Aaw-Mii. n n i-iinn,., jfcnun - ' " ' - , .-
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t: i: cr Library
Serials Espt,
WEATHER
Fair and cooler with
70 high vlay. Yester
day's high, 77; low.
43.
GROMWELL
Snook goes to bat
for Snook. See Non
plus, p. 2.
VOLUME XLI NUMBER 22
CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1952
FOUR PAGES TODAY
-Hr - -V -V, -"W -N
7 IS ..f,rf,
Hil B III ill I I
3
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. - - - ,
r. Mason
ecifral On
DR. WILTON MASON
Paul Green
To Speak At
Drama Meet
The 30th annual conference
of dramatic art teachers and di
rectors, sponsored by the Car
olina Dramatic Association, will
be held at the University next
Saturday. -
A short business session in the
Playmakers Theater, presided
over by Bristow P. Hardin Jr
of Charlotte, president, will open
the meeting.
Speakers for the morning ses
ion will include Samuel Selden,
head of the University's Depart
mpnt of Dramatic Art. whose
topic will be "What Makes Dra
matic Effect?"; Dr. Elizabeth
Welch, Winston-Salem, "Behind
Red Velvet;" Ainslie Pry or, Ral
eigh, "The Community Theatre
as a Career"; Mozelle Causey,
Greensboro, "Play. Selection";
and Peter Watling, London, Eng
land, on "Your Theatre and
Ours."
Paul Green, noted author and
playwright, will be the featured
speaker at the luncheon session
in Lenoir Hall. Green, who re
cently returned from an extend
ed visit to the Orient, will dis
cuss and compare oriental and
occidental dramatic arts in his
talk. "Theatre East and West."
Sponsored by the University
and the General Education Board
of the Rockefeller Foundation,
Green's mission as cultural am
bassador between the two hem
ispheres included the study of
drama, music and dance in
number of nations among them
.Tanan. Malava. Thailand, India
and Greece and lectures oi
these arts taken from his Amer
ican experience with them.
Hp snoke to many student
groups and before cultural and
academic organizations, and saw
at first hand dramatic practices
hundreds of years old in Japan
and India, of which the West is
beginning to make use.
The public is invited to the
meeting, and delegates will be
guests of the Carolina Playmak
ers at the Saturday evening per
formance of "Death of a Sales
man." In addition to President Har
ris rvffir of the CD A are Mrs.
Alma Elkins, Whiteville high
school, vice-president, and John
W. Parker, Chapel mil,
tive secretary.
Thirty
The Yackely Yack is seeking
30 more copies of last year's
yearbook.
Anyone interested in selling
their copy is asked to bring it
by the Yack office on second
floor Graham Memorial. A nom
inal price will be paid for books
in good condition
No yearbook pictures will be
taken today.
R
To Give
Tuesday
i Dr. Wilton Mason of the Un
iversity music faculty will in
augurate this season's series of
recitals and concerts when he
gives a piano concert in Hill Hall
Tuesday at 8:30 p. m.
The public is invited and there
is no admission charge.
His program will include pi
ano works by Bach, Haydn, Kab
alevsky and Chopin, featuring
the latter's great Sonata in B
Minor.
Well known to local and state
audiences, Dr. Mason has ap
peared as soloist with the North
Carolina Symphony and has been
both piano and harpsichord so
loist with the Raleigh Chamber
Music Guild.
A charter member of "Ac
companists Unlimited," a New
York agency which furnishes "on
the spot" accompanists to trav
eling artists, Dr. Mason played
some 25 to 30 concerts last sea
son throughout the Southeast,
accompanying many of the coun
try's outstanding artists.
A composer as well as a pian
ist, Dr. Mason will be rembered
foj his score to the musical play,
"Spring for Sure," which was
chosen as the Carolina Playmak
ers tour show last season.
His more serious works in
clude concert songs which have
been featured by Helen Jepson
and others, transcriptions of 18th
century lute music, and various
chamber works.
Story Book
Prints Form
Unique Show
By Mary Grace Megginson
A parade of captivating nurs
ery characters and a number of
. i- .1 "II 3 1
oeautiiui carriej-iia axiu xiictgnuj-ia
prints are on display in the South
Exhibit room of the Morehead
Building.
The novel exhibit is the work
of Mrs. Mary Livingston Stoude-
mire of Chapel Hill, whose hus
band, Robert H. Stoudemire, is
a graduate student in the Univer
sity. The exhibit will continue
through November 6. a
Skillfully blending bits of fab-
ric Wltn String, caraouciru juiu.
watercolor, Mrs. Stoudemire pro-
duces story book prints that are
filled with animation, "something
new" and original. They are called
"applique" pictures and they
greatly resemble needlework
Included in the colorful dis
play are picKanmnies, twicu
mammies, the Lringnam uog ana
the Calico Cat, maereiia, mine
Red Riding Hood, the Big Bad
Wolf, petite ballet dancers, pigs,
mules, the Cow that Jumpea uver
the Moon, and other larm animais,
Little Boy Blue, the tringerDreaa
Boy, Tom Tom the Pipers bon
1-nTinincf awav with the pig, a
clown and a red elephant.
There are also several hand-
fvno magnolia anu taiucmo
kiuii- o
prints of various sizes.
Mrs. Stoudemire, wno was pom
. i
at Oak Grove Plantation at Sal
W S. C (in Aiken County),
says that it is only an acciaenx
.... lit i :
- 1 A
that she is painting. in iu&ii
crhnnl I 'thought I wanted to be
dancer," she said. Then I
broke a leg in a .basketball game
and I began to paint and draw to
keep myself occupied while in a
cast. I had always drawn and
painted some to entertain my
d sisters. I
younx "I" prdolls
beiieve x muuc
during that' time than anyone else
pver has." (Mrs. Stoudemire is
number five in a family of eleven
children. Her parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Z. Vance Livingston oi za.L-
The artist revealed that it is j
even more accidental that she is
,oVincr "arjoliciue" pictures.
"About 15 years ago," she said,
(See STORY BOOK, page )
Twins, Too
Only A Few
Show Up
For Rally
By Louis Kraar
A small, listless group in Me
morial Hall for the pep rally
last night came to life at 7:30
when the band, cheerleaders
and football squad entered,
and filled the hall with crys of
beat the Deacs.
Bo Thorpe, head cheerleader,
and his assistants pumped Caro
lina spirit into the group with
great enthusiasm. The small
crowd, composed of the usual
campus characters as well as out
siders, shook the rafters with
yells.
Barry Farber, editor, of The
Daily Tar Heel, spoke in behalf
of the Monogram Club, which co
sponsored .the rally with the Uni
versity Club. Farber pleaded for
more of that "metaphysical intan
gible called school spirit." The
students took the cue and yelled
even louder.
Chal Port and Tom Higgins, co
captains xf the grid squad for the
Wake Forest game, introduced the
football team. The crowd re
sponded with warm applause for
each player.
Amid the songs and shouts were
two half -pint-sized Tar Heel fans,
twin hovs nf ahrmt. 10 vpars nlH
attired Carolina sweaters and
beanies. Their alto yells could be
heard, slightly put of harmony
with the throng.
Just before the rally started an
unidentified student rose and, in
the manner of a cheerleader, spur
red the cheers on. Later the same
student interrupted Farber's talk.
Farber causticly put him back in
his place with: "Pardon me for
talking while you're interrupt
ing." The crowd roared, and the
heckler sat down rather obsequi-
""J
The rally closed with "Hark
ting cheermaster Thorpe as the
n a
Pieuluue Ui "iC
started the song, two policemen
who were monitoring traffic out
side the hall took off their hats
respectfully.
The rally ended with more
crys of "beat the Deacs" and all
left. A trumpet player in the
uaiiu, tiippieu. aiiu. un tiuitues,
was the last to leave the hall that
was so conspiculously studded
with empty seats throughout the
rally
Kemp Nye's
c L Glenn a Nye brother of
Kemp B Nye of Abernethy's Mu
. ohftn hpr wag "believed to
, -nerished in his plane when
it caught fire j. it was shot
, enemv territorv Oct-
ober 7
The announcement came from
Panel Praises Carolina
Sfudents Must Fare For Selves
In Germany, Say Visitors Here
By Tom Parramore
"The German student has to
find his way for himself."
This was the concensus of a
group of German students that
spoke Thursday before the
YMCA supper Forum.
The subject was "Life in a
German University," and the
group consisted of five stu-
- mfonr whn have
UCI1LS auu a. ij.vj.'s-""
come to study at Carolina un
der the program of exchange
conducted by the State Depart
ment. The German students point
ed out the lack of an orientation
program at their schooL In
stead, the student must immedi
ately begin to learn his own
way through the 'myriad prob
v. I. ffv -'4lr74
GOVEhNOR AD LAI STEVENSON. DEMOCRATIC presidential candidate, addresses an overflow
audience in San Francisco's cavernous Cow Palace. The crowd agreed with applause, cheers and
whistling as the Illinois Governor aimed sledge-hammer blows at the GOP. UP Telephoto.
Stud
ems
With
By Punchy (Billy) Grimes
University students aren't in complete agreement with
their president's position on post-season football games.
Polled yesterday about Gordon Gray's recent statement
that he opposed - post season ;
games for Carolina and State, j
students answered in part:
Lyle Davis, Henderson sopho
more, said, "One extra game won't
hurt and as far as the players
are concerned, however, I think it
tends to over emphasize football
in respect to other college activi
ties." -
Clyde Camp, Roanoke Rapids
junior and a cheerleader, said,
"It gives the individual athlete
a good chance to become better
known nationally through the
publicity . . . and will help raise
the school name in the eyes of
the public."
Sue Carter, another cheerleader
and a resident of Chapel Hill,
disagreed. "I'm definitely against
it. I think that it put too much
of a strain on the players. It
also tends to professionalize col
lege football."
A senior from Charlotte, Irving
Fogler, said, "I wish the confer
ence would allow us to have the
games so the Athletic Associa
tion can make some much needed
money. I see no harm in them at
all. If we play 11 weeks, why not
12?"
Others interviewed were about
evenly divided on the bowl issue.
Brother Killed
the Department of Defense in
Washington.
The 40-year-old command pilot
was a Regular Air Force Officer
with 16 years' service to his cre
dit. His military career also in
cluded combat bombardment ex
perience in World War II.
lems of placement and adjust
ment, they explained.
Uppermost in the minds of
the students was the aid given
to American students in such
things as choice of curriculum,
choice of courses, living quar
ters and extra-curricular activ
ity. Goetingen, they explained,
was not situated on a campus
but scattered out all over the
town of Goetingen. Most of
their fellow students lived in
private homes around town.
German high schools, one of
the group said, are the equiva
lent to two years in American
colleges, so that when a student
graduates from high school he
does not go into general col
lege or preparatory work, but
uisaaree
Grays View
World Peace
Booklets Out
For Students
For the use of high schools par
ticipating in the High School
World Peace Study and Speak
ing Program of 1952-53, the Uni
versity Extension Division has
just published a number of the
University Extension Bulletins on
the subject! this year, "Building
World Peace: What Have Been
the Achievements and What Are
the Prospects of the' United Na
tions?" , I
Compiled in the nature of a
peace handbook by E. R. Rankin,
Director of the program, the bul
letin contains 13 articles dealing
with this year's central topic.
Articles comprising reproduc
tions of previously published ma
terial or excerpts from addresses
are included by: President Har
ry S. Truman, Secretary of State
Dean Acheson, Governor Adlai E.
Stevenson, General Dwight D.
Eisenhower, Secretary - General
Trygve Lie, Prime Minister Win
ston Churchill, Ambassador Ern
est A. Gross, Benjamin V, Cohen,
General Omar N. Bradley, Laura
Vitray, and General Matthew B.
Ridgway.
A special article was prepar
ed by Samuel R. Levering, mem
ber, National Executive Council,
United World Federalists.
The 64-page bulletin includes
also a three-page bibliography.
straight into the field of study
which he has chosen.
Also new to the group was
extra-curricular activity. The
German student is interested
mainly in politics: for example
German rearmament and the
United Europe question. Other
than politics the average Ger
man student is most interested
in the theater, arts and movies.
Neither is he required to go to
class, but goes when and if he
so desires.
As to fraternities, student Hel
muth Deicher said that they
were beginning to come into
fashion again after having been
wrecked by the Nazis during
the war.
? . J Ti Jvi$aa.
I
Wo
BRIEF
WASHINGTON The U. S.
charged yesterday in a note to
Moscow that Russian planes
made a "wanton and unjustifi
able attack" on the American
B-29 missing off Japan since
Oct. 7. The note demanded com
pensation. Payment is in order,
the U. S. said, both for the loss
of the plane and for the lives
of any of the crew of eight who
may have perished.
SEOUL, Korea Alert Ameri
can soldiers stood by their guns
atop towering Triangle Hill last
night, awaiting another series of
savage counter-atacks which
their commander warned were
sure to come.
SAN DIEGO, Calif. Gov. Ad
lai Stevenson declared yesterday
that the "best chance for a just
ana peaceiua wona mnges on
the results of next month's elec-
tAt
UNITED NATIONS N. Y.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Vishinskv announced vester-
day he would reply today to
Secretary of State Dean Ache-
son's policy speech before the
United Nations General Assem
bly.
EN ROUTE WITH IKE Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower cam-
paigned on the Eastern Seaboard
yesterday after -a stepped-up
attack against the Truman ad-
ministration and blasts at "god-
less communism."
WASHINGTON The Navy,
seeking more information on the
mystery of the atom, has fired
cosmic research rockets to heights
of 40 miles over the earth's po-
lar cap.
fc
WASHINGTON Jacob Frei-
dus and Larry Knohl, figures in
tne congressional investigation
of former Assistant Atty. Gen.
Lamar Caudle, were indicted
yesterday on charges of making
iaise statements to the RFC.
The indictment returned by a
federal grand jury accused the
men of giving false information
in several letters and financial
statements submitted to the RFC
during attempts to buy the as
sets of the Aireon Manufacturing
Co. about two years ago.
PITTSBURGH A wave of!
wildcat strikes by United Mine
Workers which had idled 150,000
appeared to be breaking up yes
terday. An industry source said
the strikers, who walked out in
protest to the Wage Stabiliza
tion Board's delay ' in approving
a requested $1.90 a-day wage'
boost, were returning to their
jobs at a good rate.
Mewman Gets
Starting Nod
From Snavely
Carolina Resumes
Football Schedule
In Today's Clash
By Tom Peacock
, The North Carolina football
team resumes its schedule
here today against Wake For
est College in Kenan Stadium
at 2 o'clock after a two week
cancellation of athletics.
The game will be Carolina's
first Big Four contest, as last
week's game with N. C. State
Wake Forest Pos.
Ondilla ..Is
North Carolina
Kocornick
Opitz
Fredere
Mullens
Patterson
Yarborough.
Adler
Newman
White
Parker
Wallace
Gaona It
Link 1?
Donahue c .
Pickard rsr
Bridges rt ,
Lewis re
George :. qb
Hillenbrand lhb
Churm rhb
Koch b
was cancelled. The Tar Heels are
slight underdogs against Wake
Forest, defending North Carolina
champions.
Carolina coach Carl Snavely is
putting his hopes for a victory
in the hands of freshman quarter
back Marshall Newman of Clin
ton. After Texas had mauled the
untried Carolina Split-T for four
touchdowns, Snavely sent New
man into the game late in the
fourth quarter. Newman was
thrown for a loss, but on the next
play tossed a touchdown pass for
the lone Tar Heel score.
The Tar Heel backfield is
marked by power and depth, but
Carolina is lacking speed. Left
halfback Bob White had a good
day against the Texans, and will
be starting along with Larry Par
ker at right half and Bud Wal
lace at fullback.
Carolina's backs accomplished
a lot towards perfecting the diffi-
cult T during nine days of dum
m -tice while tl,e polio ban
was on The Deacons have been
during that time, however, and
Wawe Forest is favored because
of th.at and its 39"7 licking of
-arouna last year. Carolina mis-
sed two Sames, one with Georgia,
tne omer Wltn biate-
The Deacons have an unim
pressive record of one win, two
losses and a tie, but Wake Forest
has met top-notch competition
and played good ball. The Deacs
lost their opener to Baylor, 17-14,
in the last minute of play, then
beat William and Mary, tied Bos-
ton College, and lost to Villanova
last week.
Quarterback Sonny George
leads Wake Forest coach Tom
Rogers' straight T formation.
George was the villain in last
year's rout of Carolina, and this
year he has a host of fast backs
plus two of the best offensive ends
in the Conference.
Halfback Bruce Hillenbrand,
who has shaken loose for numer-
j ous long gains including a 60-
I vard touchdown snrint against
William and Marv. and Joe Korfi.
hard hitting fullback, lead the
Wake Forest backs. Hillenbrand
has a rushing average of 6.4 vards
a try this season. Billv Churm
and Pete Coker are leading rush-
Gf 92 and 68 yards to his credit,
George will direct most of his
passes to his ends, Bob Ondilla
and team captain Jack Lewis.
See TAR HEELS, page 3)
George and $10
George was still only half
paid for yesterday.
George is the friendly collie
who frequents the Y Court and
who was out of commission for
a while recenlly after getting
shot in the face. He's only half
paid for because only $10 has
been paid on his $20 medical
bill.
Dig deep for George and
turn il into The Daily Tar Heel
office, Graham Memorial.
1