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Serials Dapt Chapel Hill " CR1MI Those pardoned Nazi war criminals are a - danger to the world, says Lewis Ripps, page 2. N.- C. WEATHER Increasing cloudiness and rather cold with some light rain in mountains, probably mixed with snow. High yes terday 42, low 15.1. ! Z i . "V. VOLUME LIX Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N.'C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1951 United Press NUMBER 91 (Cm mr$ -aW ifi ivn 1 .1 K - "- V , 4 ' til -.1 i ' V it- Eli RAY ANTHONY AND HIS ORCHESTRA will provide the music for tonight's German Club dance in Woollen Gymnasium, tomor row's Memorial Hall concert and another dance tomorrow night at the gym. German Dance Set Starts This Two formal dances and a Sat urday afternoon concert by Ray Anthony and his orchestra, plus a round of parties will highlight the traditional Mid-Winter Ger man Club festivities here this weekend. The Women's Interdormitory Council has granted 2 a.m. per mission to coeds attending to night's dance, scheduled from 9 until 1 o'clock in Woollen Gym nasium. Only girls planning to attend the dance will be extended the late permission, however, and reg- Dance Rules Emphasized For Students Students planning to attend the various German Club functions tjhis-weekend were reminded yes terday that the rules and regula tions - of the University Dance Committee will be in effect for all of the. activities. ' The four rules especially em phasized by the Committee were: 1. No person is permitted to . leave the dance hall during the evening with the intention of re turning unless accompanied by a chaperone during his or her en tire stay. 2. Anyone showing signs of drinking or other misconduct will be asked to leave the dance. 3. Anyone bringing intoxicat ing beverages on the dance floor is automatically suspended in definitely. 4. No smoking and no refresh ments will- be allowed on the dance floor at Wooll c-rv Gymna sium. ' The Committee also asked that students attending the concert comply with the no smoking rules in effect in ' Memorial Hall. The group expressed its wish that interested students feel free to call on the Committee with sug gestions that might help them and their datss better enjoy the week ' end. Inflation OLYMPIA. Wash., Feb. 8 (UP) Inflation note: A bill was introduced in the stale legislature today increas ing from $25 to $75 the amount a person must steal before his crime, changes ' from petty to grand larceny. Evening ulatiohs require that they sign out and in on leaving and returning. to their dormitories. Tomorrow afternoon's concert will be given in Memorial Hall from 4 to 6 o'clock. Sharing the spotlight with Anthony and his band will be Ronnie Deauville, Betty Holiday, and the Skyliners. Admission to the dances and concert will be by German Club passbook only. The Club is spon soring all of the activities. Tomorrow night's dance will take place again in Woollen Gym from 8 until 12 o'clock. Both danc es are formal. This in Anthony's first appear ance at the University. He will journey here from Washington where he played last night for the University of Maryland Sen ior Prom. The Anthony band bears a. great similarity to the late Glenn Mil ler's orchestra. Anthony himself started out with Miller before the war. : Studying Our Methods Education School Hosts To Japanese Guests The School of Education served as host to a group of visiting Jap anese educator-librarians here yesterday. - Cosmopolitan To Give Show Sunday Night 'The Cosmopolitan Club will present its" annual show in the Playmaker Theater Sunday eve ning at 8:30. . Featured will be the Highland Fling by Jim Wilson, Armenian folksongs by Shahen Haroutun ian, Indian songs and dances by 5ipra arid Purabi Bose, and a skit entitled "This is Carolina." The .Cosmopolitan Club is an organization of foreign students and other interested students on campus. "The club wishes to contribute to campus life arid shov its grat itude to their American hosts by presenting this show," President Haroutunian said. W. Remington Receives Fine, Imprisonment Federal Judge Refuses Bail For Perjurer NEW YORK, Feb. e (UP) William W. Remington, former $10,000-a-year government econ omist, was sentenced the maxi mum today five years in prison and a $2,000 fine; on conviction of lying under oatW in denying he ever belonged to the Communist Party. Federal Judge Gregory F Noonan imposed the sentence, declaring that Remington's con viction last night by a jury of seven women and five men involv cd not only perjury but loyalty to his country. The judge refused to free Rem ington on bond "at this time: pending his appeal of the verdict Defense attorneys indicated they would take the case to the Court of Appeals and ask the higher court to grant bail. U.S. Attorney Irving Saypo asked for the maximum penalty for perjury, saying: "The crime was compounded by his (Remington's) further per jury in ,the course of this trial Intertwined is the terrible hurt that he has done to our country in betraying his trust by participa ting in the delivery to a foreign agent of important secrets of our government." The tall, handsome, sandy-haired former Commerce Department economist, impassive through the trial and even on hearing the ver dict last night, appeared shaken at Saypol's demand. Sign Up Now For Rooms All dormitory residents wish ing to keep their rooms for the spring quarter must sign the dorm advisor's list before Feb. 14, it was announced yesterday by Housing Director James Wads worth. The advisers in all of the men's dormitories will have 'a list pre pared and it is the responsibility of residents to sign up before the deadline. Otherwise, they will lose their room assignments. The group included seven men, all representatives of different types of school libraries in Japan, ranging from elementary schools through secondary schools and universities to those dealing with problems of adult education. The Japanese visitors are visit ing school libraries in Williams bury, Norfolk, Richmond, Raleigh, Durham, Washington, Newark, New York City, Cleveland, Kala mazoo, Chicago, Urbana, and San Francisco under the sponsorship of the U.S. State Department and the U.S. Office of Education. Their visit to this area was under the supervision of Miss Jane Wilson, Supervisor of Ele mentary Schol Libraries in the Durham city schools. B-45 Jet Crashes Near Elizabeth City ELIZABETH CITY, Feb. 8 (UP) An Air Force B-45 jet bomber, two engines afire, crash ed and burned 10 miles north of Belhaven at 1:36 p.m. today, sec onds after its three crewmen bail ed out at 11,000 feet. 1 ' ' H ' ; si - y 2,000 Pack Memorial To Hear Bi I ly Graham ' .By Chuck Hauser Evangelist Billy Graham" may not have converted anybody last 'night,' but he visibly impressed more than 2,000 persons who sardined into overflowing Memorial Hall to hear the 32-year-old preacher call for a rebirth of Christianity. Students, faculty, townspeople and country people jammed the aisles and standing room of the auditorium in a crush reminiscent of the mob Burl Ives attracted on the Student Entertainment Com mittee series last year. It was past 8:15 when the evangelist took the rostrum, but practically, every seat in Memorial hall was filled by 7:30. At 8 o'clock chairs were brought up on the stage for the1 overflow audience. Dressed in a natty light brown double-breasted suit with, a (See BILLY, page 4) GI'sTi TOKYO, Friday, Feb. 9 () Enemy resistance on the road to Seoul crumbled Thursday as two veteran American divisions tight ened the noose on Chinese Reds trapped south of the Han River in western Korea. ' .Tiger-faced tanks of the U. S. 25th Division raced within f our miles of the city's western out skirts and lobbed shells into the fire-blackened carcass of the old capital. ; -,"" . ; , Punching ahead steadily f fiotxi he southwest, Puerto Rican in fantrymen of the famed U. S. 3rd Division stormed a high hill four id one-half miles from Red- held Seoul. Third Division, howit zers thumped Chinese positions north of the Han. Chinese troops, caught between the death-dealing guns and bay onets of these two divisional col umns, face almost certain de struction. ' Enemy losses, mostly Chinese and mostly in the west, already have exceeded 57,000 by official estimate since the 8th Army be- ?an its limited offensive Jan. 25. The U. S. 8th Army said in a terse announcement Thursday: "Destruction of Communist forces in the pocket south of the Han in the western sector, the objective of the current phase of the limited offensive, is pro ceeding and may sum up as a sizable victory in terms of en emy losses. . - . . "No further implications should be attached to the present situa- Phi Assembly Votes U.S. Stay In Korea A resolution . to withdraw U.S. troops from Korea was defeated Tuesday night at a Phi Assem bly debate. ' Visitors as well as members vot ed overwhelmingly against the withdrawal Of troops. Midwinter Conference ante OnTrappedE What The Lord Requires Of Us Topic Of Dr. Anderson At Montreat Dr. Bernard Anderson, as main speaker of the University Mid- winter Conference at Montreat, has chosen as lecture topics "Choose Whom You Will Serve," "What The-Lord Requires of Us," and "Faith Working Through Love." The former Gray Professor oi Bible on this campus will speak the nature of revelation and the on "God's Victory in Christ" as nature of faith, the authority of his final Sunday morning sermon, the Bible, and Christian worship. Anderson is currently a profes-- Concerning what the Lord re sor at Colgate-Rochester Theo- quires ;, of Christians, Anderson logical Seminary in Rochester, wiU explain the theme, the ques N. Y. Tie has; been invited as ; tion of "man in the image of God" guest speaker for the Montreat the 'Christiari attitudes toward Retreat, sponsored by the YM and : embtioh arid sex, and the Chris YWCA, from Feb. 16 to 18. tian attitude toward time and tal - t u r e IfTiS a n n Noose nemy ation." That was an Eight Army re minder from the commander, Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, that the objective of the present irive was to kill enemy troops. Two In One Departments Collaborate On 2 Operas It will take the collaboration of men and women in several departments of the University to make possible the presenta tion of the two operas which will be given this year under the same billing. The first is "Down In The Valley," an American opera by Kurt Weill, based on a Ken tucky folk-song which utilizes a chorus of 30 with four leads. The second is Mozart's comic opera, "Bastien and Bastienne," written when he was only 12 years old. The staff, headed by Joel Carter, consists of production directors Fred Young and Wray Thompson of the Dramatic Art Department; set-designer Tom my Rizzutto and light-designer Barbarer Skinner, also of the Dramatic Art Department; choreographer Ruth Price, as sistant professor of physical ed ucation; and chorus-master Max Lindsey of the Music Depart ment. Final tryouts for the operas will be held Sunday" afternoon at 3" o'clock in Hill Hall. Stu dents and townspeople are in vited to participate. The title 'of the conference will be "The Christian Answar" based on the ivew testament, meme, "Thou shalt love tho Lord thy GGod with all thy heart, soul, mind and. strength, and thy neighbor as thy self." ,'In the first talk, Dr. Anderson will deal with the "God-question" ears Nominations Would Create Selection Unit For 3 Councils Heavy Opposition Expected For Bill At Next Session By Don. Maynard With an eye to ridding the student judiciary arm of polit ical influence, Student Party Floorleader Bill Prince last night introduced a bill in the Student Legislature creating a non-partisan board to name candidates for election to the Student Council and the Hon or Councils. Introduced as one of three bills by Prince, also the SP chair man, the bill was referred to committee and will come up at the next Thursday night session. It would do away with party nominations without the sanc tion of the selection board. It calls for a "judiciary selec tion board" similar in purpose to the Bipartisan Selection Board now picking Men's Honor Coun cil candidates. The present Bipartisan body is made up of representatives from both parties who select from ap plicants the candidates for vacant Men's Honor Council' seats. However, the new board would be comprised of the chairmen of the Men's, Women's and Student Councils, two additional members from each council and three at large members to be appointed by the student body president. The new body would consider applications for open seats on any of the councils, either reject ing or approving the application. Approved candidates would be qualified to run on either of the party tickets. Disapproved applicants would be eligible to run for the seats independently, but could not be nominated by either of the parties. Stipulating that of the 12-mem-ber board, seven would be re quired to compose a quorum, the bill also states that a dissenting vote of two of the members would be sufficient to disqualify a candidate. Observers predicted last night that the bill would find heavy opposition at the next session of the Legislature, when the bill comes out of committee for con sideration. Introduced by Julian Mason was a group of amendments changing the wording of the Elections Law and providing for a change in the present election districting. ents. For the final lecture, there will be comments on the social con cern of Christianity and the Christian motivation for social action. CoTifei-ence Co-Chairmen Nan cy Her and Mike McDaniel yes terday urged interested students and faculty members to register in the Y Lobby from 9 until 1:30. Total cost for the conference is $13.50, with $3.50 payable at reg istration and the remainder upon leaving the Montreat Hotel. Transportation will be provided for the group which will leave Chapel Hill Friday afternoon, Feb. 16. . T Medics Aid In Fight Oh Tuition Increase Sudden Surge Of Interest Is Noted By All Medical Affairs Divisions Here By Edd Davis A eudden arm of enthusiasm has gripped students in the Medi cal Affairs division in the cur rent campaign against' increases in tuition, John Sanders, president of the student body, said yester day. The campaign, designed to prevent the proposed increases as suggested by the Advisory Bud get Commission, is being backed by student government. "Many students have assured me of their full cooperation since the recent apearance of an article in The Daily Tar Heel noting the lack of interest in the campaign," he said. "The campaign is well . under way, gaining" progress rapidly and in a well organized man Students Join Both Parties Robson Says England Urges Campus Politic By Owen Easley Britain encourages full student participation in a broad range of political activities on and off the British campus, Dr. William A. Robson informed a student and faculty group Wednesday night. The visiting professor of polit- Student Lifts 'Dogs Steak Inside Book DENVER, Feb. 8 (UP) A 26-year-old University of Col- . orado student was fined $10 in police court today for walk ing out of a Denver super market with a package of weiners and a pound of steak between the pages of a hol-lowed-out text book. Milton A. Herslater was charged with carrying away the meat between the pages of "The Illustrious Life of Wil liam McKinley, Our Martyred President." ' He was taken before Police Judge Omar Garwood. Hcrsh alter told the judge that he purchaired the book some time ago and hollowed out the pages as a hiding place for valuables while attending the Boulder, Colo., school. He said he was on a shop ping tour for his girl friend when he saw the meat and realized he had the bo6k with him. Garwood fined him $10 and gave him a 30-day suspended jail sentence. Conant Says Draft All 18-Year-Olds BOSTON, Mass.. Feb. 8 (UP) The president of Harvard Uni versity last night urged Congress to draft all able-bodied males 18 years old into military service as the best way to prevent a third World War. "We have no time to lose," Dr. James B. Conant warned. He said the free nations of the world must build up their armies quickly, to maintain the margin of military superibrity they.lbst whien Soviet Russia discovered the secret of .the atomic bomb. . , ner," Sanders explained. Sanders pointed out that mim eographed material will be dis tributed to each school in the division stating the facts involv ing each school. Included in the material to be presented are the tuition rates ,f the 1948-49 period, the 1950-51 period, and the new rates pro posed by the Commission. "It will be important for every student to carefully examine the printed matter," Sanders said. "Students of the Medical and Public Health schools will find that their tuition under the pro posed rates would be almost double that of the present rates." The present tuition rates in the School of Medicine are $300 for (See TUITION, page 4) s ical science from the London School of Economics and Political Science spoke informally on the political activities of British stu dents at a meeting sponsored by the Carolina chapter of Students for Democratic Action. "It is quite valuable that this atmosphere of free political in quiry and participation pervadt'.s the life of the British colle; and university student since," th speaker noted, "the university has proved the nursery from which public leaders are drawn." Better than producting campaign-wise national leaders, Iht active give and take of political debate, Dr. Robson declared, has developed an ability to make in dependent judgment on issues. Political consciousness bred into the student during his formative years also enables him to evalu ate propaganda appeals and un derstand the real meaning of campaign promises. On one of several occasions when the visitins overnm.-nt and political expert drew an ap preciative chuckle from his audi ence, Dr. Robson explained that some few students take the scare h for a political philosophy serious ly enough to join both the Lubnr and Conservative campus clubs. Large numbers of students jnin one or more campus affiliates cf the national parties. Party leaders take a strong in terest in campus groups and v.. t frequent appearances to di.-xvi national problems and pirt.v policies. Student rtriprocate th interest by gving personal a t - ance to the party durinc elctuvi campaigns and other genra activities. Green EAST LANSING, Mich., Feb.. 8 (UP) Eighteen-year-cli Nancy HeLder, Michigtn Stai College Freshman, said to-ia' she was getting a lit tie tired cf people questioning her about her green hair. "It's just l'ke anyone elss's hair," she said, "except thai it's green." Nancy, who lives in Milwau kee, Wis., said she wanted tr shock everyone at a party, n she dyed her hair with - vegetable dye. "And now it won't wash c . 1, she iaid, staring helplessly : a mirror.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 9, 1951, edition 1
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