kauser
WEATHER
Fair and cooler. High, 72;
low, 40.
One reader voices some
views about another read-
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v es opimatk- oee p.
VOLUME LXII NUMBER 15
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1953
FOUR PAGES TODAY
m - m i ma. w k
Daily Tar Heel To Join
77ie Associated Press
The Daily Tar Heel will become a member of The Associated Press
and begin receiving its wire service
decision yesterday.
State and national sports and
with the installation of teletypes-
machines. Also included in the I
service will be extra football cov
erage on Saturday nights.
The new service will cost a flat
rate of $25 a week and a football
assessment of $85 for the season.
The Associated Press is general
ly considered the best of the three
national news services. It is a
corporation owned by member
newspapers. In other words, when
a newspaper subscribes to this
service, it not only buys the news
but is a member of the group.
Commenting on the addition,
Daily Tar Heel Editor Rolfe Neill
paid, "We're glad to be a member
of The AP again. The decision to
aslc the Publications Board for a
wire service was made because we
believe the students are interested
in the sports world and because
we calculate it to be financially
ieasible to subscribe to this serv
ice. We welcome student reaction."
The Daily Tar Heel was a mem
ber of The Associated Press three
years ago. But a drop in student
enrollment and corresponding de
crease in funds caused the service
to be discontinued.
Meeting in regular session yes
terday, the Publications Board ap
proved the new service by a 4-2
vote. This motion gave the paper
authority to get the service for a
period of one year with Publica
tions Board approval necessary to
renew the contract next falL
In an earlier meeting of the
board, a move to appoint Chair
man Joe Raff financial coordinator
was repealed.
The salary of subscription man
ager for The Daily Tar Heel was
raised to $15 weekly by unanimous
vote of the board. "It had " been :
$8.50.
IDC Proposes
Plan For Coed
Dorm Visiting
Interdormitory Council Presi
dent Walt Gurley outlined a plan
last night for coed visiting privi
ledges in dormitories at the open
ing meeting of the IDC.
He mentioned the plan along
-with some other proposals for the
coming year which included a new
Cobb Dorm social room in the
lasement, an Interfraternity Coun
cil D3C coordinating committee
and a bigger IDC dance. He asked
for suggestions concerning $196,
000 in dormitory money.
The IDC president expressed
his belief that efforts toward the
achievement of coed visiting were
near success and he called upon
his listeners to help swing the
power of the administration be
hind it
He then disclosed plans for the
renovation of Cobb Dorm within
the "not too distant future."
Scheduled improvements for tne
crowded dormitory include the
partioning of the basement, now a
living area, into a social area and
a game room.
Gurley praised the Cobb occu
pants for their purchase of a tele
vision set and called on represen
tatives from other areas for simi
lar action which he said showed the
University administration that the
students wanted better accomo-
dations and were willing to work
for them.
Gurley revealed that the Uni
versity and the IDC have $196,-000
(See WC, vcge 4)
Come Early
Jrs., Gradr
Juniors, graduate and dental siuaenu
for the Yackety-Yack will be taken today through
Friday.
Students are asked to get their pictures made
today as early as possible in order to avoid the last
minute rush.
Girls will wear white blouses. Boys will wear
coats and ties.
Pictures will be taken from 1 to 8 o'clock down-,,
stairs in Graham Memorial each day.- -
as result of a Publications Board
state news coverage will be expanded
Campus YDCs
Hear Harrison
Speak Tonight
Billy Harrision, state president
of the Young Democratic Clubs of I
T .! 1? -it !
rtorm uarouna, wiu speas ai a
meeting of the University Young
Democratic Club tonight at 8
o'clock in Gerrard HalL
The meeting will be open to all
students, and a spelcal invitation
is extended to freshmen and trans
fer students.
The Young Democratic Club's
are, in effect, the junior element
of the national Democratic Party.
Membership is open to. anyone be
tween the ages of 18 and 40.
Through the local clubs, young
people who are interested in poli
tics and government have a chance
to study the political problems of
the day, to participate in Party
affairs, and to work on behalf of
the candidates and programs of the
Democratic Party.
Harrison, a Rocky Mount busi
nessman, was elected to the State
x.u.L. presidency a year ago. A
University graduate, he has been
acuve in civic ana political artairs
on local and state levels. Harrison
will -offer his impressions of the
recent conference of Democratic
leaders in Chicago, which he at
tended as a member of the North
Carolina delegation. It is expected
that he will also discuss certain
proposed changes in programs and
organization of the Y.D.C. at the
State level.
Other business on the program
will include the selection of dele
gates to the State YJXC. conven
tion, which meets in Raleigh this
weekend. Club plans for the semes
ter will also be discussed.
Claude Shotts
Will Give Talk
Claude Shotts, Director of the
University YMCA, will talk to the
Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom at a meeting
of the organization tomorrow night
at 3 o'clock in the Board of Al
dermen's room at the Town HalL
Mr. Shotts topic, "Germany in
1946 and 1953," will be a summary
of the changes which have taken
place there.
For many years Mr. Shotts
worked with the American Friends
Service Committee in Germany.
Among the many prominent
members of the Women's Inter
national League are: Dorothy Can
field Fisher, Pearl Buck, Madame
Pandit, and Mrs. Trygve Lie.
Founded in 1915, the League
elected Jane Addams of Chicago's
Hull House as its first president.
The purpose of the group is to
work by non-violent means for the
establishment of political, econo
mic and social betterment of the
world so as to produce peace and
freedom.
All students, men as well as
women, are invited to attend.
Wesley Meet 'n Eat
Wesley Foundation members will
eat together tonight upstairs in
Lenoir Hall, from 6:15 to 7:00
o'clock. A quartet will provide en
tertainment. Dental Pics
I i fe" - - - f
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Cornell Wrigm fuuai
BOB WRIGHT drove back to UNC this quarter in a new fire-engine red M-G. The senior from Char
lotte entered a raffle in September, sponsored by the Charlotte Men's Fashion Guild. The drawing was
held on September 21, and the next morning calf on the phone announced that he had won the prize
a new M-G.
Interim Group
Announced By
Prexy Gorham
Student Body President Bob
Gorham announced yesterday the
formation of an Interim-Orientation
Committee.
Raleigh Tillman, chairman of the
new committee, will head its ac
tivities, which President Gorham
said will expire with the comple
tion of his administration.
The Interim Committee will
function as a supplement to the
regular Orientation groups, and
will act most strongly during the
period from fall to spring by
sending letters of welcome Jto new
students.
It will also send out activities
cards which will enable prospec
tive students to point out their
special interests.
All activities will be noted and
filed by the Committee, and in
formation sheets concerning pref
erences will be made available to
new students.
The Committee plans to send
the .names of people with whom
it has corresponded, to campus or
ganizations which can in turn send
out supplementary material.
President Gorham also com
mented that the question of the
Visiting Agreement is once again
in the hands of the Inter-Fraternity
Council, and no further ac
tion will probably be taken until
spring.
Gorham will announce the plans
for the coming year in his "State
of the Campus address this
Thursday before Student Legisla
ture.
Frosh, Pastor
Jones Discuss
Sex Problems
By Ted Rosenthal
"Love is sex-plus. It's involved,
and wnen you think of sex apart
from love, it's a misuse of it."
That's what Pastor Charlie Jones
of the Community Church said last
night in moderating the Freshman
Fellowships discussion of sex
problems.
He continued, "As one psychol
ogist has said, the sort of person
you are by the time you're about
16, will determine the sort of sex
ual relatioas you will have.
"You may be a bully who must
have the feeling of dominating
others; a 'clinging-yine, who
must have somebody to depend on;
a 'star who must stand out, in
order to be happy; or a turtle,'
who never wants to be in the lime
light. To be" happy you've got to
understand yourself. V
Saying, "I feel that people have
too long asked somebody to make
their decisions, especially regard
ing God and sex, so let's see if we
as a group can do some group
thinking," the Pastor divided the
members into several small groups.
He asked eacfi one to briefly dis
cuss "why do we think sex" is a
problem,' and if so, "what is "the
(See FROSH, page 4)
7f,rrntr
MBRi
WASHINGTON Six officials of
the Communist party have been
seized in a roundup by FBI agents,
Attorney General Frownell an
nounced yesterday. All were des
cribed as now holding- or having
held positions in the party's- Mid
western organization. The arrests
brought to 93 the total of Red
leaders apprehended by the Justice
Department since 1948.
WASHINGTON While Presi
dent . Eisenhower- was telling
American church women in At
lantic: City yesterday that peace
can be won only "slowly ami tor
tuously," Secretary of State Dulles
was announcing here that his gov
ernment is discussing the possibi
lity of new assurances against re
vival of German aggression. Dulles,
in response to news conference
questions, said that the United
States, in its search for solutions
to- the East-West conflict, would
be glad to give Russia assurances
that we will use neither Korea,
Austria or Germany for aggressive
purposes.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Reliable
sources here yesterday reported
that contact has been made with
the kidnapper of little Bobby
Greenlease and That a ransom of
$500,000 has been demanded for
his return. A family spokesman,
Stewart Johnson, denied the re
port and said that there has been
no contact with the kidnapper nor
"any go-between.' Among the visi
tors to the suburban brick man
sion of Greenlease's millionaire
parents Monday night was Arthur
Eisenhower, bank official brother
of the President
MOBILE, Ala. The FBI re
ported yesterday that Thomas F.
Rickert, vice-president of the Es
cambia Bank of Flomaton, Ala
bama, has confessed he embezzled
more than $50,000 to live the life
of a "jolly good fellow." A local
FBI agent, H. O. Hawkins, was
quoted as saying that Rickert
spent the money to pick up checks
for hunting and fishing trips with
his friends. His case brought to
eight the number of embezzlements
uncovered in the South in recent
months. A total of $464,44622 has
been involved in fhese unauthoriz
ed withdrawals.
Sketch Class
Will Be Given
A sketch class for the public is
being planned for Person Hall Art
Gallery this semester.
Registration and the first meet
ing of the class will be held to-
aight at 7 o'clock in Person Hall.
Fpp for the class is S13 for 13
175
m 1
meetings and includes the cost of 1 1948, the music was originally
materials. Kenneth Ness will teach composed in 1860 by H. S. Thomp
the class in sketching from models! son. The song was first called
in charcoal, pencil, pen and ink Annie Lifle' and then changed to
and color with consideration for "Amid". It achieved fame when
structure, design and - rendering Cornell adapted the music for
methods. I their college song.
- .""'.'3
TB Sanitorium
Dedication Is
This Afternoon
The Gravely Sanatorium, another
link in North Carolina's repidly
advancing health program, will be
dedicated in exercises here this
aftrenoon.
It will be opened to patients
November 1.
Built ta a cost of $1,186,000, the
new 10-bed tubercular hospital is
the fourth state-supported one in
North Carolina.
While it will be administered
by the directors of the State Board
of Sanatoria, under a State ap
propriation entirely separate from
that of the University, it" will be
an important part of the Univer
sity's Health Center with which it
will maintain close cooperation.
The ceremonies will begin at 2
o-'clock today and will be held
in the lobby at the front entrance
of the new hospital. A tour of the
b aiding will follow the program.
Dr. J. W. R. Norton, Raleigh,
State Health Officer, will give a
brief dedicatory address, and the
Rev. Carlos P. Womack, chaplain,
North Carolina Sanatorium, Mc
Cain, will give the dedicatory
prayer.
O. Arthur Kifkman, High Point,
chairman of the building com
mittee and member of the Board of
Directors of the State Sanatorium
, System, will preside.
The Rev. Harry McCartney,
chaplain, Eastern North Carolina
Sanatorium, Wilson, will give the
invocation." Speaking for the State
will be David S. Coltrane, Raleigh,
assistant Director of the Budget,
and Dr. Henry T. Clark, Jr., ad-:
ministrator, Division of Healths
Affairs, will speak for the' co-
ordinated University health .pro
gram.
Equipment cost amounted: to
$185,000 which is in addition to
the construction cost of $1,186,000!
The State has appropriated; $295
000 for operations the. first year
and $3o0,000 for the second, year.
Alma Mater Is
Not Too High
Cornell students and alumni
have been singing "High above
Cayuga's Waters,' since 1872 when
Archibald Weeks, then a senior,
composed' the words for their
"alma mater".
Until now, no one knew how
high; above Cayuga's waters Cor
nell was until the engineering stu
dents measured the height at more
than 422 feet
"Hark the Sound," which is
adapted to the same tune, was
written by William Starr Myers,
class of '97.
According to Sigmund Spaeth in
his book "History ef Popular
; Music," Randon House, copyrighted
'Russia is Dangerous
Says Dan K. Edwards
In Phi Inaugural Talk
D Senate. For
Federal Water
Development
By Ann Huffman
In a close vote of nine for and
eight against, members of the Di
Senate last night passed " a bill
providing for the federal deve
lopment of national water re
sources. Introducing the bill, Gene Cook
said, "While seeking a better world
to live in, we should not forget the
little, downtrodden man : who
would benefit from this extension
of our water resources.""
He added that the way to the
awakening of responsibility- tf the
American people to the nation as
a whole had been paved by the late
Franklin Roosevent with his Ten
nessee Valley Authority.
Subsequent proponents of the
bill disclosed that enemies of the
bill includes power lobbies, rail
roads, water right authorities, and
monopolists. They approves projects
similar to that of TV A irt the Col
umbia, Missouri, and St Louis
river basins.
Members of the opposition
stated that there are ncr monopo
lies in the U. S. except govern
ment monopolies. They maintained
TV A is costing the American tax
payers $130 million yearly.
A motion to table the bill .was
defeated and members of the af
firmation continued to expound
"this good old-fashioned Ameri
canism." Federal resources would
Droaden tne use oi electricity at a
reasonable cost to the consumer as
private power enterprises have had
their chance and failed.
Stanley Shaw pointdi out that the
government would become owner
of vast properties and public .uti
lities witnout the control of state
and local governments.
Larry Addington: was sworn , in j
as a conditional senator.
Teacher Tests
Will Be Given
The National Teacher Examina
tions will be given Saturday, Feb
ruary 13, 1954
Application form and aibuHetin-i
of information describing registra
tion procedure and containing
sample test questions may be ob
tained from college officials: or
directly from the National Teacher
Examinations, Educational Testing;
Service, P. O. Box 592, Princeton;
New Jesrsey.
College advisors or department
heads should be consulted for seleo
tiao of optional examinations.
If
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V,
SMOKE RISES HIGH into th air at Va He jo, Calif., whtrt flamas
gutted a tugboat, destroyed a freight pier, and damaged several
boats at the Mare Island Naval Base there. Two men were reported
missing and at least a dozen were injured as more than 1,000 fire,
men fought the wind-whipped flames. Damage was estimated in
excess of $200,QQ0-NEA Telephoto.
v Matthews Takes Oath
For Speaker Position
As Robert Pace Exits
By Richard Creed
Russia is dangerous. It now be
hooves us to defend our way of life
against destruction."
With . this declaration Dan K.
Edwards former Under-Secretary
of State, admonished the Phi as
sembly last night to prepare to
take the world's problems "upon
your shoulders."
Speaking before : the inaugural
meetingjof the Phi, on. the topic,
"The Norm Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization," Edwards said, "The
way we fit in to the International
scene ? is. of utmost . importance.
Today you get the feeling of be
ing, a pawn of fate.- Wars come
along j and our entire lives are
changed .1'"
"The unity of Europe is of great
importance today, nob, only because
it helps - Europeans; to- defend
themselves from Russian, aggres
sion, but to relieve her of her
dependence upon.: the United
States," he continued.
The evidence of Russia's inten
tions to move out from her boun
daries and to dominte the world
have been made .apparent, he add
ed. Explaining the: operations of
NATO," Edwards said that after
World War Two, when the Rus
sians -threat to freedom became
more manifest, the United States
gathered her friends about her. We
have taken part in containing the
advances made by Russia through
her saielites, he- saitL
E Prior to Edwards speech former
-speaker of the Phi Robert Pace
administered. :the: oath: of office to
the new Speaker;. Wade Matthews,
and to Syd Saufford, speaker pro
tein r Don Angell;. parliamentarian;
Dayton Estes,: critic; James Prit
chett, clerk; Lands Brmnfield, ser-geant-at-arms;-
ami Harrison Dun
lap, treasurer.-
Praising - European industrial
potential and inventiveness, he
!saiLj"We-cctia: not afford all that
to go behind-7 the iron curtain".
We have always recognized Europe
as -the keyarea in the prevention
of Communist expansion, he con
tinued; "We set up the Marshall Plan,"
he said," "gfrering an elemept of
hope.' We m longer used to offer
economic aid to European coun
tries since.' they can now maintain
their economic solvency, he said.
"It: was offered in the. past as an
explained.
Warning against the destruction
which- a war with Russia would
bring, Edwards said, "The old con
cept of a balance of power is no
longer valid, because it is depen
dent on a resort to arms. But to
day a resort to arms is likely to
be the last one."
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