekly meeting Monday night in Graham Memorial and individual nominations will be accepted for spring elections. Chairman Bill Prince said the final Student Party nominations will be made in about four weeks. Prince reguested that all mem bers be prompt in attending the regular weekly meetings, which will start at 9 o'clock. Those who are interested in student government and campus politics are asked to attend the meetings and discuss campus problems. Deyton Wins Old East Dormitory elected John Deyton. senior from Spruce Pines, as vice-president Thursday. Deyton defeated ( Wayrie Roberts in the run-off wiin a vote ot z-n. John succeeded his brother. Walter Deyton, who moved in to the job when former Presi dent Van York accepted a posi tion with Burlington Mills at the end ot fall quarter. . id ti ll - id n- -A .it ll