U U C LIBRARY
GL:UA13 DEPT.
CHAPEL HILL, K. C.
8-31-49
WEATHER
Fair and cooler
with 72 high. Yester
day's high, 80; low,
59.
HOPE
The editors are
hopeful about hope
for Easter. See page
2.
VOLUME LXI, NUMEER 122
CHAPEL HILL, N. C,
SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 1953
FOUR PACES TODAY
Fraternities Begin
Greek Week Slate
The third annual Greek Week, a constructive five-day affair which
includes giving blood and clearing a church yard, starts tomorrow.
Purpose of the event is to provide constructive projects to round
-$
It's Nashery
Tuesday Night
At SEC Show
Ogden Nash, the witty, comic
poet, defines the perfect husband:
"He tells you when you've got on
too jnuch lipstick, and helps you
with your girdle when your hips
stick."
Nash will be here Tuesday at 8
o'clock in Memorial Hall under the
auspices of the Student Entertain
ment Committee.
Mr. Nash has concentrated for
some twenty years on producing at
a prodigious rate the light verses
that have become associated with
his name. His book, "Hard Lines,"
published in 1931, established him
as an outstanding writer of hu
morous poetry. "I'm A Stranger
Here Myself," published five years
later, was a best seller, selling
more than 100,000 copies in the
original edition. These two together
with his eight other books, contain
8634 poems, a number increased
wekly by his regular contributions
to the" New Yorker and Saturday
Evening Post.
Odgen Nash has attracted a large
and faithful audience with his wit
ty comments on the modern scene.
Samples of Nash at his best include
his reflections on The Happy Fam
ily: "Children aren't happy with
out something to ignore and that's
what parents are created for" and
Breaking the Ice. "Candy is dandy,
but liquor is quicker."
Honor Council
Reports Cases
Four students were suspended
for Honor Code violations, ten ac
quitted and one recovered from pro
bation during winter quarter exam"
inations, the council reported yes
terday.
One was suspended for cheating
on a Spanish 2 examination, an
other for copying from someone's
examination paper in Sociology 56,
one for cheating on a Geology 1
final and the last for copying an
swers from an exam book on an
instructor's desk in Spanish 2
which had been finished and turn
ed in to the instructor.
Ten students were acquitted or
found not" guilty by the council.
Three persons were found not guil
ty of cheating on a zoology 42 final.
Two others were acquitted on pos
sible honor code violation in phil
osophy 42 on the final. Two more
were found not guilty on charges
of violations on a Spanish 2 final.
Three others were acquitted on
possible charges of violations on
a geology 1 final examination.
One student was removed from
probation. He was placed on in
definite probation in May of spring
quarter 1952.
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out pledgeship of fraternity pledg
es. It was instituted here in 1950
when Dick Jenrette organized a
movement to rid the campus of
hazing. Fraternity hazing was out
lawed by the Interfraternity
Council that year, and the con
structive Greek Week replaced
Hell Week.
The campus wide project for the
greek letter bearers this year will
be to clear the lands of a new
Methodist Church on the outskirts
of Chapel Hill Friday afternoon.
-Pledges and actives will also
join in the blood drive Monday af
ternoon. Exchange dinners are scheduled
for Monday, Tuesday and Wednes
day nights. Exchange dinners are
ones in which the various fraterni
ties play host to each other's pled
ges. Free movies are slated for Wed
nesday night at the Carolina Thea
ter. Thursday afternoon a field day
will be held at Woollen Gym. One
of four awards will be presented
the winner of this event.
Stunt night is Thursday night at
8 o'clock in Memorial Hall. An
award will be given for this event
also.
Other awards to be presented are
for the best ' pledge as shown by
participation in the week and for
the pledge class with the highest
scholastic average.
Capt. J. S. Keating of the U. S.
Navy will address the annual
pledge banquet in Lenoir Hall Fri
day night at 7 o'clock.
Steven Trimble is chairman of
this year's Greek Week.
Last year, most of the fraterni
ties participated-in the event.-Early
reports showed that most would
be included in this year's fratern
ity fest.
Approximately 385 were expect
ed for the climax Lenoir Hall ban
quet, Greek Week officials said.
FThey said the events are arranged
to bring the men together in com
mon activities.
IDC
The Inter-Dormitory Council will
meet Monday night at 7 o'clock in
the Alumni Building for the elec
tion of officers.
UNC Fumbles Duke Challenge
To Beat Blood-Giving Record
It doesn't look like Carolina is
going to beat Duke this year
either. At least not if the blood
donor appointments continue on
the scale thus far, Chairman
Harriet Eliason said.yesterday.
Only 75 persons have signed
up for the Bloodmobile's visit
here tomorrow through Wednes
day although a goal of 1,009
pints has been set. The 1,009
figure is one more than the num
ber given by students at Duke
University in its recent blood
drive,
Blood collected in the drive
will be used for two purposes:
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KOREA JOE, Sgt. Kim Man Su,
of the Republic of Korea Army,
who is better known to his Am
erican soldier buddies as "Korea
Joe," shows off his new of
ficial arms and legs. Kim stepped
on a land mine, which blew off
both his legs; then his arms were
amputated because of severe
frostbite. Now he's well on the
road to recovery NEA Tele
photo Another Bill
Aimed To Dry
Campus Wets
RALEIGH, April 4 (Special)
Still determined to dry up intoxi
eating beverages on college cam
puses, Rep. William Winkler of
Watauga has introduced another
bill to achieve his aim.
It was little different from a sim
ilar measure the Watauga Repub-
lican sent forward several weeks
ago. Winkler said the changes were
suggested in the House Proposi
tions and Grievances Committee.
The earlier bill would have pro
vided for the suspension of any
student and the firing of any fac
ulty member, official employe con
victed of violating the prohibition
against liquor on the campus.
The new bill merely subjects
them to a $50 fine or up to 30
days in jail for a first offense, and
$100 fine and up to three months
in jail for a second offense.
The Proposions and Grievances
Committee showed little inclina
tion to endorse Winkler's first ef
fort. Observers predicted his sec
ond would fare no better.
Most of it will go overseas to the
armed forces .while some will be
kept in this country for imme
diate use in combatting polio.
Appointments may be made in
the Graham Memorial office or
by calling 5611 or- 9-1881.
It is recommended that no
fatty foods be eaten within three
hours of the blood appointment.
Unmarried minors must have the
written permission of a parent
or guardian.
The last donation record set
by the Carolina campus was that
of 822 pints given last Spring.
for discussing the exchange of sick
wounded buddy
- -
vital plasma being administered to
Surplus In Red,
Finances
For UNC
took Dim
If the House's Finance Commit
tee does't o.k. the proposed bond
issue, state educational institu
tions are likely to suffer, it was
indicated yesterday. :
For if the committee doesn't
think it's needed the General As
sembly probobly will go along with
that opinion, and House Bill 941,
asking for $13,000,000 in bonds to
help state education, will be dead.
The probability of getting the
funds from the state's surplus al
ready is dead, according to Budget
Director David S. Coltrane. "The
surplus will be in the red if the
10, percent pay increase goes
through," Coltrane said.
. r.nv TTmstparl has flslceri for a i
10 percent pay raise for all state
employees retroactive to July 1,
1952. According to Coltrane, the
retroactive pay and the salaries for
the rest of the fiscal year (June
30) would cost $13,000000 and for
the next fiscal year would require
$27,000,000.
UNC's part in the proposed bond
issue is $1,001,000 and the Con- J
solidated University total is $2,-;
881,000. The breakdown for the
University at Chapel Hill:
Matching funds for Insti
tute of Government $500,000.
Dorm renovation &
equipment 196,000.
Bingham Hall 41,000.
Peabody Hall basement
ment excavation 36,000.
UNC Total $773,000.
The Division of Health Affairs i is j
asking for the rest of Chapel Hill's
$1,001,000. Their breakdown:
South Wing Medical
equipment . '. $ 50,000.
. Complete post grad,facil-.., .
ities & Dental School
equipment 143,000
Remodel Med. School 3rd
floor area 25,000
Complete equipment can
cer research floor 10,000
Health Affairs Total $228,000
MUNSAN Allied and Commun-
nist liaison officers are expected
to meet late today in Panmunjom :
to Dut the finishing touches on
plans for a Monday meeting which
could pave the way to a truce in
Korea. Most officers here expressed
belief that disabled prisoners will
be exchanged soon. A time must
be set for the session to discuss
plans for exchanging sick and
wounded prisoners of war. And
Gen. Mark Clark's formal accept
ance must be delivered to the
Communists.
WASHINGTON FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover, has told Congress
that Communists are infiltrating
"every field" of American activity
and "enemy espionage" rings are
working more intensively than
ever before in U.S. history. Hoover
made the mornings in testimony,
published yesterday, before a House
appropriations subcommittee. The
FBI chief asked for a boost in
operating funds from $67,000,000
to $70,000,000 for the fiscal year
starting July 1.
ISTANBUL, Turkey Forty men
trapped alive in the Turkish sub
marine Dumluplinar which sank
yesterday in the Dardanelles tele
phoned the outside' world that they
were huddled in a back compart
ment. Six crew members fell over
board when the Dumlupinar col
lided with the freighter Naboland,
a Swedish freighter. Five were
rescued and one died. The sub
marine's commander managed to
float a buoy after the sub sank.
The buoy carried a telephone con
nected to the sunken vessel.
WASHINGTON -They'll be roll
ing eggs across the White House
lawn tomorrow in the revival of a
tradition. Over 50,000 citizens of all
sizes will roam the six acres of
lawn which hasn't been disturbed
by President Eisenhower's golf
practicing. This is the first of these
events since 1941.
BRIEF
worio reaee as Mi
STANDING AMONG DOGWOOD bows, Carolina May Queen
Saralyn Bonowitz makes an appealing picture. Miss Bonowitz was
chosen by the coeds who also picked her a court of 10. Carman
Nahm will be maid of honor. Daily Tar Heel photo by Cornell
Vright.
Saralyn Bonowitz To Be
Carolina May Queen
Pretty, auburn-haired Saralyn 5-
Bonowitz of Chattanooga, will reign
as May Queen at the University on
Sunday, May 10.
The queen and her court of 10
were selected by coeds on the basis
of beauty, personality and charac
ter. Carman Nahm of Deland, Fla.
will be maid of honor.
Other members of the court are
Elizabeth (Pepper) Stetson, West
Chester, Pa.; Grace Gordon, Spray;
Diane Breslow, Rahway, N. J.; Bev-
cny iiai., weexiiuuiu, jdcqueiuie
i n r t t i:
Fox, Roanoke, Va.; Dorothy Smith,
Spencer, West Va.; Ann Sory, Palm
Beach, Fla.; Jayne Adams, Char.
lotte and Virginia Wilson, Jackson,
Miss Smith, a member of the May
Court and Chairman of the May
Day Committee, announced that
plans for the pageant are incom
plete. , Tne May Queen, a senior in the
j University, is a member of Chi
Omega sorority. An English major,
she plans to attend the summer
session of the University of Chat
tanooga following graduation in
June. She plans a teaching career.
She is president of Valkyries,
highest honorary organization for
coeds at the University; president
of the Hillel Foundation; former,
secretary of her sorority; was
Women's orientation chairman and
of campus orientation this year,
and was a member of the Student
(Legislature last year. She has made
the Dean's List almost every quar
ter.
Before coming to the University
Miss Bonowitz was a student at
Stephens College, Columbia, Mo.
Candidates To
Meet Monday
For Briefing
Students will meet the candi
dates for office and the candidates
will meet the election laws at a
mass meeting in Memorial Hall at
7.30 tomorrow night.
The candidates for president,
vice-president, secretaryVtreasurer
and head cheerleader will make
short talks to the group, said Dusty
Lamson, chairman of the Elections
Board. Other candidates will be in
troduced. All candidates are required to at
tend the meeting, Lamson said.
Candidates who don't have an
excuse for not attending are dis
qualified unless they notify the
Election Board Chairman within
48 hours. Chairman Lamson can be
I reached at St. Anthony Hall.
w . cJi y4! iiit
Student Series
By Playmakers
Is This Week
The Playmakers will present
Wednesday and Thursday, the
160th in their series of new plays
by student playwrights. The bill
is a series of three one-act plays,
i -. ...
Tney are "Hi, sir," written Dy Jam-
es Leonard of Trappe, Md. and dir-
'jected by Cyril Lang of East Orange'
N. J.; "The Mute" by Cyril Lang,
directed by Anne Edwards of New
Bern; and "Little Wonder" by Don
ald Deagon of Chapel Hill, directed
by Mary Virginia Morgan of By
halia, Miss. The plays are under
the general supervision of Foster
j Fitz-Simons. Curtains are at 7:30
land there is no admission charge.
Hi, Sir," a comedy of army life
wm feature Lt. Kaspar played by
Hal England of Kings Mountain;
OLt. Little, James Fouts of Lexing
ton; Lt. Foster, Billy Barnes of
Wilson; Maj. Graughton, Donald
Treat of Chapel Hill, and the Gen-
; eral, George Belk of Williamsburg,
Va.
"The Mute," a psychological dra
ma of the last hours of a convict
features Tommy Rezzuto of Ashe
ville will as the Mute; William
Trotman, Winston-Salem, Felix;
Neta Whitty, New Bern, Zo; John
Millpr Sicmnl Mt . Tenn.. the Hired
Man; James Leonard, Trappe, Md.,
i the Lawyer; Dan Reid Raleigh, the
Negro Prisoner; Max Paul the
Bartender; Don Carmichael the
Second Man; Carl Williams of
Charlotte the Chaplain; and Dave
Ashburn.
Easter Story In Wax At
Planetarium This Week
The Easter Story is depicted in
miniature in an exhibit now being
shown at the Planetarium.
The tiny scenes are all in color
and were made inside sea shells
and the lids of containers.
Michele Zuckmayer, the artist
produced the exhibit to be shown
concurrently with "Easter, the
Awakening", the Spring Planetari
um' presentation. Each scene is in
a minute detail and was formed
without the aid of reference, pic
tures. The secenes include "Palm
Sunday," "The Last Supper,"
"Gethsemani," "Golgotha," "The
Tomb" and "The Ascension."
Public inspection is invited daily
from 2 to 10 p.m.; on Saturdays
from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and on Sun
days from 1 to 10 p.m.
$ Whether or not this Easter will
be the landmark of another great
rebirth of hope and peace, the
abiding faith of Christendom rests
today in the promise held forth in
the resurrection long ago in Jerus
alem. From Vatican City to Korea,
Christians held their breaths in
feelings of both hope and doubt
over recent Soviet peace hints. In
a Good Friday news conference,
Secretary of State Dulles said the
United States will have to con
tinue strong defenses, but an ag
greement of an exchange of ill and
wounded prisoners of war might
open the way to a Korean armistice.
As Americans readied for Easter
yesterday they were reminded of a
day before the first Easter nearly
2,000 years ago, probably the most
hopeless day in human history.
The crucifixion of Jesus appear
ed to mean that these loyal people
who had followed Jesus were mis
taken, that this Jesus was not the
Messiah after all. Even more impor
tant, they wondered whether the
testimony of the Bible regarding
the coming of the Messiah was
false.
The wondering stopped . and
faith was renewed when Christ rose
from his tomb, with the same body
in which he had suffered. He first
appeared to a few faithful wom
en; later to the disciples. In all
there are ,11 definite and different
appearances recorded in the New
Testament.
That same faith seemed restored
yesterday as in Munsan, Korea, a
tiny "freedom village" of tents
sprang up and U.S. Marine engin
eers rushed hospital facilities in
case a more significant promise
materializes the exchange of ill
and wounded prisoners of war.
On the other hand, in East Ger
many the Communists chose Good
Friday for harassment of the Pro
testant church. They banned a
synod in Weimer, seized a seminary
and forbade Easter services in
the half-mile "death zone" separ
ating East and West Germany.
In North Carolina a new holiday
Easter Monday seemed rapidly
becoming a permanent fixture on
the state calendar. Although ap
parently less than 20 years old as a
holiday, the day will be observed
this year as a day of rest by thou
sands of students, state employees
and store and industrial workers.
Official lists of legal holidays in
the various states show that North
Carolina is the only state noting
Easter Monday.
Carolina students will not have
Monday off, however.
Chapel Hillians and early ris
ing students attended a sunrise
service this morning at the Forest
Theater. The service was a com
munity affair, conducted by Chapel
Hill churchmen and planned by
a layman committee. Scripture and
prayer with organ music made up
the program of the brief service.
Meantime faint glimmers of hope
the same hope born on the Res
urection day shone in at least one
tiny sector of the Soviet peace of
fensive. France announced she has
been informed by Moscow that 14
of her captive civilians, held nearly
three years in North Korea have
been released and are on the way
.home.
Thus was the picture for Easter
1953 a continued faith in Christ,
new hopes for peace in Korea and
Carolina students ushering in the
great day at a service as the rays
. of hope and sun bathed the scene.
Carnival Plans
Are Outlined
Plans for the University Club's
annual carnival are underway and
entry blanks have been sent out
for the April 17 event.
Chairman Fred Hutchins said any
campus organization is eligible to
enter and he asked those who plan
to do so to let him know by ap
plication or in person as soon as
possible. He lives at the SAE house.
An entry fee of $2.50 will be
charged.
Booths in the carnival will be
judged in originality, general ap
pearance and workmanship with a
cup being awarded to the best
booth. One of the feature events
will be the crowning of the winner
of the Ugly Man contest sponsored
by Theta Chi Fraternity.