n.; 1 C LI 2: aun 7 lttrtt'?rr? v fc W ret WEATHER Cloudy and warm with 72 high today. Yesterday's high. 76; low, S3. BLACK You've heard about the letter edged in black, now read the editorial edged In It. See p. 2. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 44 CHAPEL HILL, N. C TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY lii JV And You Won t Co imp I PI ! uH3 H Lun J An u Here's Where You I Cast Votes Today Heje is where students cast their votes today: Polls open at 8:30 a.m. and close at 6:00 p.m. Dorm District I: Cobb Dormitory; VOTES AT center section of Cobb. Dorm District II: Ay cock, Lewis, Everett, Graham and Stacy: VOTES AT Lewis and Stacy. Dorm District III: Alexander, Connor and Winston: VOTES AT Alexander. Dorm District IV: Mangum, Manly, Emerson Stadium, Joyn er, Grimes and Ruff in; VOTES AT Mangum or Gerrard HalL Dorm District V: Steele, Old East, Old West, B.V.P., White head and all other University-owned residence halls; VOTES AT Gerrard Hall. Town Women: All women students not living in University owned buildings; VOTE AT Gerrard Hall or in Graham Me morial. " Dorm Women: All women's dorms; VOTE AT Graham Me morial or Alderman Hall. Town Men I: Southern Section south of Cameron Ave. ex tended; VOTES AT Gerrard Hall or Graham Memorial. Town Men II: Rectangle bounded by west Cameron, South Columbia, West Franklin and Mill Road; VOTES AT Gerrard Hall or Graham Memorial. Town Men III: All other men students; VOTES AT Ger rard Hall or Graham Memorial. Farber's tand Is Despite a recent news story, ex-DMLY Tar Heel Editor Barry Farber yesterday said he was not supporting any candi date for the job which he recently vacated. He referred to a story appearing in Saturday's Daily Tar Heel which said he asked Walt Barber Shop Quartet Will Make Debut The Society for the Preserva tion and Encouragement of Bar ber Shop Quartet Singing in America will make its debut on the Carolina campus Friday night when its chorus performs for the Sadie Hawkins Day dance. The new chapter of the SPEB SQSA was last week with the selec tion of Bob Minteer as p r e s i dent and Bill Drum raond a s secretary -t r e a s - urer. Meet ings are planned for Tuesday of each week and the only member ship requirement is that the in dividual be a male. Past barber shop singing led Minteer to initiate interest in this revised four-man harmony at UNC. As a member of the "Air Fours" quartet while in the Air Force, he saw the enthusiasm and rise of his quartet in the Dixie district of the SPEBSQSA. Before he was handed his discharge pa pers, he, and the other three har monizers agreed to stir up barber shop singing interest wherever they were. The fulfillment of Min teer's pact is in the establishment of the UNC group. Once established, the singing group plans to present an annual show plus performances upon re quest. Wedgwood Talks Mrs. Claire Leighlon, one of America's best known graphic artists, will speak on her cur rent exhibit of Wedgwood plates in Ihe library. Mrs. Leighion will speak at a tea sponsored by ihe Bullshead Bookshop in the Assembly Ex hibit room Thursday afternoon at 3:35 pan. The work on the plate was dose at the request of the Eng lish firm of Josiah Wedgwood. Mrs. Leighion comes from End land, but has lived in Chapel Hill. Election Impartial' Dear to take over the interim job when Farber left. The story k quoted -Wiley - Kenned yr- -a- sup porter of Dear. ....... Farber's statement yesterday said in part: "... Although Ken nedy's statement is 100 per cent true, I feel he has mobilized an impertinent truth to Walt Dear's advantage, somewhat unfairly. "I asked Dear if he would fill in . . . between my departure and the fall elections simply because he was familiar with the job and was the only logical choice who was not already holding down an important staff position. I might have asked Biff Roberts had Biff not been burdened with the sports editorship. "My position in Tuesday's elec tion is one of sincere and abject impartiality." Dear said yesterday in part, "It is regrettable that this misunder standing . . . has occurred . . . However, I have never consider ed his (Farber's) request an en dorsement, and do not believe Kennedy intended his comments to be misinterpreted as such ah endorsement." PiKA'sName Queen Tonite To Beat Dook The "Beat Dook" float parade queen will be cnosen irom candidates tonight at a dinnei at the PiKA house. Judees selecting the queen are Mrs. R. H. Wettach, Noel Houston and E. Carrington Smith. Candidates and their sponsors are Anne Jacobs, ADPi; Dee Fu nai, Alpha Gam; Margaret Cheat ham, Chi O; Sandra Donaldson, Tri-Delt; Bitty Schaeffer, KD; Lyn Daniel, Pi Phi; Peg Hall, Alderman; Page Moore, Carr; Tish Coley, Mclver. Ann Hartzog. Beta; Jackie Krell, Chi Phi; Linda Lindeman, DKE; Janie Bugg, Delta Psi; Diane Breslow, KA; Anne Sory, Kappa Sig; Judy Taylor, Phi Kaopa Sigma; Sara Bostick, SAE; Carmen Nahm, Sigma Chi; Mary Helen Crain, Sigma Nu, Jo Ann Yokely, SPE, and Geraldine Sni der. BVP. Deadline for entering a candi date for aueen has been extended to 3 o'clock this afternoon, Chair man Clayton Jackson said yes terdav. Deadline for entering a float has been set for 3 o'clock to morrow afternoon. an he LT. COL. W. F. SANTELMANN CHARLES OWEN MARIMBA SOLOIST Debate Team Places Third In Tourney The University Debate Squad placed third in a tournament at tended by 10 schools at the Uni versity of South Carolina this weekend. UNC students participating were Beverly Webb, Bruce Mar ger, Derith Alexander and Al Le vine on the affirmative and Tom Lloyd, Bob Clampitt, Charlotte Davis and Ken Myers on the nega tive. The affirmative team of Webb and Marger placed second in the tournament losing only one de bate. Marger tied for third as the best individual speaker. The query for debate was "Re solved: that the Congress of the United States should enact a com pulsory fair employment practices law." Duke and South Carolina plac ed first in the tournament attend- id by Wake Forest, Duke, UNC, South Carolina, Johns Hopkins, Georgia and Georgia Tech. Former UNC Profs Book Out Soon "Divided We Fought: A Pictor- al History of the War, 1861 1865," edited by a former Uni versity teaching fellow, will come out tomorrow. The book, containing nearly 500 photographs and drawings, was edited by David Donald, who was on the staff here in 1942. A na tive of Goodman, Mississippi, Donald took his A.B. from Mill saps College and received his Ph. D. from Illinois in 1946. He .is now an assistant professor of his tory at Columbia University. The photographs and drawings were selected by Hirst Milhollen and Milton Kaplan who are as sociated with the Library of Con gress in Washington, inese are accompanied by a descriptive text and contemporary eye-witness ac counts edited by Donald. 1 1 AV Ednd "The President's Own," the United States Marine Band, will give a concert tonight at 8 o'clock in Memorial Hall as the first Student Entertain ment Committee presentation of the year. The Marine Band, founded in 1798, is on its annual fall tour. Conducted by Lt. Col. William F. Santelmann, the band makes three coast-to-coast radio broad casts a week and makes frequent television appearances. Students will be admitted free tonight upon presentation of ID cards. Faculty and townspeople will be charged $1. Auditorium doors will open at 7 p.m., SEC Chairman Bob Simmons said yes terday. University Band Director Earl Slocum has compared the band's performance to the "same high level of the finest symphony." Members of the SEC are Chair man Bob Simmons, Bill Watt, Walt Ernst and Bill Brain. Fac ulty advisors" are Samuel Selden of the Dramatic Arts Department, William Newman of the Music Department and Olin Moujon of the Commerce Department. Other performances scheduled by the SEC for winter and spring are Nadine Connor, Fred War ing's Chorus and Ogden Nash. WASHINGTON After a grim aviation weekend, the na tion yesterday counted 88 per sons dead or missing in the dis appearance or scattered crashes of eight American military planes and three civilian aircraft. Some 31 passengers and crewmen a board two U. S. Air Force trans ports are missing; 48 are known dead in the crashes of a military transport, a fighter plane and 3 Navy craft; and nine are dead in the civilian crashes. Air Force planes searched in vain Sunday for a huge C-119 Flying Boxcar which disappeared in Alaska on Saturday with 20 men aboard. AUGUSTA, GA. President elect Dwight D. Eisenhower prob ably will decide this week after conferences with President Tru man and GOP congressional lead ers whether to make a pre inauguration statement on repa triation of Korean war prisoners. Eisenhower, spending his last day on vacation at the Augusta Na tional Golf Club, flies to Wash ington today for a history-making session with Truman at the White House. In Washington, Congress ional leaders expect Eisenhower and Truman to agree at their conference on a statement telling the world America is united in its quest for peace. Rep. Durham Hints BRIEF Weapon More Powerful Than H -Bomb For seen Rep. Carl T. Durham (D-N.C), acting chairman of the Joint Congressional Atomic Committee, yesterday hinted that a bigger weapon than the hydrogen bomb is being plan ned for the future. "Time doesn't stand still," Durham said. "We'll continue our development program i n view of the present interna tional situation." When asked whether any thing besides the hydrogen bomb was used in the Pacific tests announced by the Atomic Energy Commission, Durham said he did not know. He added, Is Here Toniaht Mobile Unit Opens lood Drive Today Today and tomorrow the Red Cross Bloodmobile is visiting Chapel Hill to receive dona tions to fill the increasing need in Korea. Bloodmobile doctors and nurses will be in attendance in Graham Memorial from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. during the two day drive. The quota has been set at 400 pints for the Chapel Hill area. Prospective student or faculty donors may make appointments by phoning Graham Memorial at 5611 or 9-1881. Donors are especially needed between 11 a.m. and 1p.m. both days. Junius Fox and Bill Roth, co- Italian Film 'Paisan Tells War s Impact "Paisan," an Italian film direct ed by Robert Rosellini, will mark the beginning of a series of two films sponsored by the Student Union Activities Board The film will be shown Wed nesday night at 8 o'clock in Me morial Hall. "Paisan" is the sequel to "Open City" made by the same director in 1945. A 1946 picture, "Paisan" shows the impact of war on a na tive population and a foreign sol diery. Beginning with the landing in Sicily the film follows the American and British armies through the invasion and libera tion. The majority of the dialogue is in English but there are English sub-titles for the German and Italian speeches. The motion picture was winner of first prize awards at Cannes, Brussels and Venice Film Festi vals. Life magazine writes about the film, "The best picture since V-E Day about Americans in World War II." Series subscriptions are being sold at the main office in Graham Memorial. No individual tickets can be sold. The series price is 60 cents. House Will Lecture Thursday On Beauty Chancellor Robert B. House will give the Fall Quarter lecture in the Humanities Thursday night in Gerrard Hall at 8:30. The Chancellor's subject will be ."Where Beauty Dwells." He will discuss the place of the humani ties in a well-rounded education "We haven't had a report." Durham said the hydrogen bomb gives the Western world a powerful new weapon which, so far as he knows, the Soviets do not have and said he thinks it will help deter would-be ag ressors. The Representative f r o m Chapel Hill said he "wouldn't try to evaluate the psychologi cal effect" of the H-bomb, and added, "I don't care to comment beyond the (Atomic Energy) commission's statement. I just say it adds to our stockpile of weapons." chairmen of the blood donation committee are appealing to the patriotism of Carolinians, they said. The recent injury and cas ualty lists issued from the Pen tagon show that war in the Sniper Ridge and Triangle Hill area is at its worst, they point out. Donations from this drive will meet the Korean need. Donors must be between 21 and 69 years old and in good helath. Eighteen, 19, and 20 year olds may contribute with their parents' permission. In dividuals giving blood are ad vised not to eat heavy, fatty foods within four hours of their donation. H "9i k "V. PAKISTAN'S Foreign Minister Sir Mohammed Zafrullah urges ihe UN Main Political Commit iee, now meeting in New York, to adopt an immediate Korean cease-fire without awaiting the solution of the prisoner repatri ation question. NEA Tele photo. UN Delegates Return Here From Forums The 12 Carolina delegates to the United Nations Seminar re turned to Chapel Hill yesterday after spending three days in the UN. While in New York the deel gates conferred with UN officials, observed the UN councils in ac tion, took part in forums with representatives from Egypt, Great Britain and Yugoslavia, and got a look at the behind-the-scenes story on what makes the United States delegation tick. A question and answer session on the UN will be held tomorrow at a luncheon meeting in the sec ond floor dining room of Lenoir Hall at 1 p.m. The luncheon session will be followed up with a World Un derstanding Supper Forum at 5:45 Thursday night at Lenoir Hall when a panel from the delegation will give a report on their trip. OCS Vacancies OpenToGrads Officer candidate course ap pointments are still open for stu dents graduating in December, Maj. F. C. Caldwell of the USMR said yesterday. The 7th Officers' Candidate Course of the Marine Corps will begin March 12 at Quantico, Va. Students successfully completing the 10 week course are commis sioned as second lieutenants in the Marine Corps and attend a five month basic school course at Quantico as a second lieutenant. Dear, Roberts Spar For Post With Tar Heel Parties Present Varied Platforms In Late Campaign By Louis Kraar Carolina students will cast votes today for Legislators, class officers, student council members and the important post of editor of The Daily Tar Heel. Past fall elections have net ted about 20 to 25 percent of students voting. Vigorous cam paigns between editorial candi dates Biff Roberts and Walt Dear are expected to prime the vote above the usual small number. Biff Roberts, University Party nominee for the editorial post, is the present sports editor. He has served four years on the staff and writes the column, "Down In Front." Roberts has presented his campaign on the basis of "newspaper experience" and has promised to "put out a good daily one which will voice student opinion." Walt Dear, independent ani Student Party endorsed, has wag ed his campaign for the editor ship on the basis of independence from parties and impartial cover age. He "is 'Chairman of the Pub lications Board and has been on the staff four years. Dear has been summer editor, feature edi tor and columnist. He stated, "I am running as an independent' candidate because the campus de serves an independent approach to campus problems." The Elections Board, headed by Jerry Cook has made a special effort to get out the vote with signs telling where and how to vote in strategic campus places. Tonight the board will have about 35 vote counters working upstairs in Graham Memorial. A large blackboard downstairs in the main lounge will keep students informed of the latest count. Thirty-eight Legislative posts are open in the race. The Uni versity Party holds a slight ma jority at present, and the seats, probaoly be evenly distributed in the election. The Student Party has sparked its campaign from a headquarters in Graham Memorial which has coordinated all movements. Post ers, statements of party policies and other literature has been dis tributed. University Party officials also have issued outlines of party is sues, put up posters, and are run ning an advertisement in The Daily Tar Heel explaining their campaign. The controversy over Saturday classes, after somewhat overshad owing the campaigns and elec tions, has become a prime issue. Both parties have taken a def inite stand in opposition to them. The University Party's plat form is basically the same as last spring. It emphasizes the carry ing out of former promises rather than making new ones. Among the plans they have promised to back are a check cashing service in Lenoir Hall, an infirmary dis (See ELECTIONS, page 4) This Is The News It happened when President Gordon Gray attended a recent meeting of the Board of Direc tors of the Ford Foundation in New York. Some of ihe men were ask ing radio commentator Ed Mur row who would be Ike's Cabi net members, as Murrow sup posedly was in the know. "Since the first two advisors have been Lodge and Dodge. I would suppose ihe next two appointments will be Hcdg and Podge." Murrow informed them. . J