. ? T" WEATHER Some cloudiness and mild with high today of 75. Yester day's high, 77; low. 58. CHURCH The church of your choice and its cer vices. See page 2. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 4 CHAPEL HILL. N. C SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY rsn liV Jl A f5 A f f IE I ? II - . o) JW P brief SEOUL, Korea American Sa bre jets shot down fQur Com munist MIG-15 jets and damaged three others yesterday. It set a new record in claims against en emy jet fighters for a single mon th by claiming . 55 destroyed, six probably" destroyed and 51 damaged. ABOARD EISENHOWER SPE CIAL General Dwight D. Eisen hower was met with a thunderous chant of "We like Ike" as he swept a political path across the Old North State yesterday aboard his special train. This whirlwind tour marked the general's second crack at the traditionally Demo cratic South. Still evading a de tailed discussion of the touchy civil rights issue, he - promised, however, that if elected he would "bring into government the finest women and men of what ever color, race or creed this country has. SPRINGFIELD, 111. Gov. Ad- lai E. Stevenson yesterday an announced that he would make public today the list of contribu tors and beneficiaries to his con troversial fund to augment sala ries of top state officials. He said there were 'eight .or nine" offi cials who received money from the fund and that he had con tacted all of them Thursday night to discuss making the fund pub lic. WASHINGTON Secretary of State Acheson said yesterday that Gen. Eisenhower was guilty of misquoting him and misrepre senting his views. He also said that the general "tortures the facts." Along with the accusa tions, Acheson related an ac count of how Eisenhower had supported a Far East defense line that did not include Korea, and yet blamed him for the start of the war. - ' i L IMjtaMatigaBitt'nriffwriiiii DUKE AMBASSADORS Miss Durham At Grail Shag The Order of the Holy Grail will hold its first dance of the fall quarter tonight at the Navl Armory from 9 until 12 o'clock. Tickets for the dance, which will be informal, will be on sale at the Armory tonight. The prices are 75 cents per couple and $1 each for stags. Music will be furnished by the Duke Ambassadors. ' Featured with t.hP band will be Miss Jean Tew, who won the Miss Durham titio tv.ic vpar. and nas been -. . OTDTT'o heard on recordings irom " -"Our Best To You." DTH Meeting A meeting for all students in terested in working for The Daily Tar Heel, will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Roland Parker Lounges, second floor of Graham Memo rial Students interested in any phase of journalism are urged to attend this meeting. Fad Facts For New Gals Coeds Hep To New Sf 11 i i mi liil llililiilllf r N ' ; " r i lilllllllillii h .tar -If!' ' HERE'S A GAL whose whole appearance spells style. Her green Iweed suit with boxed jacket is straight from the pages of Harper's Bazaar.' Her accessories point up the editor's report that "leather is big fashion news." The zippered bag and coidseamed gloves are made of tan pigskin a perfect leather in color and texture to go with rugged tweeds.-- '-;-- - - vI: - Graham Memorial Offers Facilities Graham Memorial, student union, offers Carolina students many opportunities and facilities to make their stay in Chapel Hill pleasant and profitable. Graham Memorial is probably best known for its main lounge on the first floor where the stu- i K f Jf X. l feel f International Students Set Meet Today International students are in vited to attend this mornings ac tivities of the International Stu dents Program. Here is the com plete schedule. . 9;45-lReport in YMCA Lobby for name tag. 10 Movie and explanation Of the game of football Gerrard Hall. m -45 Brief introductions by Parsu Amersey, president of Cos mopolitan Club. HCoffee in tne ixuxx Lobby. Meet companion for the afternoon. . , A I Everyone meet at x m and go to game together. Sponsors of the program were afraid the information has not reached many of the students due u0 rush of registration. Stu dents who will not be able to attend the morning's activities due to class conflict are urged to meet with the jest of the Itoud at 1 P-m. in front of the YMCA and attend the game. IB dents may gather to chat or read the latest magazines. The base mentof the building houses, is the popular Rendezvous Room where couples may dance and have re freshments. There is. also a wood shop in the basement where any one may come to worK ana a barber shop where haircuts cost only seventy five cents. Other facilities include a dark room lor tnose interested in photography and a travel agency hich is open from 2 o'clock to 4 o'clock daily. The travel agency will make train, bus, or plane re servations for any student and also will make arrangements for special groups who would like to charter a private bus. Manager Bill Roth urges all students to feel free to drop in any time and take advantage of these opportunities. Roth also called attention to the special exhibit now on dis play in Morehead Planetarium The display is composed of pic tures of the student unions and their furnishings at other schools, The University is asking for a new student union in the per manent improvements which go before the Advisory Budget Com mittee this Monday in. Raleigh 'We Major In Minors' Youth Center Replaces Popular Hangout For Carolina Students By Sam Holmes "It's just a case of switching from beer bottles to baby bottles." Ben Schreiber, operator of Harry's Delicatessen for nine years and who, with his wife now is operating a children's wear shop at the same location, was talking. The words were for old time Tar Heels who returned this fall to find one of the town's popular spots for food and jazz piano converted to, The Youth Center. Schreiber said he gave up the operation of Harry's because he i -. yjes By Deenie' Schoeppe Society Editor You've heard what the fas hion magazines lay are "musts" for the college !' girl: the "de butante slouch,'' the "midday effect," the fitted coat. Now the question most new coeds are asking is, "What does the Carolina Coed .wear?" As the main event o the day is the game, 'spose we begin there. I I Football games generally call for suits or (wool dresses (weather permitting), hose and flats or heels, as you like. How ever, it's a long; hike over hill and dale to the t stadium which makes the going not so good in heels, car or ho car. i For the Grail dance after the game, some people like to change into something dressier, though many will keep on the clothes they've" worn to the game. Next on the agenda is Rush Week. The Pan-Hel handbook tells you all you need to know, but here are a few last minute reminders;- the first parties on Monday and Tuesday nights are dressy heels, hose, dressy dresses and gloves. At the rest of the parties you'll be fine in sweaters and, skirts. On all occasions the Caro lina coed is in step with the latest fashion, with informality the order of the day. For week night dates yoiS 11 see " mostly sweaters and skirts when the date includes movies, the Goody Shop or the Rathskeller. For dancing, dinner dates and most weekend dates, dressier suits and dresses, as the, occasion demands. As for accessories, the wide leather belt is a great favo rite. The new heavy medallions and other large jewejry are quite popular also. Loafers and saddle shoes are still holding their own, though different colored flats in kid or suede are worn quite a bit. For that extra dash of color, bright scarfs are often added to suits or sweaters. But whatever you wear, wherever you go, that Carolina spirit will always be in style. Charlie Bernard III With Jaundice Charlie Bernard is at it again or still. The young assistant director of admissions has spent more time in hospitals the last three months than Dr. Kildare. Now he has a colorful case of yellow jaundice. Charlie was floored June 4 by coronary thrombosis and spent four weeks telling pretty nurses about Chapel Hill. After a couple of months he began feeling pretty good again and got in a fight with some foreigner named Influenza I and his friend Virus. ' was tired of working a 15-hour: day and because it didn't afford the kind of family and social life he wanted. He denied the rumor he was forced to close because police found beer on the table at Harry's after the curfew hour of mid night last spring. He said that when' the police found the beer on the table it was just two minutes past midnight, and that it was there only because of an oversight. The place was being cleaned up and he was working on his books T. JONES . Longhorn Quarterback Ex-Columnist Bill Buchan dies At 27 Bill Buchan, longtime Daily Tar Heel columnist, news writer and friend of all, died unex pectedly of a heart attack Thurs day in Jacksonville. He was 27. A native of Aberdeen, Bill had worked in Jacksonville for The News and Views since June, 1950 He served in World War II and returned to Chapel Hill where he enrolled in the University. Bill wrote a column for The Daily Tar Heel - called This 'n That, a collection he gathered in his nocturnal ramblings. He carried on in his column with an imaginary character named Wil bur Amberson who was as much a personality as Bill himself. Rolfe Neill, managing editor of The Daily Tar Heel, only yester day received a letter from Bill written about three hours before his unexpected death. As usual he was doing something for some body else, asking that we give a freshman a tryout for the staff. Bill was planning to come to today's game and "see everybody before the weekend is over." He is survived by his father, H. C. Buchan Sr., Charlotte, and four brothers, Lee of Aberdeen, John of Fayetteville, and Ralph and Carl of North Wilkesboro. Funeral was held yesterday at Bethesda Presbyterian Church at Aberdeen. Burial was in Old Bethesda Cemetery. RN. at the time, he said, and he stated that the ABC Board in Raleigh quashed the case when he ex plained the full facts. When he decided to close Harry's, Schreiber said, he still wanted to live in Chapel HilL and after a survey of the town's busi ness possibilities decided on the children's wear shop. The store, modernistic in design, opened September 2, and business has been good. The Schreibers' new motto is, "We Major in Minors." ! , - - I liiii :iiHiiiiiiliiPiii m .. ,. . . o. . M . ..... ... . . j BILL BUCHAN Split-T Party Will Feature Name Talent Tar Heels Test New Formation For First Time By Tom Peacock Head Football Coach Carl Snavely will unveil the brand new North Carolina split-T formation this afternoon at 2:30 when the Tar Heels open their season against the Texas Longhorns before an expect ed crowd of 35,000 in Kenan Sta dium. The Texans are highly favored to win today, with a smashing 35-14 victory over Louisiana Satte already to their credit. TEXAS Massey Lansford Sewell McDonald Branch Genthner Stolhandske Jones Dawson Pace Ochoa Pos. le It is c rg rt re qb Jh rh fb North Carolina Kocomik Fredere Foti Mullens Patterson Yarborough Adler Annilllo White Parker Wallace Longhorn head coach Ed Prices' charges shot to the top of the list of teams in the Southwest this week, while Carolina is rated no better than third in the South ern Conference. The Tar Heels will be using the .split-T .for the f first time in history today, Snavely previous ly being one of biggest advocates of the single wing. Texas also uses the' split-T, so the two teams will be using the same formation for the first time in this game, the fourth of the series. Quarterbacking Carolina in its bid to even the series at two games apiece will be junior Car men Annillo of Union City, N. J. Annillo, who earned the starting position after the injury of Charlie Motta, is considered more than capable in the difficult key spot of the split-T. Texas is loaded this year with both speed and power, and three Longhorns have been picked on many of the pre-season All Americas. Left halfback Gib Dawson, was All-Southwest Con ference last year, led the Confer 3iice in scoring, and is practically a unanimous choice on pre-season All-Americas. Fullback Dick Ochoa, 200 pounds and a dash man, is also touted as the best in the coun try, and the ,third' Texas pre season All-America, 210 pound and Tom Stolhandske, has been rated the best in the southwest for two years. Handling the team from the quarterback spot in the Texas split-T is T. Jones, who scored two touchdowns and passed to teammate Stolhandske for an other last week against LSU. There is no lack of power in the North Carolina backfield, but the Tar Heels have much less speed than Texas. Snavely fore saw the slowness as far back as last spring when Carolina switched to the T. The fastest man m uaroiina s Dacmieia is right half Chal" Port, a senior from Mifflington, Pa., and he isn't slated to start this after noon. In addition to Annillo, Carolina will have three hard running, ex perienced backs in the lineup, Annillo being the only non-letter-man. At left half is 21 -year-old junior Bob White of Lyndhurst, N. J., a letterman who saw a lot of action last year. Co-captain Bud Wallace, senior from Kins ton, starts at fullback, and will do the Tar Heel's punting for the second straight year. Wallace had a 39.9 yard average last year. Rounding out the Carolina backfield at right half is sopho more Larry Parker, a defensive (See TAR HEEL, page 3) HUGH REEDER . . Longhorn Center Cowgirl Tells Of Texas U. Life, Campus "By Anne Chambers Daily Texan Editor AUSTIN, Tex., Sept. 26 No matter what the football score, Texas wins from North Carolina. Next semester the third Uni versity of Texas president to come from Tar Heel territory will assume .office Dr. Logan Wil son indicating, as a compliment, that Texas accepts only the best, naturally. - Our best and loudest cheers won't be at the game Saturday, though. Few of us wranglers will be able to trade our 'hosses" or Cadillacs in for an Airplane in time to reach that North Caroilna frontier for the opening kick-off. Seriously, however, the Uni versity of Texas is neither a country club, nor a dude ranch. Our 12,000 students, coming from even the remotest parts of the vast Texas empire, are hard working (not specifying at what), typical American youth. We study only when absolutely necessary until seniors or even graduates. Our playtime is spent at Barton's Springs, the coldest swimming water south of the North Pole, or at coffee time in the Chuckwagon, student cafe teria. On warm, sunny days (which means year-round) we head for Lake Austin to fish, swim, and learn how to disengage ourselves gracefully from water skis. Par ties run from the very formal to the nightly beer-busts. We prom enade and- spend our few paltry pennies on the Drag, otherwise known as Guadalupe Street. If we are still bored, there are some 250 clubs or organizations we could join. And then there are other things ... The University of Texas once was confined to Forty Acres, but the Main University has since doubled its size and expanded in to eight branches located in other parts of the state. The most famous and favored building at the campus in Austin however, is the Tower, a 27-story structure which has hidden rooms that the architect probably doesn't even know about. When Texas comes out on top of game scores, the Tower lights are orange, and the building is a tall, colorful symbol of victory. We hope it will be so Saturday night. Damage Slight An early Wednesday morning blaze caused approximately $1,500 damage to the Carolina Club on the Greensboro high way just outside of Chapel HilL operator Charlie Siancil said yesterday. The fire was discovered by a neighbor at about 7 a-m. and was brought under complete control by the local fire de partment about 9 o'clock. The fixe was believed to have been started by a short circuit on a wire leading to a refrigerator compressor. The club will be reopened for customers by Monday.

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