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VOLUME LXH NUMBER 14 " CHAPEL HILL, N. C. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6JgSl - FOUR PAGES TODAY
; . ' ; ; ' : '- . -
Arf Gallery, Government Institute
Buildings Will Be Started This Spring
Construction on Carolina's new
million dollar Institute of Govern
ment building and $800,000 Wil
liam H. Ackland Memorial "Art
building will begin this spring
when contracts are let in MaMrch.
Consulting architects for both
Colonial style structures are
Eggers and Higgins of Philadel
phia, designers of the Morehead
building. Watts Carr of Durham is
the architect for the Institute of
Government building and H. Ray
mond Weeks of Durham for the
Ackland Art Museum.
Proposed site of the new In
stitute of Government building is
on Raleigh highway between the
intramural athletic field and the
Country Club road. The Ackland
museum will be located on Co
lumbia street near the Franklin
street corner on the former Foy
Roberson lot
Half of the cost of the Institute
of Governement building is a gift
from the Knapp Foundation and
American College Editors See
No Revolt Behind Iron Curtain
MOSCOW, Oct. 5. Three college editors from the United States,
on their way home after a ten-day visit to Iron Curtain universities,
felt that "We have made some impression on the people" of Russia.
The editors, Daniel Berger of the Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
Review, Mark Emond, former edi-
lintor at the University of Colo
rado, and Zander Hollander, for
mer feature editor of the Michi
gan Daily at the University of
Michigan, said that they had not
seen any signs of unrest or lack
of sympathy with the Soviet re
gime in the Ukraine.
"People here seem to be united
behind the Government," Mr. Ber
ger said. . . it would seem that
there is nothing more foolish than
to figure there is going to be any
support inside the Soviet Union
for opposition to their Govern
ment." The editors said they were told
that Kiev University "had a lot of
American magazines and newspa
pers.. But the only thing they had
was The Daily Worker and that
was way up on the top shelf and
didn't look like anyone ever read
it."
Russian students asked the Am
ericans whether they could tell the
truth about their impressions when
they went home, without being put
in jail.
"We told them that we could say
whatever we pleased when we went
back to America," Mr. Hollander
said. "But I don't think they quite
believed us."
Argentine Will Address
Faculty Tomorrow At 8
Senor Diego Newberry will speak
on "Argentina: Pampa and People"
in the faculty room pi 4. " -ehead
Planetarium tomorrow night at 8
o'clock.
Senor Newberry is appearing un
der the auspices of the Institute
of Latin American Studies. ' v
Senor Newberry is a promir it
Argentine author and jourr st.
He was educated in Cordob ind
Buenos Aires, Argentina and' at
tended the University of Minnesota
for several years.
J-rr-Tssp - -
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INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS & ADVISER CHAT AT WEEKEND RECEPTION
Ghaffar Habboubi, Iraq; Olga Zerpa, Venezuela; Col. Carlyle Shepard, UNC; Leena Yrjola,
J. .Finland; Colin J. Williams, England
the other half state appropriation.
Carolina was designated as the
site for the Ackland Art building
in 1948 when the United States
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed
an earlier decision of the lower
Court of Appeals to give the
$1,500,000 Ackland bequest to Rol
lins College, Florida.
Originally drawn up in 1938, the
Ackland will left the money to
Duke University, but the bequest
was subsequently refused. An
earlier will designated that the
money be left to either Duke Uni
vrsity, UNC, or Rollins College.
As most of Ackland's bequest
was f 00 works of art, Carolina
had to wait for construction until
enought interest on funds held by
the Ackland trustees, had ac
cumulated. The trust funds will be
expanded for art purchases and
teaching activities calculated to
broaden the understanding and
appreciation oi the fine arts
Public Control
Of Water Di's
Debate Topic
"Federal development of na
tional water resources" will be dis
cussed tonightin: the Di Senate at
8 o'clock on the third floor of New
West.
Senator Gene Cook will intro
duce the bill which deals specific
ally with inter-state water re
sources thai cross state borders.
Proponents of the bill point to
the Tennessee Valley Authority as
evidence of the benefits of such
governmental activity. They con
tend that the federal agencies are
better equipped to expand such re
sources and would thus be able to
provide the public with more ad
vantages at a cheaper rate.
Opponents feel that federal con
trol tends toward Socialism and
crowds out private interests. They
also object to governmental use of
public funds for such endeavors.
All visitors are invited to voice
their opinions on this question, Phi
officials said.
UNCs Foreign
Language And
By Joyce Adams .
American-English and American
women more, than anything else
puzzle foreign students on cam
put. This was brought out in a panel
discussion on "Campus, U.SA." at
the Cosmopolitan Club Sunday
afternoon, when members from six
countries discussed the basic prob
.-.. .r I nmu..mum'm''Jwym..J.-w4..wjH J';!uuuuijwwwwMto I
throughout this section : of the
country.
It is planned that the Ackland
Museum, located near Person Hall
Art Gallery and Hill Music Hall,
will be a part of the Fine Arts
Center, with a new and large
Playmaker's Theatre to .be built
when funds are available.
The University has bought the
former Tri-Delt house opposite the
rear of the music building; Jioining
the Museum site with the campus.
WASHINGTON The chairman
of the congressional Atomic Energy
Committee, W. Sterling Cole
(R-N.Y.), said yesterday that Russia
already has enough "deliverable"
H-bombs to place the cities of the
United States in "real and im
minent danger." The veteran re
presentative said he personally re
gards the situation so alarming that
he is reacy to abandon the GOP
balanced budget drive in favor of a
"drastic" tpeeiiup in defense prep
arations. He called for an in
crease annually of $10,000,000,000
in the nation's defense and military
appropriations to meet the Rus
sians' threat.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Robert C.
Greenlease, father of the six-year-old
boy kidnapped from this city
last week, remained secluded in
his massive , house yesterday after
the F.B.I. be;ame eligible to enter
the hunt for the kidnapper. Under
the provisions of the 1932 Lind
bergh Act, the national investigat.
ing bureau can enter a case such
as young Greenlease's after one
week has elapsed. It is assumed
that by then the abductor has
crossed state lines, a requisite for
federal intervention.
RALEIGH Final returns in Sat
urday's statewide school-hospital
bond election won't be known un
til Oct. 20, when the state Board of
Elections meets here to certify the
returns. State officials weren't
waiting until then, however, to con
gratulate each other over the re
sult, so apparent in early returns
that vote-counting stopped at the
three-fourth mark. At that time
both issues had been approved by
about seven to one landslides and
both had passed in every county
in the state.
BRIEF
1. 1 -
Students Air Their Problems;
Dating Difficulties Head The List
lems of foreign students at U.N.C.
K.C.S. Pillai from India said
that many students from his
country could understand and
read English quite well, but had
difficulty in making themselves
understood when they spoke.
Shrugging his shoulders, he said
he could not see any way to ad
just to it, since the mouths of
Cornell Wright Phoio ,
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YOGI BERRA AND JOE Collins chase Peewee Reese's foul into
the stands in the sixth inning of the fourth game of the World Se
ries. Berra fell over the railing into the stands in the unsuccessful
attempt. The Bums of Brooklyn came on to win the game and even
the Series with the World Champion's New York Yankes. NEA
Telephoto. 4
Martin Is Hero
Yankees Win In Ninth
NEW YORK, N. Y., Oct. 5. The New York Yankees lowered the
boom on the Brooklyn Dodgers today to win their fifth consecutive
World Series and pick up $9,000 per player in winners' checks. Billy
Martin was the hero of the game, knocking in the winning run in the
last half of the ninth after the Dodgers had appeared to have pulled
the game out of the fire.
The game was a fitting finale to the whole Series. The Dodgers
came
from behind to tie it at
three-all in their part of the last
frame on Carl Furillo's two run
homer to the right field stands.
Allie Reynolds received the cre
dit for the win while Clem Labine
took the loss. Reynolds came in to
replace Whitey Ford in the eighth
inning. It was his seventh Series
win.
In the first inning, after putting
the Dodgers out without too much
difficulty, the. Yanks took a two
run lead on two hits. Woodling
led off with a base on balls, Collins
fanned, and Bauer singled to left,
(See ALLIE, page 3)
Primitive Man Conceived That
Soul Is Immortal, Says Harland
"Primitive man very early be
lieved in a life after death," said
professor J. P Harland of the
Archeology Department as he pre
sented the first of a series of
studies on worship Sunday even
ing at the Baptist Student Union
Supper Forum.
Professor Harland showed slides
taken of ancient graves which
showed articles buried with the
skeleton which the primitives
Indians and Americans seemed to
be made differently.
Betty Ray, an American girl who
studied in Rome, said she found
her greatest difficulty in Italy was
in ' understanding the social cus
toms. "I got around," she says,
"But not without many an embar
rassing faux pas."
Kamel HaKim from Egypt con
fessed flhat American social cus
toms left him in a daze. He was
constantly afraid of making a
wrong move.
Students from China, Japan and
India said it was hard for them
to get used to American dating
customs, since in their countries
a boy seldom spoke to a girl, and
wouldn't dream of asking her for
a date.
Other students on the panel in
cluded Carol Mendenhall from Eng
land; Fang-Wen Wang from China;
and Adan Cajina from Nicaragua.
The majority of foreign students
are shy, afraid of making the wrong
move socially, and unsure of their
English, so that often they stand
on the sidelines, not daring to
take an active part in the college
doings.
Several suggestions were made
on how to overcome these prob
lems. It was thought a good idea
that students coming to America
should have an orientation pro
gram in their own country first.
They could talk with students
who had already studied here and
(See PROBLEMS, page 4)
UP Organizational Meet
Scheduled For Tonight
The University Party will have
an organizational meeting tonight
at 7:15 in Graham Memorial.
All dormitories, fraternities and
sororities are asked to have their
representatives attend this meet
ing.
The UP is one of the two cam
pus political parties, the other be
ing the Student Party. The UP re
turned to power in the Spring of
1952 after being out of office for
about five years. It won last year's
election to make it two straight.
wanted to take with them after
death.
Harland traced the development
of . worship from an early form
based on man's fear., "At first he
sought to control this fear with an
appeal to magic," he said.
"The next step in the develop
ment was man's belief in the ex
istence of a soul. He saw a dead
man and decided that the thing
that was missing about him was a
soul," Harland said.
"Later he came to believe in
spirits, then in spirits with a form
and he finally came to make idols
to represent that spirit," Harland
said.
"When he built a cover to pro
tect the idol, the temple as a wor
ship place arose," Harland con
tinued.
Harland Illustrated his whole
talk with representative slides.
Next Sunday Dr. John Gillin of
the Anthropology Department will
present the second of the worship
series.
House Will Be
Guest Speaker
At Y Meeting
Chancellor House will be the
guest speaker tonight at the first
of a series of membership meet
ings being planned by the YMCA.
The meeting will take place at
Gerrard Hall at 8 o'clpck.
Before the chancellor speaks, a
meeting of all students interested
in taking part in the Y program
will be held at the Y building at
7 o'clock.
At this time the chairman of
the various commissions will out
line their plans for the coming
year.
Plans for deputation, Bible study,
freshman work. United Nations
Day and Assembly, and the Caro
lina Quarterly will .be among the
many activities discussed at this
time.
Dan Edwards Speaks
Tonight; Matthews Will
Be Inaugurated In Phi
Former Under-Secretary of Defense. Dan K. Edwards, will speak
tonight at the inauguration of Wade Matthews as speaker of Phi.
Others to be inaugurated are Don Angell, parliamentarian; Dayton
; ; ; Estes, critic; James Pritchet
.
or examines
Self On Why's
Of Existence
The Student Party last night
held - a panel discussion on the
question: "For What Doss the Stu
dent Party Stand."
Opening the discussion, Joel
Fleishman former chairman, said,
"I consider the Student Party not
so much a political party as a po
litical activities group." He ex
plained that membership in the
party was open to anyone who
wished to join, and that through
extensive membership the party
could carry out the desire of the'
student body.
Panel ember David Reid ex
plained tnat the party was in
terested not only in politics but in
every phase of student activities.
"I feel that the Student Party is
the progressive party on campus as
concerns stifdent activities."
"Actually we represent ourselves
at the meetings," said Lew South
ern. "But we know we can do noth
ing which the student body does
not want us to do." Southern also
is a former chairman.
Gordon Forrester explained his
procedure in joining a political
party as a freshman. "I visited
meetings of both parties and met
people I liked at each," he "said:
"But after a couple of ""visits' to
each party I knew which was the
party most representative of the
student body," he continued.
Included in the meeting was a
report by Forrester on the last
Student Legislature meeting, Don
Geiger, vice chairman of the party,
gave a rundown on the operation
of the various officers and depart
ments in the party.
Doty Iseley was elected clerk for
the party, and Reid was elected
publicity chairman. Both were vot
ed, into office by acclamation. '
Deadline For
Yack Contracts
Is This Week
All campus organizaitons must
send representatives to the Yack
ety Yack office on the second" floor
of Graham Memorial this week to
sign contracts for space in this
year's issue, Assistant Business
Manager Tom Spain announced
yesterday.
Spain said that included in this
request were fraternities, sorori
ties, honorary societeies, profes
sional schools and social clubs. He
also reminded all organizations
which have not paid for their
space in the 1953 Yack that they
must do so before this year's con
tracts can be signed.
The Yack office will be open
from two until five o'clock every
afternoon this week for those wish
ing to sign contracts and Spain can
be contacted at St. Anthony Hall
at all other times.
Juniors Today
Senior, Law: Last Day
clerk; Louis Brumf ield, sergeant-
at-arms; and Harrison Dunlap,
treasurer.
Edwards topic for discussion is
the North Atlantic Treaty Organ
ization. A native of Durham, Edwards
did his undergraduate work at
Duke and finished his graduate
study at Harvard, as a member of
Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Phi and
Phi Delta Theta.
While in the armed forces, he
received many citations including
the Purple Heart.
This former mayor of Durham
also served as North Carolina As
semblyman, and chairman of the
Committee of Public Welfare of the
House of Representatives.
He served as under-secretary of
defense during the Truman admin-
j istration
'He Was Thar
And He Spoke
Skipper Says
"He was thar and he spoke."
That was O. J. (Skipper) Coffin's
advice last night to the Press Club
on how to cover a speech. Coffin
recently retired as head of the
School of Journalism but continues
to teach on its faculty.
Between puffs on his strong ci
gar, he introduced himself by say
ing: "Howdy folks! Come and see
me anytime you ain't loaded."
Skipper rambled on about old
times in the life of UNC and Caro
lina journalim. Between anecdotes
he threw in a few off-the-cuff re
marks about writing clubs. "Any
body's got a mind to write should
get together with other folks got
the same notion and chew the fat
. . . does a writer good to find out
what's on other folks' minds."
This, it seemed to Skipper, was
the best use to make of the Press
Club, which is open to anybody on
the campus interested in writing.
"If you're gonna write, you gotta
live with people, get with human
ity on the hoof." This was his ad
vice to aspiring journalists.
Weimar Jones, President of the
North Carolina Press Association,
and newcomer to the School of
Journalism staff was scheduled to
speak, but a throat operation ren
dered him temporary voiceless.
Movie, Dance,
Bridge At GM
A program to make every Caro
lina student the life of the party
gets under way this afternoon in
Graham Memorial.
First on the schedule of events
is social dancing instruction by
Miss Margaret Taylor in the Ren
dezvous Room at four o'clock.
At five, the scene will shift to
the main lounge for bridge in
struction by Harry Smith. Tab
les will be set up In one corner of
the lounge where students inter
ested in learning the art will be
safe from the eyes of bridge-playing
friends.
Then, at eight o'clock, movies
of last Saturday's game with Wash
ington and Lee will be shown in
the main lounge. Coach Jim Gill
will be directing this last part
of the day's instructional program.
Today is the last day seniors and law students
may have pictures taken for the Yackety-Yack.
The deadline was extended through today.
To be certain of getting pictures made, stu
dents should plan to come as early as possiblo.
Hours are from 1 to 8 o'clock in the evening.
Graduate students, juniors and dental student
may also have their pictures taken today.
All girls except seniors will be photographed in
white blouses.