e-31-49 Horn A Mm 57 WEATHER Showers, scattered thunderstorms, win dy and warm with 80 high. FREEDOM The press writes on freedom of tt press. Page 2. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 142 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY Foreiiff'sl Stay Cot cdfl-ffn T t 4ft 1 I i TL VV Committee" Will Revise Vote Lows , The new student Legislature Thursday night set up a committee to investigate and revise the elec tions law. The committee is to remove the loopholes in the present law and make the changes made necessary by the switch to the semester sys tem. Gene Cook (SP) pointed out the loophole in requesting an investi gation after the recent election. He said that a candidate is charged on his account only for the posters and material that he actually uses, not for all he buys. Cook pointed out that this al lows a candidate to buy more pos ters than he uses at a lower unit cost for each poster. Thus, he can use more posters and stay within expense limits. Joel Fleishman introduced a "bill to grant The Daily Tar Heel its original budget request. The Student Party made a clean sweep of the offices and committee chairmanships in the Legislature. New officers are: Don Geiger, speaker pro tem; Joel Fleishman, parliamentarian; Anita Anderson, clerk; and Mac Morris, sergeant at arms. The new committee chairmen are: Manning Muntzing, Ways and Means;. Gordon Forester, Finance; Jim Turner, Rules; Dayton Estes, Elections; and Edith Cross, Coed Affairs. Anita Anderson is chair man of the Archives Committee since the. off ice of . clerk carries with it that duty. Opera Institute Plans Summer MasterClass A special Master Class for voice teachers will "be conducted July -18 by Walter Golde as a feature of the Summer Session of the In stitute of Opera to be sponsored by the University Extension Service. The Institute this summer, which opens June 10 at Boone and runs through August 27, will be oper ated in connection with the De partment of Music at Appalachian State Teachers College. A number of outstanding musicians will make up the staff. Golde has trained many well "known singers and will serve as chief voice teacher for the sessions in North Carolina this summer. One of the best known voice teach ers in the nation "he lias trained a number of Metropolitan Opera stars. The Master Class under Golde's direction will be limited to 10 voice teachers. He will conduct daily discussion groups and give private lessons to those registered. Further information on the program may be obtained from Director Cordon at the Extension Division in Chapel Hill. Two terms comprise the Sum mer Session of the Institute which will be conducted at Boone in co operation with the Department of Fine Arts headed by Gordon Nash. The terms will run from June 10 to July 17 and from July 21 to Au gust 27. The famous Grass Boots Opera, popular traveling group which has taken opera to the people of the state, will be at the School pre paring for its fall tour. Members, some of whom will perform in 4,Horn in the West," will be in re hearsal. Enrollments for the Institute will be handled through the Extension Division at Chapel Hill. Water Safety All persons interested in tak ing a water safety instructor's course should meet tomorrow night at 8 o'clock In room 304 of Woollen Gymnasium, Coach Dick Jamerson said yesterday. is1" ' s . , - I v v' f " t -M J?i;A . xl'1 . ' 1" - I s J."I , -S yC 's ' ' s i HAWAII'S FIRST RETURNED prfoner-of-war, Corporal Susma Shinagawa, is hugged by his mother as sister Mrs. Ted Sasako (left) and father Sogoro (right) beam proudly at the soldier. Shinagawa was given a royal welcome when he arrived in Honolulu after his release from a Communist prison camp in Korea. NEA Telephoto. UN Assembly's 'Soviet1 Voice Took Beating By Volunteering By Jennie Lynn "It's no fun being a Communist in the United States," said USSR Delegate Fred Crawford, after the Model UN Commission meetings yesterday morning. Since he announced that he would represent Russia in the As sembly he has been called a "secret Communist" and was assured that he would be "treated with the greatest of venom." Fred faced such sentiments yesterday. He found the Russian delegate has no friends and sees nothing except people lined up against him. Under such conditions, which obviously exist in the real assem bly, Fred feels assured that if the UN achieves anything it will be a miracle. From his experience of having the shoe on the other foot, he realizes that it is impossible for the Russian representative to talk with other nations. Before he says a word they have already de cided against him, "As long as we treat "the people of Russia with hatred they are go ing to fear us; nothing can be ac complished," he said. "We must be sympathetic towards all peoples. We should accept them as individ uals, who are loved by God and favor peace as we do." He says Russianism and Com- Selden Plans Summer Season Working With Outdoor Plays With the coming of the summer season, Samuel Selden, director of the Carolina Playmakers, is going to be one of the busiest men around these parts. As advisor and supervisor to at least five outdoor dramas wmcn have stemmed directly or indirect ly from North Carolina's pioneer project, "The Lost Colony" at Man- teo, Selden has contributed in large measure to this State's grow ing reputation as the home of the open air production. Selden, who is head of the De partment of Dramatic Art at the University, is director of Paul Green's "The Lost Colony". This summer he will be chiefly concern ed with it and with Kermit Hunter's "Horn in the West," in its second season at Boone. He also has a dozen projected plans that he is now advising m eariy swecs x planning and writing. At various times he has advised productions of 'Unto These Hills" at Cherokee and "Forever This Land!" at Petersburg, 111., both by Kermit Hunter, and Green's "The Common Glory" at wiiuamsDurg, Va. . North Carolina's summer snows are thriving. Last summer 400 ac tors, dancers, designers and tech nicians participated in the three largest productions, with audiences of 45,000 at "Tne .osi uiui.j , iao nnn at "Unto These Hills, ana 55,00 at "Horn in the West." This season, according to Mr. Sel den, a total of 250,000 tourists and North Carolinians are expected to attend the three snows. fnr this form oi theatre has grown partly from dra munism are two distinct things. Russianism, not Communism, is the national belief. Within the peoples' hearts Russianism (their beliefs, traditions, and heritage), is much stronger. They nave been persuad ed that only through Communism will Russianism be advanced. "Perhaps this weekend as a Rus sian delegate has cost me a few friends," Fred concluded. "It cer tainly cost me and the hundred or so other persons who participat ed in the Model UN Assembly a good bit of work and little peace of mind, but if it has illustrated to just a few people the strengths and weaknesses of the UN and the attitudes of other countries it has been worth it." Research Prof Presents Two Papers On Statistics Manindra N. Ghosh, visiting re search professor in biostatistics in the School of Public Health at the University gave two papers at the joint meeting of the Biometric So ciety and the Institute of Mathe matical Statistics held in Washing ton, D. C, through Friday. Professor Ghosh, who is from Calcutta, India, has been at the University since January and will be here for a year. matic education of the people of North Carolina through the Bureau of Community Drama founded by the late Frederick H. Koch as a part of the University Extension Division and still active in further ing high school, college and Little Theatre groups. Old Volumes Carefully Kept Rare Books Are Storehouse Of Information For Research By Ken Sanford The average undergraduate is un familiar with what lies beyond the door in the University Library la beled "Rare Book Room," but the graduate student and the research worker know that the rare volumes within contain a storehouse of in formation for the searcher. One of the rarest collections in the room is the Hanes Collection of Incunabula which is made up of books published before 1500. The collection was given by the Hanes family of Winston-Salem in memory of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley Hanes. The In cunabula collection is part of the Hanes Foundation for the Study of the Origin and Development of the Book. About 615 separate titles are included in this collection. It in cludes three original pages from the Gutenberg Bible. Books in cluded in the collection range in date of publication from 1467 to 1500. PANMUNJOM The Communists called a 43-hour recess in truce talks yesterday and it was believed they might be seeking high level instructions in preparation for a major move. North Korean Gen. Nam H asked the recess after Lt. Gen. William K, Harrison, United Nations truce chief, accused him of making a "deliberately untrue statement" about the choice of country to take charge of Com munists prisoners who refuse to go home. PHOENIXVILLE, Pa. The Ar my began treatment yesterday at its Valley Forge Hospital here of a number of freed American sold iers who "may have been victims of Communist propaganda" during their imprisonment in North Ko rea. The men were among a group of 20 ailing former captives who arrived by plane Friday night at nearby Willow Grove Naval Air Station after a hush hush flight from Tokyo. Their arrival brought to 58 the number of freed Ameri cans who have been returned to their nativeland since they were exchanged by the Communists last week. Group Offers Service Jobs For Students Miss Anne Queen, college secre tary for the American Friends Service Committee, will interview students interested in summer service projects Tuesday. Students may arrange for an in terview in the YMCA office on Monday. A luncheon will be held in Len oir Hall at 12:30 Tuesday afternoon for all those interested in the va rious summer projects. Besides the projects Miss Queen will discuss the Carolina Institute of International . Relations to be held at Woman's College in Greens boro, June 8-12. Ambassador G. L. Mehta of India will deliver the opening address at the Institute. Other faculty members for the Institute are D. Hidden Ramsey of the Asheville Citizen-Times; Frank W. Rounds, recently returned from the U. S. Embassy in Moscow; Ami- ya Charkvarty of the University of Calcutta, India; The Rev. A. J. Muste, national secretary of the Fellowship of Reconciliation; and The Rev. Stuart Morris, secretary of the Peace Pledge Union of Eng land. The Carolina Institute is spon sored by the American Friends Service Committee, a nation-wide Quaker service agency. Another important collection is the Whitaker Collection of Samuel Johnson, James Boswell and Their Friends. This collection is made up of books by and about Johnson and Boswell, and includes first edi tions of all of Johnson's writings and a first edition of the famous Boswell's Life of Johnson. The col lection was presented by William A. Whitaker of New York City, UNC class of 1904. Mr. Whitaker has 'also given the second, third, and fourth folio editions of Shakes peare's Works published in 1632, 1664 and 1685 respectively. Mr. Whitaker also gave the 1 Whitaker Collections of Charles Dickens and George Cruickshank. They contain many first editions of Dickens and fine examples of the printing and binding of his works as well as many original ex amples of the unique and interest ing illustrations or George Cruick shank. -One of the most valuable col amed To May Post Dorothy Smith of Spencer, W. Va., senior, will serve as chairman of the May Day program at the Uni versity next Sunday, May 10. She will also be a member of the May Day Court. Other members of the May Day committee are: Sarah Wood, Ta koma Park, Md., in charge of pro grams, ushers and properties; Sal ly Lee Schindel, Hagerstown, Md., publicity; Mary Ellen Jones, Atlan ta, in charge of writing script for the dance program legend; and Joyce Gouge, Blac Mountain, in charge of the dance program. Miss Saralyn Bonowitz, Chatta nooga, Tenn. will be May Queen and Miss Carmen Nahm, Deland, Fla. will be maid of honor. Other members of the Court will be Miss Smith, Jayne Adams, Char lotte;-Dee Breslow, Rah way, N. J.; Beverly Chalk, Greensboro; Jac queline Fox, Roanoke, Va., Grace Gordon, Spray; Anne Sory, Palm Beach, Fla.; Pepper Stetson, West Chester, Pa.; and Virginia Wilson, Jackson, Miss. An art major in the University, Miss Smith plan to work as a com- ' mercial artist following graduation in June. Her hobbies are fashion design and illustration, interior decoration, and music. An outstanding, student, Miss Smith received the Delta Delta Delta scholarship at the University for this year. She is also head of the YWCA art committee, member of the Card Board, Student Legis lature, secretary of one of the cam pus political parties, secretary of the senior class, member of Val kyries, is an Air Force ROTC spon sor, past house president of Delta ueiza ueita sorority, and was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity Sweetheart Court. Blaine Given BA Fellowship Dr. J. C. D. Blaine, associate pro fessor in the School of Business Administration, has been awarded the Warner and Swasey Fellowship, through the Foundation for Edu cation. He will be associated with Dr. Ralph B. Thompson of the Univer sity of Texas and will study the operations of the Warner and Swasey Company, a machine tool ing industry at Cleveland, Ohio. Dr. Blaine, who is teaching transportation courses in the pro gram of study recently established by the School of Business Admin istration in this field will give spe cial consideration to the industrial traffic aspects of management in his study under this fellowship. lections for scholars and .research workers is the Tannenbaum Shake speare Collection acquired through New York alumni and other friends of the library. It was established in honor of Dr. Samuel A. Tannen baum, collector and bibliographer. It contains for the most part works on Shakespeare and bibliographical works. Other outstanding items in the Rare Book Room include first edi tions of many important American and English authors, limited edi tions, examples of fine printing and binding from the world's best presses as well as other literary and historical rarities. There is a small collection of medieval manuscripts and some beautiful examples of the art of illumination. Illumination is the hand adornment of a letter or manuscript using colors and de- ' signs. The Rare Book Room is kept at: a constant temperature and humid- (See RARE BOOKS, Page 4) N The University says welcome today to some of its dearest friends Mom and Dad College in the third annual Alpha Phi Omega Parents Day. . Offspring Joe and Jane will get a chance to show where the fam- ily's money is going, and at the Gotham Is On Fence In NSA Vote Tuesday President Bob Gorham yester day took a middle of the road stand on the question of the Na tional Student Association. The student body will decide Tuesday in "a referendum whether Carolina will remain in the nation wide student group, NSA. The poll came about as result of a recent controversy concerning member ship in NSA. "As president of the student body, I am not going to issue a statement either for or against NSA," Gorham said. "I feel that my job is to see that the students get a fair and objective look at NSA. Then they can decide whether to remain as a member or not." Gorham added, "Regardless of the students' decision, I shall car ry out their wishes to the best of my ability.". President Gorham appointed a committee to "disseminate informa tion both pro and con concerning NSA and its value to the Carolina campus." Members of the committee are Wood Smethurst, Sol Cherry, Ken Barton and Pete Adams. , "It will be the duty of this com mittee to put the facts before the students. It is their job to do this in a fair and impartial manner," pointed out Gorham. The committee is temporary and will cease to exist after the refer endum, Gorham said. Literary Mag Goes On Sale The Carolina Quarterly, campus literary magazine, will be available this week at the book shops and Y court. Delayed by financial difficulties, the new issue will be tagged the winter issue. The campus literary magazine plans to publish its spring issue later in the quarter. This week's Quarterly will be composed entirely of fiction and poetry. It includes two short stories by University students, "Wilth the Tide" by Don Reid and Sio Credesse" by Tom Lloyd. Charlotte Davis is the new editor of the magazine. This issue, how ever, was published under the edi torship of Bill Watt. mmmmm ft APPLE QUEEN Kathryn Eisen hower, niece of President Eisen hower, performs her f frst official duty as queen-elect of the 26th annual Shenandoah Apple Blos som festival which is being held in Winchester, Vt. After cutting into this 38 pound, two-feef wide apple pie, Miss Eisenhower was crowned festival queen by for mer Eighth Army Commander General James Van Fleet. NEA Telephoto. same time reveal a little pride in the beauty of the campus. The day's activities will begin at noon with a picnic lunch on the campus after which parents and friends of students will get a chance to meet the faculty and administrative staff in the lounge of the Morehead Building at 2:30. From 1 o'clock until 4, visitors will be received in the Naval Ar mory, Carroll Hall, the library, Woollen Gym, Phillips Hall and various other buildings. An in formation booth will operate near the Old Well dispensing name tags and programs. There will be shows in the Planetarium every hour, guided tours of the campus, an address by President Gray and a concert by the University Band under Davie Pop lar at 4 o'clock. In case of rain President Gray's address and the concert will be held in Hill Hall. The concert will be divided into three parts, with three different conductors. The first part will be directed by Joseph Field of the Chapel Hill High School Band and will feature the "Washington Post March" and a band arrangement of "Deep River." Joseph Wood, as sistant director of the University Band, will lead the second part, featuring "Pacific Grandeur" and "High School Cadet." University Band Director Earl Slocum will lead the finale featuring Leroy An derson's "Blue Tango" and closing with "Hark The Sound." APO Vice-President Charles Kat zenstein said yesterday, "We wish to extend to all parents and friends of the University students our genuine welcome to the campus. And we hope they will enjoy their visit to the oldest state Univer- silty in the country." Riot Leaders Are Expelled At Princeton PRINCETON, N. J., April 30 One student was dismissed and nine others were suspended from Princeton University today for their parts in an undergraduate rampage through this town Tuesday night. They had been called before the disciplinary committee composed of faculty and students, by five proctors who had picked them as ringleaders from among the 1,000 students who took part in the af fair. The committee promised pun ishment of other , leaders next week. At the same time, irate towns folk, whose mailboxes, fences and flower beds had been uprooted in the melee began submitting bills for damages. Six complaints were received today totaling $300, which will be assessed against individuals and class treasuries. The names of the boys punished were not disclosed, but all except one, it was known, were freshmen or sophomores. Two of the suspen sions were for one year, two were for three weeks, three for one week and two were indefinite. Those on short-term suspensions also were placed on probation for at least six months, which requires them to live under rigorous dis cipline. Charges of disorderly conduct that were brought against four stu dents as the result of a minor inci dent in the tense town yesterday were dropped today by the police. Korea Veterans All Korea veterans must come by 315 South Building immedi ately and sign this months at tendance certificates if they want to be eligible for April's subsis tence checks.

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