Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 13, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TpflL if Oil ' fl fP yf V Vf GERMANS a?' I 1 I I l I I sp J s:00 f ; I t! iL I I f'' ment reports on so- v ) J lV.S' ' weekend, see p.4. WEATHER Partly cloudy and ;ool with 50 high. Yesterday's high, 60, low, 37. . . VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 94 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY 18 High S Womed For Eighteen more high school sen iors have been selected for in terviews before the Central Com mittee of the John Motley More head Scholarship Foundation on Ularch 2-3. ,Last week 18 other candidates were announced, making 36 final nominees coming here. The can didates have already been screen ed by principals and county com mittees and will be sent here by the district groups. The nominees are: District II, Colonel William T. Joyner, Ra leigh, committee chairman; Gor don R. Brown, Durham; Jimmy Lewis Love, Sanford; Richard Foster Barber, Route 1, Durham; "William Thomas Huntley, South ern Pines; Robert Garner, Ox ford, and Gary F. Williams, Ra leigh. Retrial Wets Same Sentence For Offender A student was retried Wednes day night by the Interdormitory Court for shooting firecrackers in a dormitory and the previous sen tence of the court was upheld. The student was convicted by the court in January on charges of shooting fireworks and was sus pended from the dormitory for at least one quarter. ' On Feb. 5 the Student Council remanded the case back to the lower court for retrial. The case had been appealed on the grounds that two constitutional rights of the defendant were violated by the IDC court. Another student, convicted for" possession of an air rifle, shooting it in the dormitory and damaging University property, was suspend ed from the dormitory for at least one quarter. The sentence was changed to indefinite probation on the condition that he pay property damages. Three other students were tried for shooting firearms and being in volved in the shooting of an air rifle inside a dormitory. The court found one boy guilty of shooting the air rifle and he wras suspended from the dormitory. The sentence was then changed to indefinite pro bation. The other two boys were exon erated. WUNC Will Air Duke Program Tonight : Ah 8:15 A concert by the Duke Univer sity Men's Glee Club will be broad cast tonight at 8:15 by " radio . sta tion WUNC. The program, which will originate in Page Auditorium on the Duke campus, will be a live broadcast. ' The program will mark the first attempt by WUNC to pick up a broadcast outside Chapel Hill and the longest single program schedul ed to date. The concert will run about an hour and a half. Directed by J. Foster Barnes, the 150-man elee club will render se lections from BacTi, Handel, and Beethoven. Also included in the Program will be selections by Step hen Foster and modern and novel' ty numbers. WUNC is the campus FM station and operates on a frequency of 51.5 mc. BSUTalk The second in a series of Bap tist Student Union discussions be held at Camp New Hope tonight at 7 o'clock. Interested students should meet t the church at 5:30 p.m. "Re- freshments will be served. There will be a social at fhe church tomorrow aV7 putn.-- ffefp 1 District V, R. Grady Rankin, Gastonia, committee chairman; Norman Allison Chamberlain, Route 1, Matthews; 2ana Emer son Eargle, Waxhaw; Thomas Willis Lambeth, Statesville; Me bane Moore Pritchett, Lenoir; Clem Harry Shankle, Troy; Mar ion Wilson Griffin, Davidson. f District VI, D. Hiden Ramsey, Asheville, committee chairman; Edward Wike Sutton, Cullowhee; Clayton Stalnaker, Spindale; Wil liam Francis Yost, Weaverville; William Watson Morgan Jr., Route 3, Canton; Jose Edward Stuntz, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Christ School, Arden); James Owen Shurling, Asheville. The final selections will be an nounced here March 4 by the trustees of the foundation. ... SHE WON'T be here for Ger mans but she does remind us of our roommate's sister. Taking ad vantage of Hollywood's balmy weather, Lucy Knoeh eases into a pose for the cameraman. She also works on TV. NEA Telephoto. Muntzing Fills Staff Posts For Handbook Final selections for editorial staff of the Carolina Handbook have been made by Manning Muntzing, editor. Jim Turner was chosen managing editor and Frank Plott is the new photographic editor. Assisting the editorial staff will be Clay Johnson. The Handbook is divided into 15 sections with each section having an editor. Section editors include Susan Fink, Greetings; Ed Yoder, University Heritage? Bill Brown, Student Government; Ray Long, Classroom; Pete Adams, Organiza tions; Louis Kraar, Publications; Steve Moss, Fraternities and Dorm itories; Ted - Lynch, Freshman Guide; John Thompson, Town of Chapel Hill; Mary Jo Paul, Coeds; Bernard Theiling, Spirit; Everette Parker, Athletics; and Jim Turner and Sue Fink, Campus Life. Gra ham Memorial will do its own sec tion. Boyden Henley was appointed photographer; Boyant, secretary; and Chal Shley, rewrite. John Rie bel is the advisor. Students interested in assisting the various editorials are urged to contact Manning Muntzing or any person on the staff. The next com plete staff meeting will be held Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in the YMCA which is open to any one interested in writing for the Handbook. . a hi ? start has been made' on the Handbook and the editor ex- npcts to have the entire book set lit) Dy nUAl v-a-"' - . .Tiini v . ii. TTii a complete new face mciuuu ( pictures, new wiu new wriie-upa make-up. ' The Handbook is published in connection with the YMCA tad .j vertisors in Chapel Hill. It is sent to all incoming Freshmen and sold o students for 10 cents a copy. . i,ow the Hand- The stau nope -Soring Took out Deiore .termr' - yk. 11.,-i.uu i n. lulling u.-Hm. ' , mm mm-jj1"'' if i , - . , J.N BULLETIN Duke University ran its win ning streak to eight games last night, edging Wake Forest, 101 99, in a two-overtime thriller at Wake Forest. The Blue Devils now have an 8-3 conference record. They meet North Carolina State, the con ference leaders, at Raleigh to morrow night in another crucial - game. BRIEF" LONDON The Soviet Union broke off diplomatic relations with Israel yesterday. Western diploma uc sources expressed no surprise and said the Russians were appar ently stepping up their efforts to win Arab friendship in the Strate gic Middle East. A sharp Soviet note blamed the rupture in rela tions on the bombing Monday of the Soviet Legation in Tel Aviv in which three Russians were in jured. In Moscow, the eight adults and one child at the Israeli lega tion began packing at once. NEW YORK Convicted atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, their last-ditch appeal for clem ency turned down by President Eisenhower, will learn next Mon day the new date for their execu tion in Sing Sing Prison's Electric chair. Legal sources here said they believed Judge Irving "R. Kaufman, who presided at the couple's 16-day trial in 195 1, would set an early execution date, possibly during the first half of March. Emanuel H. Bloch, attorney for the Rosenbergs, said he would make every effort to save them. WASHINGTON The biggest Congressional Korean war investi gation since the 1951 McArfhur dismissal hearings shaped up yes terday with Gen. James A. Van Fleet as the war witness. Two Senate committees called on Van Fleet to spell out his ideas for cracking the Konean military dead lock by a new United Nations of fensive. Van Fleet faced question ing on his statement that the 8th Army with its present manpower and material is capable of mounting a major offensive that could break the present military deadlock along the 155-mile fighting front SAN FRANCISCO Generalissi mo Chiang Kai-shek said in a wire less interview" yesterday that his forces can invade Red China when ever they choose, without sanction of the United Nations and with no fear of Russian intervention. But he does not believe he is adequate ly, prepared for such an invasion. Meanwhile, in Washington, inform ed sources' Indicated that deliveries of American F-84 jet fighter-bombers to Chinese Nationalist forces on Formosa should begin fairly soon. It "was "also believed that Chiang-Kai-shek's" air force "will receive reconnaissance versions of the F-80 Shooting Star jet fighter. Five Local University . Five books from the campus head the list of publications from the University Press for the first half of 1953. This is the largest group of titles to come from one source in many years. Three of the books are being published posthumously. The late Dr. Henry McG. Wagstaff's mem oirs of - the Concord Community of Person County, which was bis boy hood home, will be published as a series of" sketches called "Wiley Kiirn unit 11 . n uiica. " " In May "the Good Doctor and Other Writings" of Dr. William DeB. " MacNider will come out. Dr. MacNider was a long time member of the faculty of the University of North Carolina" Medical School. The two volume "Documentary History of the University of North Carolina" 1776-1799,T by the late Dr. R.iD. W. Connor, will be pub- j j, in. jujje.-This book-was orig- Wirt Roy S . n - ; - - vmm:m i , ' - K: - -i - ;ir -;' , l ' ! h " ' - ' Z V'&iLeijlLJL-jaStT -i ' vv - WwvMaK. S jt&v&S'S&Zc 't s. - - " , - - mm - ? - J - : ' ; " i ihMADkMtttt. . .. ....... . .11 ui -.oowaJ .v. AASbCS V ' i- r I" ? ' It J ' s I . S 5 i i i,, - ' -. I ' ' J THESE 16 ATTRACTIVE GIRLS are sponsors for the Winter German Club dances to be held tonight and tomorrow night at the University. Ray Anthony and his orchestra will furnish music for the two formats in Woollen Gymnasium and a concert in Memorial Hall. Top row, left to right: Jane Schoolfield Danville, Va., with R. Bryant Hare, Wilmington, president of the German Club; Bruce Carr, Rocky Mount, with Gordon, Taylor, Richlands, secretary; Temple St. Clair, Bluefield, W. Va., with Alex Mc Millan, Charlotte, vice-president, and Anita Caine, Greensboro, with Jim Schenck, Greensboro,, treasurer; second KJVwJU?Siia-vBrown, Albemarle, with . JakeJR.?untreer Mt. Airy; Nancy Rose, Charlotte, with Skip ov Roddey, Charlotte; Sibyl Devereaux, Chevy Chase Md., with Roger Kingsbury, Washington, D. C; Mary Elizabeth Lindeman, Virginia Beach, Va., with Henry V. Wilson, Dover, Del.; third row: Martha Dowdey, Burlington, With Bill Yates, Burlington; Laura Lee Allen, Cincinnati, O., with Pat Samonds, Durham; Kay Boyette, Carthage, with Swain Stephenson, Halifax; Susan Ambler, Chicago, III., with Edward B. Gross, Harrisburg, Pa.; fourth row: Sandra Wright, Winston-Salem, with John Baldridge, Winston-Salem; Claire Chesnut, Jacksonville, Fla., with Tom Ruff in, Winston-Salem; Sarah Manning, Williamston, with Wallace Pridgen, Wilson, and Ann Mason Chapin, Richmond, Va with Jones Yorke, Concord, Clinic Meefs Today The orchestra section of the North Carolina Music EducstoYs Associ ation will sponsor an all-state high school orchestra clinic here today and tomorrow. Approximately 120 boys and girls from 15 high schools throughout the state will get together, under mm I rinai v-nance For Gut Rates University students are being of fered special rates for the "Ice Ca pades of 1953" performance Mon day ' night in the William Neal Rey nolds Coliseum at Raleigh. The per formance begins at 8:30. Through the Special Services Committee of SUAB, students may order tickets in the Main office of Graham " Memorial today between 9 o'clock and 11 p.m. Today is the last day for orders to be placed. ' BooEcs Head Press List inally scheduled as part of the University's Sesquicentennial but was delayed by the author's death. Active members of the Univer sity faculty are the authors of two books. Prof. Floyd Hunter's "Com munity Power Structure" will ap pear in May. It is a sociological study of the real leaders of a large Southern city. , The fifth book is one of the series on education by Dr. Edgar W. Knight of the School of Education. Volume IV of the "Documentary History of Education in the South Before 1860" is concerned with the institutions founded by private and denominational groups. Perhaps the most important of the new publications, from the point of general interest, is very elaborate "Flowers of the South" by Wilhelmina F." Green and Dr. Huga X. Blomquist, head of the Botany Department at - Duke Uni-'Versityi-"'' -- -: ; -"- usic the direction of Paul Painter, Uni- versity of Illinois music director, for two days of music-making. It will be climaxed by a concert of orchestral music tomorrow night in Hill Hall at 7:30. This morning and afternoon will be spent in intensive rehearsals, both in separate instrumental sec tions and with the full ensemble. Tonight at 7:30 they will attend a concert of chamber music to be presented by members of the Uni versity music faculty. This concert, to be given in Hill Hall, will be open to the" public! The program will include works by Mozart, Brahms and Dohnanyi. Following the concert there will be a dance for the high school stu dents in Graham Memorial. Tomorrow morning and part of the afternoon will be devoted to rehearsals, after which there will be recreation, including attendance at the current Morehead Planetar ium show, "Birth and Death of the Earth." The student concert, also open to the public, tomorrow night will include numbers by Hadley, Han- (See CLINIC, page 4) Campus Seen American flag drooping on pole as rain continues to pelt it dur ing day. Coed amusing self during dull class by wearing husky athlete's brogans, chagrined when she has to follow male by laughing stu dents before he'll return her tiny loafers. Rain as usual to inaugurate Germans weekend. tairtf And RAY ANTHONY Wayne Morse Talks Monday In Raleigh RALEIGH, Feb: 12 (Special) Sen. Wayne Morse, controversial political figure from Oregon, will speak here Monday night at 8 o'clock at The United Church on Hillsboro St. Sen. Morse, who was reelected for a second term in 1950, will speak on "Ethical Standards in Government." The speech Monday night is sponsored by the 1953 Institute of Religion. Theme of the Institute is "Strengthening Freedom in Am erica." Sen. Morse is a distinguished ed ucator and independent political leader. He was born near Madison. Wis. in 1900 and studied at the Uni versities of Wisconsin, Minnesota and Columbia. At the University of Oregon, he rose from assistant professor of law in 1931 to dean of the law school, a position he held at the time of his election to the United States Senate In November, 1944: TT s 0T3 5 sn Itq & Two Dances, Concert Mark Big Weekend Ray Anthony and the Bunny Hop bounce onto campus tonight to open Mid-Winter Germans with a for mal dance in Woollen Gym from 9 o'dtock until 1 a.m. Anthony, one of the nation's most popular dance orchestras, also will play a concert tomorrow afternoon and another dance tomorrow night. Coeds have 2 a.m. permission to night for the Ray Anthony dance, the Dean of Women's office and Women's Residence Council an nounced. The concert will be held in Me morial Hall from 4 until 6 p.m. and the dance will be in Woollen from 8 p.m. until midnight. It also is formal. Life magazine is scheduled to send a photographer for the week end to take pictures to, run with a feature story the weekly picture mag is preparing on Anthony. Billed as the Young Man with a Horn, Anthony has planned his or chestra around a strong brass sec tion and his selections have a snap py tempo. He plays novelties, jazz, swing and sweet ballads. One of his more noted numbers is "When the Saints Go Marching In," which is accompanied by his orchestra parading through the aud ience. It was one of his most popu lar numbers when he played here several Winters ago. Anthony sent advance w$rd aS well as instruction sheets, encour aging those, who' plan to attend the dances to learn the "Bunny Hop," a simple number recently revived by his orchestra. A copy of the instructions were printed in yesterday's Daily Tar Heel. The weatherman forecast cloudy and mild for today with a high of 50. It is expected to clear tomor row. Conduct Rules For Weekend Are Published Dancing can be dangerous. Students were reminded yester day by the chairman of the Dance Committee of the University dance rules in effect for this weekend. They provide that: 1. Any person desiring to leave the dance hall during the dance with the intention of returning must be accompanied by a chaper one during his entire stay away from the dance. 2. Anyone showing signs of drinking or other misconduct shall be dealt with according to the dis cretion of the Dance Committee. 3. Anyone giving the wrong name is automatically suspended indefinitely. ' 4. Anyone bringing intoxicating beverages on the dance floor is au tomatically suspended indefinite ly. The Dance Committee is empow ered to suspend from all dances given under University auspices any student for misconduct. Length of suspension is up to the commit tee. Y Wives George Kachergis of the Art Department will speak Tuesday at 8 p.m. to a meeting of the Y student wives group. The meeting will be held in Person Hall. Kachergis attended the Art In stitute in Chicago. During the past year he has exhibited in several painting museums and contests. He will speak on "An Approach Toward the Under standing of Modern Art.''
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1953, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75