uu,e Library
Ssrlals Dspt.
Cbapel Hill U. C
v i
BODY
"John Brown's Body"
is reviewed. See p.
2.
6-31--S9
WEATHER
Occasional showers
with 58 high. Yes
terday's high, 59;;
low, 49.
VOLUME T.X1, NUMBER 71
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 1953
FOUR PAGES TODAY
Town Chora
Group To Give
Concert Friday
The Chapel Hill Choral Club, un
der, the direction of Joel Carter,
will present its first concert of the
season Friday at 8:30 p.m. in Hill
Hall.
The public is invited and there
will be no admission charge.
The club, composed of townspeo
ple, faculty and students, will
feature a number of local soloists
and the University Symphony Or
chestra. The program will com
prise three works, the Bach Can
tatas No.1 105 and 192 and the Han
del "Dettingen Te Deum."
Bach's Cantata No. 105, "Lord,
weigh us and just us not," written
for the ninth Sunday after Trinity,
is based on the text of Psalm 143.
The Cantata No. 192, "Now Thank
We All Our God," is one of Bach's
"best known, and contains the
chorale melody of the same title,
and is still used as a Protestant
hymn.
Handel's "Dettingen Te Deum'f
is a work of pomp and splendor.
Written for performance at the
English Royal Chapel and St. Paul's
to celebrate the British victory
over the French at Dettingen, 1743,
in the War of Austrian Succession,
was received with enthusiasm by
the English people.
The text is drawn from the
"Book of Common Prayer" of the
Church of England. Unusual bril
liance is given the work by the use
of high trumpets throughout most
of the choruses. The first trumpet
part will be performed by Gerald
Einhorn, University freshman from
Norfolk, Va., who will use the spe
cial high trumpets in D acquired
by the Music Department for this
performance.
Faculty Elected
To High Posts
During Holiday
A number of University Faculty
members who attended . meetings
of scholarly organizations during
the holidays were elected to im
portant offices or appointed to
committee chairmanships.
Dr. Sterling A. Stoudemire, chair
man of the Department of Romance
Languages, was elected chairman
of the Spanish 18th and 19th Cen
truy section of the Modern Langu
age Association of America, which
met in Boston.
Dr. W. L. Wiley, professor of
French, was elected secretary of
the French Renaissance section.
Dean Clifford P. Lyons of the
College of Arts and Sciences was
elected to the Exectuive Council of
the Modern Language Association,
and Dr. Richmond P. Bond of the
English Department was elected
chairman of the English Group for
"the Age of Johnson." Dr Robert
A Pratt, also of the English Depart
ment, was elected chairman of the
Association. ,
Dr. Walter Allen Jr. of the Class
ics Department, was reelected
chairman of tfceMonography Com
mittee of the American Philogical
Association.
Dr. B. L. Ullman, chairman, Class
ics Department, was elected to
membership on the ' nominating
committee of the American Philo
logical Association. He is a form
er president of the association.
Panel Monday
A panel discussion and forum
"A United States of Europe?"
will be held tomorrow from
5:30 to 7 o'clock in Lenoir Hall.
Moderator for the discussion
will be Dr. J.'C. Lyons of the
Department of Romance Lan
guages, who has toured Europe
many times. Panel members who
will present points of view from
several European countries are
Dr. Jacques Hardre, professor of
French, France; Alfred Des
cloux, graduate student from
Geneva, Switzerland, on Switzer
land; and Helmuth Deicher, Ger
man student, on that country.
Ted Sheveov, formerly of Yu
goslavia, will Introduce the pan
el members. .
v. Am -Hip
PENNED UNDER THE TRAILER of his heavy truck is Gerald
Massie, shown talking with a police office after his truck colided
with an automobile near Black River Falls, Wise. The driver of the
car was killed instantly in the collision, and Massie himself died
while enroute to a hospital. NEA Telephoto.
Horfon
Dion
By Louis Kraar
President Ham Horton and his cabinet met Friday behind locked
doors "to discuss the. method of carrying out the administration's
program," according to Horton.
Topics discussed in the meeting were not disclosed, but it was
indicated that most basic campusf
issues were talked over in three
hour session.
Results of the meeting will be
announced in the form of Presi
dent Horton's address to Legisla
ture at its opening session Thurs
day. Horton's talk, which is ex
pected to be a "state of the camp
us" type speech, will probably
outline the cabinet's "plan for leg
islative action this quarter.
Horton said that allowing press
representatives to sit in on the
meeting would keep legislators
from being the first to hear the
cabinet's plans. His reply to ques
tions concerning the nature of the
issues discussed was a flat "no
comment."
Actually, the cabinet's plans
have no authority other than ad
vising Legislature. Early indica
tions of Horton's program show
that it may be received warmly by
both parties. Since the Student
Party has legislative majority, Uni
versity Party administrators are
faced with the problem of present
ing a program that will be fairly
acceptable to both parties.
Members of the cabinet are Ed
Gross, Virginia Hall, Phinn Hor
ton, Jim McLeod, Martin Jordon,
Sol' Cherry, Jack Stilwell, Harry
Philips, Wade Matthews and Geor
ge McLeod.
Jack Stillwell, Martin Jordon,
Harry Philips and Wade Matthews
did not attend the meeting.
Life' Exhibit
Being Shown
At Morehead
A new exhibit of some 50 pho
tographs, some of them in color, cn
18th century England, which was
assembled by editbrs of Life Mag
azine, is exhibited in the More
head Building and will continue
through Jan. 23.
"Eighteenth Century England."
title of the exhibit, is based on the
article by that name which ap
peared in Life's History of West
em Culture series. Much unpub
lished material has been added to
the exhibition, however, and the
result is a colorful panorama of that
age of contrasts.
England of the 18th century saw
daily life turned into an , "art" of
great elegance, and at the same
time saw the drab beginning of
the age of industrialism, Life edi
tors point out. "It calls to mind
not only the gentlemanly precepts
of Lord Chesterfield and the state
liness of country houses, but also
the ferment and squalor of London
where a. tenth of England's popula
tion lived," they say.
, era -
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19 ?sa
Is b
lien
DTH Writers
Will Be Given
Press Awards
Awards for the best editorial,
sports, feature and straight news
writing published in The Daily
Tar Heel during the Fall Quar
ter will be presented by Press
Club tomorrow night.
Barry Farber, Greensboro, for
mer editor who is now in the
Army, will receive the best edi
torial award for his "Personally"
column on Sen. Joseph McCar
thy. Sports Editor Biff Roberts,
Louisville, Ky., will receive the
sports writing award for his
coverage of the Notre Dame
game.
The feature writing award will
go to Tom Parramore, Winton,
for his story on three freshmen
who set up a radio station in
Cobb Dormitory.
Managing Editor Rolfe Neill,
Chapel Hill, will receive the
straight news award for his first
story on Saturday classes.
Vets To Save
On Insurance
Veterans holding National Serv
ice Life Insurance and other gov
ernment life insurance are advised
by the Veterans Administration
they may save in premium payment
if they are able to pay them in ad
vance on a quarterly, semi-annual
or annual basis instead of every
month.
Veterans who are able to pay
premiums in advance in this fash
ion will have a reduction over the
regular monthly premium rates of
3 percent a year.
A
genda
Draff Deferments Seen
Becoming More Strict
Draft officials looked a little
closer at college students re
cently as "a mathematical im
possibility to stay within the law
without substantial tightening
of deferments" was foreseen.
Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey,
director of Selective Service,
said, "We certainly must look to
ward the colleges with something
more than an appraising eye.
The time for appraising in that
direction is about over and the
time for action is almost here."
Deferments of college students
for ROTC corps membership
alone total "almost 100,000 more
Hys
BA School's
Moving Date
Set In Feb. Q
i The School of Business Admin
' istration next month will move
' from its cramped quarters in Bing
- ham Hall to a handsome battery of
three new buildings across the way.
t In design, the new school is
i similar to the Manning-Saunders-
Murphey triangle on he opposite
side of the mall that runs from
South Building to the Library. Con
struction work began in 1950, but
because of strikes and shortages
of building materials completion
was delayed.
The central unit of the three
buildings will house the school's
administrative and faculty offices,
seminar and conference rooms and
an auditorium with a seating ca
pacity of 450.
The Business Foundation, of
which Dr. I. G. Greer is executive
vice-president, will have its head
quarters office in the central build
ing. The other two buildings will con
tain a few. offices and classrooms
and laboratories for the specializ
ed fields in business administra
tion: accounting, statistics, person
nel management, production man
agement, finance and marketing.
The University Placement Ser
vice, now located in South Build
ing, will be moved to the south
classroom and laboratory building
of the School of Business Admin
istration.,. The TJ university's Re
cords and Registration office, Stu
dent Aid and Student Loan Fund
offices, and Personnel office, which
are also now in South Building, will
be moved to the north classroom
and laboratory building.
This shift will alleviate to some
extent the crowded conditions m
South Building and will facilitate
registration of students. Archer
House, which has been used by
the registration office for some
time, will not be used for this pur
pose after the move.
The North Carolina State Board
of Certified Public Accountant Ex
aminers, a State agency, will have
headquarters in the north build
ing of the group.
None of the buildings has been
named as yet. This job falls to the
Trustees.
The School of Business Admin
istration has enjoyed a steady and
substantial growth and has attain
ed high rank among institutions
providing training for business
leadership since it was organized
in the fall of 1919 under the dir
ection of D. D. Carroll, who serv
ed as Dean from that time until
he retired in 1950.
Dr. Thomas H. Carroll took over
the deanship in 1950, coming here
from Syracuse University where
he was Dean of the College of Bus
iness Administration. He had serv
ed as Assistant Dean of the Har
vard Graduate School of Business
Administration prior to militaiy
service.
Originally called the School of
Commerce, the school has grown
from headquarters in a single of
fice in Alumni Hall to its ne.v
three-building unit. Outgrowing its
(See BA SCHOOL, page 4)
than the number we are defer
ring in agriculture and industry
combined," Hershey said in an
article in "Selective Service", a
bulletin of his agency.
"Students will not be the only
men affected by this tightening,"
he declared. But he also said
Selective Service, "relatively
speaking," had taken an "infin
itesimal" number of men so far
from the colleges, whiie induct
ing industrial vorks and farmers
and facing "an imminent necessi
ty in the not so distant future" of
drafting fathers.
W
mpuy
Local Offical
Must Approve
Any Substitute
By John Jamison
There are "other ways" for fra
ternities .and sororities to comply
with the local interpretation of the
state building code than the spe
cifications handed down by the
State Insurance Department.
These alternate plans would be
devised by the individual houses,
subject to the approval of P. L.
Burch, Chapel Hill building inspec
tor. What are some of these "other
ways"? Burch refused to answer
"hypothetical questions.
Rather, he said, he would prefer
to tour each house and then decide
whether or not the substitute plans
were adequate.
- The State Insurance Department
expects the houses to be "reason
ably safe."
The Chapel Hill Board of Alder
men was asked, "What would be
done in case the hazards are not
removed within the 90-day period?"
The board expects the fraternities
and sororities "to make bona fide
and prompt effort to correct the
hazards listed in the inspection re
port." Chapter presidents met Thursday
night with the town officials at
which time Mayor E. S. Lanier
pleaded "negligence in not making
fire inspections of the fraternities j
and sororities and other boarding j
houses long ago."
The mayor continued, "Natural
ly 'condemnation' of your houses
jolted you and led to just ordinary,
human speculation about the mu
nicipality's motives. I want to as
sure you and the public that not
one of the municipal officials had
or has any desire whatsoever to
'persecute' you or to 'discriminate'!
against you in any degree at all
nor are they willing to let you
sleep in quarters which might trap
you into a screaming death from
fire."
The town's aim, as the mayor
sees it, is to make the houses "rea
sonably safe and in compliance
with the spirit of the State's laws
for safety."
Honorary Unit
In Education
Holds Smoker
The Beta Theta chapter of Phi
Delta Kappa, honorary educational
fraternity, recently launched its
1953 season with a smoker held at
the home of Dr. Gordon Ellis, pro
fessor in the School of Education.
The fraternity, which meets reg
ularly throughout the year to pro
mote professional interest in ed
ucational leadership, research and
service, voted on new membership
of approximately 20 candidates
from among the North Carolina
men currently engaged in educa
tional study, most of whom are en
rolled as students at the Univer
sity. As a special feature of the eve
ning's entertainment, a travelogue
was shown of the 16 German school
teachers who came to this country
in September to observe American
educational institutions. Six of the
German teachers were present at
the smoker and one of their num
ber, Willi Boiler of Hesse, Ger
many, showed pictures he had
taken of his party since their de
parture from Europe.
The Germans were introduced to
the fraternity members by Prof.
Wilmer R. Jenkins of the School
of Education, coordinator of the
German teacher project for this
state.
HOLSTEN IS FATHER
An 8Tpound, 3 ounce future col
lege boy was born at 4 a.m. yes
terday to Mrs. Roy Holsten, wife
of the assistant dean of students.
The. name: Robert Bruce Holsten.
Mother is fine at Duke Hospital.
Father is happy, R. B. being his
second boy. -
fairs
ofnh)
ESTIMATED
r (i
. EXPiiTJSE
IK;
iy
THIS NEWSCHART SHOWS Federal governmental receipts, ex
penditures and deficit as presented in the fiscal 1954 budget sub
mitted to Congress by President Truman. Fiscal 1954 runs from July
1, 1953 to June 30, 1954. The estimated deficit for 1954 is $4.03 fail
lion more than the $5.8 billion deficit estimated for the current fiscal
1953, which ends on June 30. NEA News Chart.
New Deficit Budget
Spending
Income
Deficit
Public debt at end of year
THE NEWS
M BRIEF
SEOUL Three hundred UN
warplanes dealt the Communist
war machine a devastating blow
yesterday with a bomb, bullet and
plane attack on a vital supply line
between North Korea and Man
churia. F-84 Thunder jets dropped
thousands of pounds of bombs on
five rail bridges and four road
bridges just north of Sinanju, one
of the most heavily defended cit
ies in North Korea.
ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. Search
ers for a C-46 transport plane which
disappeared in the rugged moun
tain country near the Idaho-Uhah-Wyoming
boundries began their
fourth day of operations yesterday
with hopes dimming that the plane
would be located soon.
WASHINGTON Julius and Eth
el Rosenberg, the convicted atom
spies, appealed to President Tru
man yesterday to spare their liv
es. They have been sentenced to
die in the electric chair at New
York's Sing Sing Prison next Wed
nesday for conspiring to give atom
secrets to Russia. Marching pickets
asking clemency have been patrol
ling outside the White House in
recent days.
WASHINGTON Key members
of the House Armed Services Com
mittee yesterday predicted that
Congress would press for early ac
tion to break the Korean stalemate
if President-elect Eisenhower does
not do so. A survey of six Republi
can and four Democratic commit
tee members showed the majority
were convinced the Korean situa
tion is difficult but not hopeless.
2nd Movie Of
Series Slated
"The Late George Apley," based
on the novel by J. P. Marquand,
will be presented at 7:15 p.m. to
morrow in the Playmakers Thea
ter. Dr. John Honigmann, associate
professor of anthropology, will lead
the discussion following the movie.
The movie is the second in a
series of shows being brought here
by the YMCA and the Hillel Found
ation. The series is built around
man and his environment and will
continue throughout this quarter.
Admission is free.
Betty Smith's "A Tree Grows in
Brooklyn" was the first picture to
be shown.
6
QMS
u u
iS?BILUONS Or DOLLARS
o n )
0.9
June 30, 1953 June 30, 1954
Fiscal Year Ending
74,593,000,000 $ 78,587,000,000
68,697,000,000 68,665,000,000
5,896,000,000 9,922,000,000
263,900,000,000 273,800,000,000
Advertising
Examination
Feb. 14, 27
The seventh nation-wide examin
ation for advertising will be held
in Charlotte on Feb. 14 and 21.
Tread Covington, UNC graduate
who is advertising executive and
chairman of the AAAA Examina
tion Committee, said the test v:ll
be open to all who are consider
ing advertising as a career, includ
ing college seniors.
"The examination is given an
nually throughout the country to
attract high calibre young people
to advertising," Covington said. "It
provides a series of aptitude-temperament
tests compiled by special
ists in personnel testing and a
group of tests of practical know
ledge developed by advertising ag
ency executives," he said. "Through
these tests the relatively inexperi
enced person can see how his abil
ities compare with those of more
than 4,500 people now employed
in advertising. In this way we hopa
to encourage and guide people who
show promise for advertising and
save others from months, perhaps
years in the wrong work."
Mrs. Durham's
Funeral Today
Mrs. Carl T. Drham, wife of the
Congressman of the Sixth N. C.
congressional district, died at her
home here Friday night after an
illness of nine months. She had
been critically ill since Sept. 15.
Funeral will be held at 2 p..n.
today at the Chapel Hill Presby
terian Church.
Surviving besides her husband
are five children, Mrs. Gregg Mur
ray, Springfield, N. J., Mrs. M. M.
Sessler, Asheville, Carl J., Cincin
nati, and Peggy and Ann, Chapel
Hill. '
Mrs. Durham, a Guilford County
native, married Rep. Durham cn
Dec. 30, 1918.
This Is It
If you're interested in work
ing on the staff of The Daily
Tar Heel you are invited to at
tend a meeting this afternoon at
3 o'clock.
The congregating will be in
the newsroom, second floor of
Graham Memorial. Staffers are
needed in everything but the
Photography Department.
If you think you're interested,
give it a try. RN.
lA
s