Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 10, 1951, edition 1 / Page 1
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a u n C Library Serials Dspt. Chapel Hlll H . C, WEATHER . Increasing cloudiness and rather cold with some light rain in mountains, probably mixed with snow. High yes terday 42, low 15.1. IMPORTS One reason why there are so many imports is the Coed Visiting Agreement, says Chuck Hauser on page 2. 11 VOLUME LIX Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY ' 10, 1951 United Press NUMBER 92 mm. m UN Forces Plunge To Han River Edge; One Mile To Seoul Tanks Drive Through Blinding Snow Carrying War To Doorstep Of Capital TOKYO, Saturday, Feb. 10 (UP) American tanks and troops carried the Korean war back to the doorstep of Seoul yes terday, plunging through a snow storm to the Han River and a ridge only a mile from the cap ital's suburbs. force dashed four miles in-75 minutes without 'a fight . to "the bank of the Han 4-2 miles south east of Seoul. , It was dispatched personally by Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, commander of the 8th Army, after the storm kept Gen. Douglas MacArthur from The Communist defenders of j landing in Korea for the event. Seoul, their shattered ranks cut j GI's of the U.S. 25th Division took over a ridge just southwest Wildcat Stride On Railroads Comes To End Embargoes Lifted On Mail, Express As Jam Continues ' By United Press Railroad switchmen ended their 10-day wildcat strike yesterday and embargoes on the mails and Railway Express were lifted. Returning switchmen, spurred back to their Jobs by an Army No Effect itewas Seen hed By Snow; On Germans With the U. S. 25th Division in Western Korea. Saturday. Feb. 10 (UP) A U. S. Patrol last night stabbed into Inchon, port city for Seoul. by casualties and retreat from 100,000 to 10,000 in a shrinking nncl-pt Tif1rw thp Han virtnall v i , " ' fceoui s AT T" : . A ; gave up me ugni. iU ; raiders hammering the big. port the Allied onrush was light or ; 18 miles southwest of Seoul time non-existent. ! after time in recent weeks found A U.S. 3rd. Division tank 'it feebly defended. 'of Seoul looking a mile down on Yongdungpo, industrial com munity directly, across the Han from the ruined capital city. And a third task force wheeled northward along the west coast highway to within six miles of port of Inchon. Naval Appleby To Deliver Tomorrow ermon 7 REV. JAMES APPLEBY will deliver the University Sermon in Hill Hall at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Rev. James Applebv will be guest preacher at tomorrow's University Sermon at 8:30 in Hill-Hall. Dr. Appleby has been professor of evangelism and director of field work at the Union Theological Seminary since 1946. He has held many other outstanding positions since his graduation from Davidson College and the Union Seminary. ... . This is the fifth in the series of sermons sponsored by a student committee headed by Mike Mc Daniel. Ed McLeod, president of the YMCA, will preside at the ser mon. Dr. Bernard Boyd of the Department of Religion will in troduce Dr. Appleby. Special music will be under the direction of Richard Cox of the Music department. Organist will be Will Headlee. Dr. Appleby's subject will be '"A Time For Greatness." The time of the sermon has been moved from 8 p.m. to 3:30 to allow more people to hear this particular speaker, acclaimed by many to be one of the best in this part of the country, McLeod said yesterday. 'Your YWCA' Topic Monday The third meeting of the YWCA Junior Council Monday at 7 o'clock in the Monogram Club Room will center around talks by Gay Currie, Executive Director of the YWCA, and Ann Birming ham, Membership Chairman, on the topic "Your YWCA". The program will be an inform al" discussion of the YWCA as it functions on the Carolina campus. Junior Council Chairman Jean . Bloom urged all girls in the junior class to attend these week ly series of orientation on the workings of the YWCA. The of ficers and committea chairmen for next year are chosen mainly from interest shown by attend ance at the training programs. Samuel Wiley will conclude the series in a talk next week with a general look at the purposes and programs of the YWCA. CHICAGO. Feb. 9 (UP) Federal Judge Michael L. Igoe today fined the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen $25,000 for contempt of court in the . De cember switchmen's strike and acquitted individual defendants. ultimatum to work or be fired, tackled the task of moving the thousands of freight cars jam med up in yards from coast to coast. Rail officials estimated that it would take a week or more to clear the logjam of freight. But speedy progress was made in get ting ' passenger service back to normal. . At Washington, postmaster Jes se Donaldson lifted the embargo imposed last week on prattically all mail except letters, newspap ers, bank notes and medicines and other emergency supplies. The Railway Express Agency ako lifted all embargoes, effec tive as of last midnight, but ad vised shippers that there might be delays until the freight" jam up is cleared. The Army, acting, at the direc tion of .President Truman, order ed the strikers back to work and handed them a 12-Vz cent hourly pay boost. But while the switchmen went back to work, some grifmbled feelingly at the tactics of the gov ernment. They didn't like the charge of Mr. Truman that union leaders had acted like a bunch of Russians. Noted Pole Will Speak At YM Meet A. K. Niebieszczanski, repre sentative of the National Commit tee for a Free Europe, will speak to a general membership meeting ' ? -4v i-v I'll wit - - i v I . f n I i. A t I i i . "- - : nst"? Deepest Snow Since 1948 No Hindrance Cosmopolitans To Hold Show Tomorrow Singing, Dances Of Many Nations Will Be Featured Ray Anthony Puts Festivities In Full Swing Entertainment highlights from a dozen foreign countries will be offered University students " to morrow night with the presenta tion of the annual Cosmopolitan Club show in the Playmakers Theater at 8:30. Featured on the program will be songs and dances of many na tions, all done in native costumes, by foreign students at the Uni versity and other members of the By Don Maynard iClub. An inch of snow whitewash- The show is an annual affair ed Chapel Hill yesterday to and last year was rated a top dampen the feet but not the 'attraction of the year by students spirits of those attending the i who saw it. German Club Mid-Winter Dance featuring Ray Anthony A few : of the numbers to be presented will be a series of In- THESE 14 ATTRACTIVE YOUNG LADIES are sponsors for the annual Mid-Winter German Club dance. Ray Anthony and his orchestra is furnishing music for the dances held in Woollen Gym nasium from 9 to 1 o'clock last night and from 8 to 12 o'clock tonight. The orchestra will also give a concert in Memorial Hall this afternoon from 4 until 6 o'clock. Top row. left to right: Mary Strickland. High Point, with Jake Froelich. Jr., High Point, president of the German Club and representing the Beta Theta Pi fraternity; ; Kay Gilbert, Mt. Vernon, 111., with Bill Rue. Danville, Ky Sigma ChL secretary of the Club; Billie Jones, Hickory, with George S. Blackwelder. Jr Hickory. Phi Delta Theta. treasurer; and Judy Ellis,. Orlando. Fa., with Bill Wil liamson. Charlotte. Sigma ChL r - -V, . " . ' "'" ' " Second row: Elizabeth Roe, 'Wilmington, with Billy Quaxles, Rocky Mount, Phi Gammc. Delta; Joyce Bailey, Plymouth, with John B. Exum. Jr., Rocky Mount. Sigma Nu; Paula Whiiaker. Kinston, wiih Dan Perry, Kinston. Kappa Epsilon; Armecia Eure. Raleigh, with Norman Black. Greensboro. Beta Theta Pi; Marion Turner. Greensboro, with Bynum Rhodes Erown. Murfreesboro, Pi Kappa. Alpha. Bottom row: Julie Fulghum, Raleigh, with' Chuck Haywood, Sialesville, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Harriette Tebell. Charlottesville, Va.. with Ken Wallenborn, Charlottesville, Va.; Elizabeth Hamrick, Shelby, with Bill Bostic. Forest . City, Kappa Alpha; Martha Erwin. Durham, with Dan Uzzle, Dur ham. Phi Delta Theta: and Barbara Pasour. Dallas, N. C with David Allen, Greensboro, Delta Kappa Epsilon. and his orchestra last night, idian songs and dances by Sipra It was the heaviest snow j and Purabi Bose. daughters of Dr. since the record fall of eight andjBose of the Mathematical Statis-one-half inches in February, 1948, jtics Department; a Highland Fling but German Club officials saidand sword dance by Jim Wilson the dances and concert would go0f Glascow, Scotland, and Arrnen- on as scheduled. The concert this i ian songs by Shahen Haroutun- :ian, president of the Club. uiuuuuu in ixeiiiui ltii radii, wiu' be from 4 to 6 o'clock and the dance from 8 o'clock until mid night in Woollen Gymnasium. For the first itme since before the war, a German Club spokes man said, each of the Club mem- Peggy Moon, from Hilo, Hawaii, will do an authentic Hula-Hula, guaranteed by ex-Club President Jim Wilson to please the male portion of the audience. Wilson also described the num bers dates were receiving dance ;ber to be given by guitar-playing programs. ' iOlga Malina from Chile as having And, in line with a new Club 'rhythms "that would knock the Red Treacher Leaves NYU For Warsaw Juliette Alvin Plans Concert Tomorrow Juliette Alvin, international-1 Prague, Warsaw, Belgrade, Bu- ly known cellist, will give a con-' cert tomorrow at 4 p.m. in the Main Lounge of Graham Me morial. . - charest, and other European cit ies. She also toured the North African continent. . Her program Sunday afternoon political science, will be accom- j Brahms, Andante by Shumann, and Tarantelle by Popper. BULLETIN Court Of Honor The Orange District Court of Honor for Boy Scouts will be held at the University Metho dist Church tomorrow at 8 P-m. Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, national service frater nity, awards will be given for ib besi Scout Week window display, fcnd al0 there will be a showing x a technicolor movie on the local scout camp. NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP) New York University today an nounced the resignation of a Com munist woman professor of Eng lish who quit to take a position at the University of Warsaw in Communist Poland. In a letter to the University, Dr. Margaret Schlauch, 52, said: "I am afraid that the economic and political future at home is not j auspicious, not even for a Chaucer specialist, if such a person has been and still is a Marxist." New York University said she had been a good teacher of Eng lish. The University said she had done research for the government on "restricted"' projects during the war. . "Under our American system of academic freedom, no disciplinary action was taken against her be cause of her political beliefs as long as there was ho evidence that they interfered with her scholarship and classroom teach ing," the University said. "We will be interested to learn whether in years to come she will enjoy equal freedom at the Uni versity of Warsaw-as a teacher there." . V Dr. Schlauch was born in Phil adelphia. . Miss Alvin. the wife of Dr.-W.I will include Sonata by Sammar- of the YMCA Monday night at 8A Robson- v-isiting professor of j stein, Sonata in E Minor by o clock m tne i loooy upstairs. The discussion is open to the pub lic . Niebieszczanski will talk on "The Future of Freedom In Eu rope and a general discussion will follow the talk. The speaker was in Poland during the anti- Nazi resistance and at present is a member of the Polish Political Council in the United States. panied by Thomas Nichols, pi A pupil of Pablo Casals, she j first studied ".music at the Paris! WASHINGTON. Feb. 9 P) Conservatoire of Music, where ' Limited authoritv to draft 18 d'Excellence. ' t year olds, and extension of draft service from 21 to '24 months She has performed with lead-J was voted today by the Senate ing orchestras in Paris, Vienna, Preparedness Subcommittee. Admissions Is CPU Topic Tomorrow The Carolina Political Union will discuss the University ad missions policy at their regular meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Grail Room of Graham Me morial, i Roy Armstrong, director of ad missions, will answer questions at the discussion. Betty Cameron will present the views of the union and will also lead the student half of the - roundtabie discussion. v isitors are invited to join m j the meeting and to present their 1 varied opinions. Crusading Over The Notion ' Evangelist Billy Graham Might Go On Salary Because Of Much Criticism Of Love Offerings By Ralph L. Howland Associated Press Staff Writer Evangelist Billy Graham, who crusades over the nation, says he may go on a salary. The 32-year-old" well-groomed preacher says he is considering that because of some criticism he has heard of donations and "love offerings." Interviewed shortly before he addressed a crowd of 2,000 per sons in Memorial Hall here, Gra ham asserted his monetary affairs caused him no great concern. "I'd welcome a look at my in come tax returns," he said. Public subscriptions and other offerings have poured large sums of - money into local committees handling his campaign during the 20-odd months he has been rated GREENSBORO. Feb. 9P Billy Graham, the evangelist, will launch his four-week Greensboro revival Sunday, Oct. 4, in a 10,000-seat auditorium to be erected expressly for the evenL A 1.000-voice choir, to - bo recruited from Greensboro area churches; will provide a musical gackground for the young Bap tist pastor's "crusade," Plans for the revlyal were disclosed by executive committeemen of the Greater Greensboro Evengllstic Crusade at a lunchon meet ing with Graham here this week. - as one of the nation's top evange lists. Few people realize the enor mous expenses involved in this type of work. For example, his network weekly radio broadcast from Minneapolis costs $10,000, he said, and it is quite a task to keep up with the money. ; Actually, Graham said, hir needs are modest. He maintains a -home at Montreat,, where his i attractive wife ana rnerr mree daughters live. The rest of the money, after ex penses, goes to the Northwestern Schools at Minneapolis, of which he is president, to various chari ties, to missions, and radio work. 3ven nowfhe added, he is helping upport three missionaries on For mosa. Conversions there are jnazingly high,' Graham said. 1 Graham asserted he . was glad ithe question of . his financial af j fairs had been broached; he had Igiven it considerable thought. Now a complete team of audi tors will be engaged to keep a cent-by-cent check of his cam paign's income. Graham cited an example of what he meant by criticism of his fiscal affairs. He puued out a pocketbook, bordered with a me tal that resembled tin the kind one may see in almost any men's shop. It was given him "by a convert, he said. Recently he took it out of his pocket in a public place to pay a bill. There followed a letter to the eidtor in a newspaper, he went on, saying that Evangelist Graham pulled out a well-wadded pocketbook, bordered in gold. policy, the faculty and staff of the School of Business Adminis tration re, guests .of. the . Club." In ' the future, various departments of the University will be recog- nized in this way, the spokes man said. Female guests enroute to the dance last night were grateful for the ballerina -length formal gown, for the weather outside was frightful. Slush and mud threatened to ruin restyled "handkerchief -hem" gowns, or any evening dress which dipped within reach of the soggy ground. And low temper atures predicted for last night foretold of slippery footing for after-the-dance revelers. Motorists, too, wanting to park as close to the gym as possible found to their dismay last night that parking was at a premium, and will be again tonight if con ditions do not change. The intramural field parking area was "muddy and slick," ac cording to gym officials, and would remain unusable unless the weather cleared up today. No parking will be allowed on the field, a gym spokesman said. Motorists will have to try their luck at parking along the Raleigh Highway, on side streets and in the Bell Tower parking areal It all came about as the result of "heavy" snows which began Thursday night and were con tinuing through late last night. SOOToSee PT A Variety fenders off a jeep.' And a ouch of American talent will be the offering cf Jane Bish op of Swannanon who will pre sent a series of Appalachian bal- ads. Last on the program for the evening will be a skit to be given by the Club entitled, "Home Sweet Home Again.". It is de signed to portray the impressions of America foreign students might carry home with them. The show is being put on by the club for all students and towns people in recognition of the hos pitality they have found in Chapel Hill. All-Out Effort In Senate Bill A bill calling for practically total mobilization will be discuss ed by the Di Senate Monday night. The meeting is to be held at 7:30 on the third floor of New West. The bill asks that the draft be extended to include men between the ages of 18-35 and child .ess women between 18-30. The bill further recommends that a large segment of the economy be plac ed under the jurisdiction of a cen tral planning board. The Senate and guests will hear an introduction to the b;u by Dr. C. B. Robton, hd cf the Department of Political Science. Dr. Robson spent several months in Germany recently studying the social sciences at German -universities. He is familiar with the problems the U.S. faces in Eurcp. At least 3,000 people will wit ness the Second Annual PTA Variety Show here next Tuesday night in Woollen Gymnasium. Mrs. Clyde E. Mullis, chairman of the ticket committee for the big show, said that number saw last year's affair, but hoped that even more will be able to see this year's event. Nine acts, . ranging from child ren's musical and dancing groups to the Chapel Hill Concerto selec tion by Billy CarmichaeL Univer sity controller, have been plan ned. More than 300 performers will take part. The ninth act, only recently added to the show, ji; the. Chapel Hillians, a musical -quintette of Chapel Hill athletic btars. 'Roscoe' CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Feb. 3 (JP) The Harvard Lampoon. undergTadutte humor maga zine, today awarded actress Elizabeth Taylor a "Roscce" as the "most objectionable in genue" in motien pictures in 1950. The Lampon lagged Miss Taylor with the "worst fml? performance of the year" for her work in "The Conspirators" and hung e similar label around the neck of Clifton Webb among male actors for his per formance in "Cheaper by The Dozen." Miss Taylor particularly dis pleased the Lampoon cxiiirs. They also dubbed her and Dean Stockwell the "most cbjecticn able movie children of th-s year."
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 10, 1951, edition 1
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