C i i" - .1 X -
WEATHER
Fair and warm
with 80 high. Yes
terday's high and
low, 85 and 60.
HOWDY
A new editor, a
new style, on page 2.
VOLUME LXI NUMBER 138
CHAPfi HILL, N. C. TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1953
FOUR PAGES TODAY
A School
BOCQ Tops 14
M
;
I j y o i
I
fl
i p
Imp
Announces
r
Dean's Li si'
Dean Thomas H. Carroll of the
School of Business Administration
-of the University of North Caro
lina has announced the Dean's List
for the Winter Quarter, 1953.
The following students all made
a B average or better on all of
their courses. Nine students in
cluded in the group made all A's.
Their names are: Jerome Wilson
Bolicg, James Daye, Robert" Daye,
Archibald Taylor Fort, Joseph
Duane Gilliam, Goldston Franklin
Harris, William Ralph Jacobs Jr.,
William Marsh Sanders and Kim
"ble Carson Yates.
Wiley Eugene Auman, High
Point; James McCall Baker, Row
land; Edmund Gerald Barron,
jMoncks Corner, S. C; Gordon Bat
tle Jr., Greensboro; Lacy Gilmer
TJaynes Jr., Greensboro; Walter
"Enos Bell Jr., Durham; Burton Hy
xnan Bershaw, Asheville; Charles
TSdward Bizzell, Seven Springs;
Clyde James Blanchard Jr., Rocky
"Mount; Elmer Charles Bland, Tho
masville; Jerome Wilson Bolick,
Conover.
Henry Bryan Barefoot Jr., Black
"Mountain; Linwood Alton Brown
Jr., Raleigh; Robert Adrian Brown,
Tlobersonville; William C r e d 1 e
Brown, Wilson; Glass Bowling Car- j
Cashwell, Asheboro; Lynn Page
Tier Jr., Charlotte; Thomas Herman
Neal Cohn, Chattanooga, Tenn.;
Chandler, Morrisville; Herbert
Kenton Bowers Creuser, Avondale
Estates, Ga.; James Raye, Winston
Salem; Robert Daye, Winston-Salem;
Fred Hyams Deaton, States
Tille. ..
Steve William Dellinger Jr.,
Charlotte; Kenneth Franklin Eas
' ter, Winston-Salem; Aaron Caswell
Edmundson, Pikeville; Irving Efrin
Fogler, Charlotte; Archibald Tay
lor Fort, Oxford; Croaton Lofton
Fouts Jr., Faison; Lewis Daniel
"Frazier, Louistrarg; Joseph Duane
Gilliam ThomasvIUe; Neil Bost
Glenn, Burlington; Clarence Ed
ward Grenway, High Point; James
Lee Gulledge Jr., Moncks Corner,
S. C; Jerry Dennis Gulley, Clay
ton. Eddie Eldridge Hair, High
Point; Jack Gellman Handler, Sar
asota, Fla.
Charles Ralph. Harbinson Jr.,
High Point; Amos Cecil Harris,
Forest City; George Davis Harris,
Henderson; Goldston Franklin-Harris,
High Point; Max Arland Har
ris. Drexel: John Calvin Hasty,
IMaxton; Richard Wilson Herbin
Greensboro: William Buren Hill,
, Cliffside; Laura MacDonald Holo
man, Raleigh; John Robert Hunter,
Winston-Salem; Chestley Julian
Hyatt, Winston-Salem; Claude Tut
tle Icenhour, Durham; William
Ralph Jacobs Jr., Sims; John Mer
edith Jones, Edenton; Charles Ern
est Julian, Salisbury; Lee Edward
Knott, Washington.
Lamont Drear Krimminger, Kan
capolis; Richard Brooke Lawson
Jr., Hopkinsville, Ken.; Alvin Ellis
Levine, Rockingham; Henry Eu
gene Lewis Jr., Charlote; Ernest
Anthony Liberati, Philadelphia,
Penn.; Robert McDonald Long,
Concord; John Aycock McLendon,
Greensboro; Bruce Marger, Coral
Gables, Fla.; William Theodore
I Milburn, Winston - Salem; Billy
i Wilson Miller, Morganton; Glenn
5 Lowry Mitchell, Hickory Grove, S.
i C; John Franklin Moore, Lenoir;
1 William Prince Moore, Raleigh;
j Jolm. Fairbanks Motsinger, Win
j eton-Salem.
i 11
Roland Trice Neal, Durham; Ric
hard Vernon Neill. Fort Pierce,
Fla.; George Van Norris, Radford,
Va.; Engene Oberdofer n, Atlanta,
Ga.; Harold Franklin Oglesby, Kin
(See DEAN'S LIST, page 4)
4 H
V-
it
5
FRENCH VIETNAM TROOPS of a Laotian light infantry pa
trol ford a swirling river near Hanoi, Indo China. Other patrols
killed about 20 Communists in clashes, according to a French
Spokesman, as the Communist troops drove to within 60 miles of
Luang Prabang, the Royal Capital and the city whose capture would
have the most prestige value. for the Reds. NEA Telephoto.
Incoming Coed
Officers Meet
Tomorrow At 8
The spring leadership training
program for incoming officers of
coed organizations will begin to
morrow night.
The program will get underway
with an address by Dr. Bernard
Boyd in Carroll Auditorium at 8
o'clock.
Thursday at 4:30 in Carroll Au
ditorium Nancy Home and Betty
Otto Anderson will lead a group
meeting to review parliamentary
procedure.
At 5 o'clock various discussions
will be held in Gardner Hall. Sor
ority presidents and vice-presi-
dents will meet in 103 for a dis
cussion led by Dorothy Beals,
advised by Ray Jeffries.
Dorm and sorority house coun
cils, Honor Council and Student
Council will be in 104, led by
Carmen Nahm and advised by Miss
Gay Currie. Secretaries, under
Sarolyn Bonowitz and Miss Isabelle
MacLeod will meet in 107.
Mary Ellen Jones will lead and
Harry Kear will advise the treasur
ers in 108. Social chairmen will
meet with Sue Burress and Miss
Marcella Harrer in 200.
Dean Fred Weaver will speak at
6:30 Thursday night to conclude
the program.
Ubiquitous but ever welcome
cigar et hucksters passing out
samples . during "Our Best To
You" blanket party.
i
Young South Building wives
looking fondly from office win
dows upon visiting grade school
ersboth a sure sign of Spring.
Faux pas of the week as Ken
Penegar remarks at dinner for
Aver ell Harriman: "As I look
out over all these heads . . f
Parents Have
Daylong Look
Here Sunday;
A picnic lunch-
Order Reveals
All Its Officers
For Past Year
Fourteen outstanding students
were tapped into membership last
night by the Order of the Golden
Fleece the highest honor on the
campus.
Mi
A
niniivirsQiiry
In the traditional ceremony in
Memorial Hall, the Fleece beck
oned five juniors, seven seniors
and two graduate students. It was
the 50th Annual Tapping Cerem-
ampus tours mony and also saw Dr. Frank Por-
3 I
uuly
a band concert planetarium ter Graham named the Fleece's
shows and a short address by! Argonaut of the Half -Century.
President Gray. Such is Parents' j (See story at right.)
Day at Carolina. '
i The fourteen tappees were: :
Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega Rolfe Neill statesville; Thaddeus .
and the administration, the third Seymour, Chapel Hill; Robert D.
annual Day wil begin noon Sunday Gorham Jr., Rocky Mount; Thomas
with a picnic lunch on the campus, Kezzuto, Asheville; Edward B. j
MS
PANMUNJOM The new Korean
armistice talks deadlocked again
yesterday as the U.N. Command
flatly rejected a Red prisoner ex
change proposal which it said of
fers only return to Communist rule
or "endless captivity" for the Reds
who refuse to go home. In their
second meeting since Oct. 8, both
Allied and Communist delegates
stood pat on their own plans for
settling the exchange problem and
bringing a truce in Korea. An
other session is scheduled for 11
a.m. today.
SEOUL United Nations planes
dropped hundreds of tons of bombs
on North Korean targets yester
day, climaxing day-long attacks
with a 50-ton strike against an
ammunition factory. Final pilot
relays were unable to access the
damage at the factory near Chin
nampo because of dense cluods of
smoke mushrooming from the
blasted area. Newly equipped F-86
Sabre jets protecting the fighter
bombers were ordered from their
interceptor screen to ' dive-bomb
battle-line targets.
Faculty Luncheon
Dr. George B. Cutten, retired
president of Colgate University,
will tell of a great World War I
explosion when he speaks to the
Men's Faculty Luncheon at x
o'clock this afternoon.
Dr. Cutten will describe the ex
plosion in the harbor of Halifax,
Nova Scotia in which more than
1,600 people were killed and 10,000
were wounded. Dr. Cutten directed
rehabilitation after the disaster.
YW Benefit Ticket Sale
Continues Until Tonight
Tickets to "The Member of the
Wedding' will be on sale through
tonight at the YWCA, Little Shop,
University Florist, Town and
Campus Shop and Ledbetter-Pick-ard.
A part of the proceeds from all
tickets sold at these places will go
to the YWCA. No money received
tonight will benefit the Y. Regular
prices prevail in the selling pro
gram. Fraternities, sororities, dormi
itory residents, faculty members
and local civic organizations are
all aiding the YWCA in this fund
drive. Rights to ticket sales were
eranted by Andy Gutierrez, man
ager of the Varsity Theater, where
"The Member of the Wedding" be
gins tomorrow. ,
Eisenhower Orders
Strict Security Probe
WASHINGTON President Ei
senhower yesterday ordered tough
new security tests for all govern
ment employees. He signed an ex
ecutive order, effective in 30 days,
abolishing the old loyalty program
instituted by President Truman in
1947. At the same time he direct
ed the head of eacn executive
fl?encv and department to institute
strict new security programs for
thPir agencies. Like the old Tru
man program, the new one is de
signed, basically to rid the govern
ment of subversives and disloyal
persons.
WASHINGTON Opponents of
the administration - backed tide
ands bill said yesterday they are
ready to start voting on amend
ments, apparently the signal for a
break in their 19-day filibuster.
Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D-NM)
said after a strategy meeting with
other foes of the bill that "our
major objective has been accom
plished arousing the antagonism
of the country against this legisla
tion we think is bad." Anderson
said there is "quite a little chance
that a final vote on the bill may
be possible this week.
featuring box lunches from home.
Parents and friends of students
will then get a chance to meet the
faculty at a reception in the lounge
of Morehead Planatorium at 2:30.
Besides guided tours around the
campus and a Planetarium show
every hour, there will be a uni
versity Band Concert at 4:30 on
the lawn, to be preceeded by a
welcome address by President
Gorden Gray.
Di Will Debate
On UN Tonight
In honor of the local United Na
tions Week celebration, the Dia
lectic Senate will devote tonight's
8 o'clock meeting t& debate on a
bill calling for the strengthening
of the United Nations Into a lim
ited federal world government.
After the discussion, the Senate
is having a reception for delegates
to the UJi. Model Assembly and
all Senators and other guests. An
invitation has been extended to all
interested persons to go up and
take part in the debate held on the
third floor of New West.
Pi Lambda Phi Initiates
Four; Fogel Gets Award
Four new members were initi
ated into Omega Beta Chapter of
Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity last
week.
New members are Barry Fogel,
Augusta, Ga.; William Gorelick,
Charlotte; Donald Kurtz, Rock
Hill, S. C; Donald Warren, Brook
lyn, New York.
The Fraternity Schoarship Ath
letic Pledge Award was presented
to Barry Fogel during the Pi
Lambda Phi Pledge dinner.
Gross, Harrisburg, Pa.; James L.
Haney," Jr., Marion; J. Andrew
Bell Jr., Greensboro; Walter M.
Dear in, Jersey City, N. J.
Eugene Oberdorfer 11, Atlanta,
Ga.; Kenneth L. Penegar, Gastonia;
W. Stephen Perrow, Bedford, Va.;
Thomas A. Sully Jr., Charlottes
ville, Va.; James C. McLeod Jr.,
Florence, S. C, and Gilbert E.
Marsh Jr., Thomasville.
The Order also disclosed to the
public for the first time its officers
for the past year. They were: Jul
ian D. Mason, Jr. Jason; John M.
Schnorrenberg, Hyparchos; Ken
neth H. Barton, Grammateus; and
Paul N. Somerville, Chrystopher.
The 14 tappees were chosen -by
the traditional method which in
volved their being "searched for"
by two spot-lighted, black-robed
and hooded giants pacing the ais
les of the darkened auditorium.
When the tappees were "found",
they were tapped on the shoulders
and caused to stand while appro
priate citations were read. Later,
the tappees were lined up on the
stage for recognition by the audi
ence, This year the University Concert
Band presented one of its annual
spring concerts immediately before
and following the tapping.
There was a sizable group of
alumni from throughout the state
who were present for the tapping
and the reception following. The
Order was founded in 1903 and
recognizes students for character,
contribution, and service. It has
taken in almost 550 students, many
of whom have gone on to become
prominent men. Membership ixy
the Fleece is the highest honor
that can come to a Carolina stu
dent. All of its activities are secret
except the annual spring tapping.
S':::::x::-x::-:-:-:-:w:
j CO . i
i - t
!
I i I
According To Recent Survey
Only
Hell
Seven
Week
Fraternities
Over Greek
Favor
Week
Only seven of the 23 social fra
ternities on campus dislike Greek
Week enough to return to the old
"Hell Week" method of initiation.
That was the consensus of a survey
taken by The Daily Tar Heel.
The fraternity representatives
who said "it's time for a change,"
however, want Hell Week back,
only in a modified form.
As one fraternity president put
it, "The present Greek Week is not
accepted as much as Hell Week.
. -j ; The pledges don't get as much
out of it We wouldn't like to re
turn to the old Hell Week but we
would like to return to a modified
version."
"General opinion around the
however, is that Greek
Week is all right," he added.
Some of the fraternities endors
ing Greek Week expressed disap
pointment at the lack of spirit and could be united by Hell Week.
more activities. "Exchange dinners
don't accomplish much," one presi
dent said. "Even when you go to
another fraternity house to eat,
you're still tied up. After dinner,
you sit around for five or 10 min
utes talking to your own group and
then leave. The other part of the
program was all right but there
could have been a little more co
operation." One fraternity man said, "Greek
Week is a good idea, but it is un
controllable. It has been run into
the ground. What we need is more
useful work."
"The exchange suppers are
nice," he added, "but they should
do more, with fuller activities.
Hell Week is essential. Certain
pledges are in cliques and they
"The thing itself (Greek Week)
is a good idea," another repre
sentative said, "but it needs more
pushing. We should have more
clean-up type work. It keeps the
pledges busy."
Greek Week was inaugurated in
1950 to take the place of Hell
Week. This year, it entailed an
athletic contset, a land-clearing
project for a new Methodist
Church, exchange dinners, stunt
night, and a banquet at Lenoir
Hall.
Those fraternities that want Hell
Week back, want it to "bring the
pledges closer together" and to
"give us more control over the
pledges." None of the fraternity
representatives taking part in the
survey liked the idea of hazing.
DR. FRANK PORTER GRAHAM
. . . Argonaut of the half-century
Golden Fleece . Honors
Dr. Graham In Tapping
Dr. Frank Porter Graham was honored last night by the Order Of
the Golden Fleece when he was revealed as their choice for the
Argonaut of the Half -Century.
Announcement of the results of the secret balloting, begun last
February among the some 400 living members and alumni of the
organization, was made at the 50th Anniversary Tapping Ceremonies
of the Fleece in Memorial Hall.
Dr. Graham, former president of the University, former U. S.
Senator, and now special mediator for the United Nations, was
picked in response to a letter which asked the members of the
Order to help select "the member, now living, who best exemplifies
the ideals of the Golden Fleece in his life, in the example he has
set for others, and in the contributions he has made to the Univer
sity, the state, the nation and to mankind."
There were seventeen nominations coming from alumni scattered
all over the world, but Dr. Graham received a majority on the first
ballot.
Dr. Graham was recognized first during last night's tapping cere
monies in Memorial Hall. Later, he was recognized by the alumni
at the reception at the Carolina Inn, where he was presented a newly
bound first edition of Jefferson Davis' two-volume Rise and Fall of
the Confederate Government.
Dr. Graham was tapped by the Fleece as a student in 1908. -The
Order of the Golden Fleece was founded in 1903. It is the
highest honor on campus, and is the second oldest group of its type
in the country. Its over 500 alumni include many men prominent in
the affairs of the state of North Carolina and the nation.
Carolina's UN Assembly
Will Meet This Weekend
A bit of the international spot-
ight from UN Headquarters will
shine on Carolina when the Model
General Assembly meets here Fri
day and Saturday.
Designed to climax "Carolina
United Nations Week," the Model
Assembly is being held to provide retarii,t will have the reSn0nsibil-
the students with an actual expen-j ity of keeping all records during
the sessions.
The general public is invited to
attend all meetings of the Assem
bly on Friday and Saturday.
to get the ambassador to come to
Chapel Hill for the occasion, ac
cording to Henry Lowet, chairman
of the UN Committee.
Bernard Theiling today was de
signated Secretary-General of the
Model Assembly. He and the Sec-
ence in the functions ana struc
ture of the UN.
UN Week was given its kickoff
last Friday by Dr. Frank Porter
Graham, UN special representa-l
tive, who spoke on some of the
achievements of the United Na
tions.
Plans for the Model Assembly
call for the delegations of four
students from each member nation
to be divided into four commis
sions. Each commission will have
before it a particular type of prob
lem, such as: political and security,
economic and financial, social and
humanitarian, or trusteeship and
legal questions.
The Model Assembly may be of
ficially opened by Henri Bonnet,
French ambassador to the U. S.
Negotiations are now in progress
Yack Slackers
There are still several fraterni
ties and other organizations which
have not paid for their pages in
the Yackety Yack. All those so
concerned are asked to make pay
ment immediately.
t
Business Manager Russ Cowell
asked that checks be mailed to the
Yackety Yack, Box 987, Chapel
Hill or left in the main office of
Graham Memorial. Cowell also
said distribution of the books will
begin as soon as they arrive, and
that the first shipment was ex
pected about the 10th of May.