-Jr. chap2i mil, -n. q WEATHER Cloudy and mild with 62 high today. Yester day's high. 60; low. 44. 8-31-49 THANKS Thanksgiving la to morrow, jiuh and re flect and you'll find well, see p. 4. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 51 CHAPEL HILL. N. C WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 28. 1952 FOUR PAGES TODAY 1 p-)etw&' '""y2 ii rn 0 t . nr ka o)fmo)ntr"v'7 ji 1 A r x--4 If i 4 L. R. JORDAN (lefi) discusses plans for attending the American Congress of Industry with William Ruff in, president of Erwin Mills Inc.. and chairman of the Board of the National Association of Manufacturers. Jordan is president of the local chapter of Al pha Kappa Psi. national professional fraternity in business ad ministration and one of 49 U. S. students who will attend the conference. Photo courtesy Durham Herald. Tab! A A oaa mav c lo The Daily Tar Heel will re vert back to tabloid size be ginning January and will cut issues in December, the Pub lications Board decided yes terday afternoon in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. Stiff losses in advertising income, student fees, plus the additional - printing costs were the reasons given for the switch. Financial Coordinator Marshall Cline said that the Board estimates a $10,832.09 total loss if the newspaper continues in its present form. Asked whether the tabloid decision is final, PB chairman and editor Walt Dear, said, "If we can think of any other fi nancially feasible program be H am man Coming Here; Pace Plans Released W. Averell Harriman, now Mutual Security Administrator and formerly Secretary of Com merce for President Truman for two years, will speak here March 26. Carolina Forum Chairman Ken Penegar made the announcement Multi-millionnaire Harriman, yesterday.- prominently mentioned as Dem ocratic presidential candidate, will talk in Memorial Hall on a Dr. Herberg's Schedule Of Talks Listed Dr. Will Herberg, noted Jew ish philosopher and writer, will speak to various UNC groups next Monday and Tuesday. Dr. Herberg comes to the cam mi: unrfpr the ausrjices of the Inter-Faith Council. Dr. Herberg's schedule follows: Monday, 10 a.m., lecture to Dr, Poteat's philosophy class; 4 p.m., in Faeultv Lounge of Morehead Planetarium; Tuesday, 8 a.m.. lecture to Dr. Poteat's philosophy class; 4 p.m. talk for Hillel Foundation; 8 p.m., public lecture in Gerrard Hall, "Com munism, Democracy, Religion." Typists Needed The 1952 Yackety Yack needs typists. Editor Huge Gale said yes terday manuscripts must, be typed now if the book 1 is to come out on time. Those inter ested are asked lo come by the Yack office on second floor Graham Memorial. i J ft 4 4 me M 1 ar fore Chrisstmas that is better than the one adopted, then of course, the Board might con sider a different plan. The Board is always open to sug gestions." The paper will not be print ed Tuesday, December 2, fol lowing the Thanksgiving holi days, and Saturday, . December 6. The Board approved the fol lowing appointments to the Daily Tar Heel staff: Rolfe Neill, managing editor; Jim Schenck, business manager; Bob Slough, news editor; Car olyn Reichard, subscription manager; Biff Roberts, sports editor. Jody Levey, former news editor, resigned yester day for academic;reasons. subject to be announced. Secretary of - Army Frank Pace Jr. will give the first of this vear's Carolina Forum talks Tuesday. . "My Life in Public Service' will be the topic of the secre tary's talk when he speaks in Memorial Hall at 9 p.m. There will be a question and answer Pace will be met at the Ra- period following the address. leigh-Durham airport by mem bers of the forum and will be driven to Navy Field where the Air ROTC will pass in review in honor of the Army Secretary. A dinner will be given for the Secretary and members of his staff at the Carolina Inn at ( o'clock. Members of the Caro lina Forum, student government officials and representatives of the Eflministration will attend. . .mi . 1 W. AVERELL HARRIMAN Heel 4 - --I KIN BRIEF ANCHORAGE, Alaska The Vir Force, Navy and Coast Juard combined forces yester .ay for a sweeping search of the iland-dotted northern Gulf of Uaska for a lost C124 Globe naster and its 52 passengers and rew. The huge plane, third mili ary air transport lost in Alaska ince Nov. 17, vanished Saturday n a flight here from McChord xr Base, Wash. NEW YORK Rep. John Taber ;R-NY), who will head the House Appropriations Commit tee in the next Congress, said esterday he believed the 1954 oudget can be balanced and wrought down to $65,000,000. Ta- oer said at a press conference in the offices of President-elect Eisenhower that it might be pos sible to cut some taxes if the budget were "more than bal anced" in 1954. However, he said that "it's too early to tell defi nitely about that." WASHINGTON A. quick end to all price and wage controls by order of President Truman was seen as a possibility yesterday in the wake of two major develop ments: 1. Sen. Maybank (D-SC), chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said in a broadcast from Charleston Monday night he has information Truman is considering doing away with such cocntrols by executive order be fore Jan. 3. 2. Tighe E. Woods resigned as price stabilizer. His resignation was peppered with' criticism of Congress for providing a controls aw which he contended favors special interests." . SEOUL Okinawa - based American Superfortresses blast ed a Communist supply depot t Hoechang yesterday as British and Australian soldiers harassed Chinese outposts on the western front with commando-like raids. The 12 superfortresses took off from Okinawa and dropped 500 pound bombs through a solid overcast before dawn yesterday to wreck the 18-acre Red supply depot east of Pyongyang. B-26 raiders bombed two bridges over which Red supply and ammuni tion convoys moved and de stroyed 85 trucks. Clouds ham pered these operations also. SEOUL U. N. Commander Gen. Mark Clark flew back to Tokyo yesterday after making concrete" arrangements to safe guard Dwight D. Eisenhower dur ing the President-elect's forth coming visit to Korea. Clark spent 24 hours in Korea in secret conferences with Gen. James A. Van Fleet, Eighth Army com mander, and Lt. Gen. Glenn O. Barcus, Fifth Air Force com mander, the two men whose re sponsibility it will be to see that Eisenhower has "bullet-proof" protection. WASHINGTON The Ameri can Federation of Labor yester- (See NEWS IN BRIEF, page 2) Even After Gen. Hershey's Warning 19rYear-Olds Need Not Worry About Draft At Present Time By Alice Chapman Nineteen-year-olds here need not be alarmed over the pros pects of being drafted at least not in the near future. Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey recently is sued a statement that he will give the go-ahead on drafting 19-year-olds but said the young men cannot be drafted until lo cal boards are unable to fill their quotas. At present, no state selective Service chief has reported dif ficulty in filling his monthly 'I Got Four Weeks Behind.. From Diet To DiMagglo, M aril yris Success Story Special to The Daily Tar Heel HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 25. Blonde, beautiful and buxom Marilyn Monroe, who has come a long way from nude calendar poses and bit movie parts, has more than a few words to say about marriage, movies and money. ."There is: a, rumor going around that I am married. This is not true. I have no definite marriage plans," said the glam orous movie siren who has been seen lately with baseball er Joe DiMaggio. She denied ' reports of romances with Pe ter Lawford Marlon Brando and Rock Hudson. When friends asked her to meet DiMaggio she said, "I don't know a baseball from a footbal. But: I'd like to meet him." Evidently Georgia Tech's grid squad didn't mind her lack of pigskin knowledge either. The Engineers voted her their official mascot. Miss Monroe explains her first meeting with DiMaggio at a party as: "We had arrived separately. We met. . We left together." Thinking back about the days when she first started modeling and . success wasn't rapping round her door, volup tuous Marilyn told of life at the Studio Club in 'Hollywood where she lived "pleasantly, but not luxuriously, for a modest sum . a week." - -,- "Sometimes I didn't eat so much. I got four weeks be hind in my rent and was get ting worried," she said. It was at this point that she posed for the famous nude calendar that has had her fans buzzing. "Every photographer I had ever worked with had asked me to pose in the nude. But I refused," she declared. Free Films To Feature Mans Fight "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn," a film based on the book by Chapel Hillian Betty Smith, will be shown Dec. 8 at 7:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall. It will be the first of a film series sponsored by the YMCA and the Hillel Foundation. Dis cussion following the film will be led by Dr. Reuben Hill. The film series will be divided into three categories. The first, "Man and His Environment," will feature "A Tree Grows in Brook lyn" and "The Late George Ap ley." The second, "Man Against Institutions," will feature "Call Northside 777" and "Prisoner of Shark Island." "Snake Pit" and "The Treasure of Sierra Madre will illustrate the last theme of (See FILM, page 2) quota. Boards are barred from drafting anyone under 20 years old, and have been requested not to classify anyone under 19 years and six months. In addition every student is entitled to a year's deferment by law unless he has previously has his year's deferment or II-S classification (student) since June of 1951 and does not qual ify now. At present, 50 per cent of the freshmen are deferred by being in the upper 50 per cent of their class academically (mandatory ' ,, : -; ; . ' it V , - - ' : r:-:-:-:-:-:-: :-:-:-x: :- -: 4vfify,y&n&A?&ss - 's s. , ' - ""J"--.-''" ; -Xi- - L 2ZX ' - I A - ' - ' Ml Finally after her eviction no-ticfe'-arrived, she consented and' earned a much-needed - $50 which carried her through those bad days. Movies began looking at her "when I had filled out some and did pinups and cheesecake modeling." Her first audience saw her merely walk across the stage "while Groucho Marx leered" in" the film, "Love Hap py." But that was enough for Meet Favors No Ads For Educational Video A group of 65 educators, radio and television executives indi cated at a meeting here Monday that they favor the establishment of non-commercial educational TV programs in North Carolina. The ultimate goal, they said, Randolph County Organizes Group With a prospective member ship of about 30, only seven stu dents attended an organizational meeting of ' the Randolph County Club held Monday. Barbara Cox, Asheboro, was appointed provisional president and Anne Birkhead was appoint ed provisional secretary. Another meeting is planned for next Mon day night in Roland Parker Lounge at Graham Memorial at 7 o'clock. deferment), a probable 25 per cent are further defered by Air or Naval ROTC or veteran sta tus. Of the remaining 25 per cent many who are failing will drop out of school before they have received their first notice, and will join a service immediately or wait the draft call out of school, officials say. Therefore a release on the draft-age limit would effect the number of University men little more than it does at present, officials add. ICNROE most males, " At present -1 am - rehearsing for 20th Century's "Gentleman Prefer Blondes," in which I'll play another dumb blonde who isn't dumb Lorelei Lee," she explains. With bossomy Jane Russell in the same flicker, the battle of bulges will be on. Marilyn is delighted with the whole thing because: "For the first time I get to do my own singing." would be a state-wide TV net work. However, as a beginning, they said they thought it advis able to activate Channel 4, al ready allocated to the Greens boro-Durham-Raleigh area by the FCC. The group also favored the creation of a state educational radio and television commission and requested University Presi dent Gordon Gray to ask Gov.- Elect William B. Umstead to ap point such a commission. Gray made it clear that the University, in case funds become available for the establishment of educational programs, would not apply for a channel until enough money to operate for two years has been assured. The FCC has allocated 242 TV channels for educational pro grams eight of them in North Carolina. Charles F. Carroll, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, said he thought the State should use at least six of the channels allotted if a state wide plan governing all the chan nels is adopted. Gray, emphasized that applica tion must be made for the edu (See EDUCATORS, page 2) Morehead To Have Special Performance The Morehead Planetarium wii give a special performance of "The Heavens Tonight"- at 3 p.m. Thanksgiving Day to accommo date visitors, Manager A. F. Jen- zano said yesterday. The evening demonsstration will be held at 8:30 as usual. Fol lowing the evening program ; small telescope will be available for public observations of the craters of the moon, provided clouds do not interfere. Plott Winner Over Wagger For Dorm Seat SP Will Dominate Student Solons By 26-24 Count By Louis Kraar The Student Party, after 14 years according to SP officials, gained a majority in Legisla ture yesterday as Frank Plott (SP) beat out Gerry Wagger (UP) in Men's tormitory Dis trict IV, 93 votes to 77 in a runoff race. Student Party legislators total 26 and the University Party has 24 representatives, as a re sult of the runoff. These totals in clude two double endorsed legis lators and one independent that are SP inclined as well as five UP inclined double endorsed candi dates. Although Student Party mem bers hailed winning the majority as a moral victory and an indica tion of campus preference of par ties, this majority is more evident on paper than in practice. The va gue positions of double endorsed candidates, who frequently switch sides, and the many legislators absent at certain sessions keep either party from holding a de cisive majority. Sol Cherry, UP chairman, said after the returns were announced I hope that the Student Party will see fit to use its majority in the,. Legislature . to benefit the student body as a whole. With this in mind, I offer the co-opera tion of the University Party." 'The Student Party is very happy that the students have chosen it to carry out a program which will benefit all the stu dents. In all sincerity, we firmly resolve that the trust will be car ried out in its entirity," stated Joel Fleishman (SP) in behalf of his party. Carolyn Johnson and Mary Kit Meyers won junior seats on the Women's Council in yesterday's runoff election which attracted only 11 percent of women voters. Voting in Dorm District IV, composed of Mangum, Manly, Emerson Stadium, Joyner, Grim es and Ruffin, was very light yesterday, according to Jerry Cook, chairman of the Elections Board. Out of about 400 potential tial voters, only 28 percent casted their ballots. Campaigning between Plott and Wagger was especially vig orous for a runoff race. Aided by extra party support, both waged strong personal campaigns. The lack of funds by the candidates who had exhausted their expense limits, made door to door visiting imperative. Observers in Ruffin and Joyner said they were paid visits by both candidates. Wagger. (UP), the loser, is a senior from High Point who has served in Legislature several terms. The winner, Plott (SP), is a freshman from Charlotte and plans to study lawv San Jose Greeks Put On Probation Special to The Daily Tak Hm. SAN JOSE, Calif, Nov. 25 Six Greek letter fraternities have been put on social probation un til 1954 by the Deans Committee for presenting "obscene and ob jectionable" acts in an All-Greek show. Until Next Week Today's is the last issue of The Daily Tar Heel until next -Tuesday. VL , .v ... . .. All news, editorial, business and sporis offices will be clos ed until 2 p.m.nexl Monday. Copy for next week's first issue must meet ihe usual deadline 3 p.m. ihe day before publication. 7

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