- WEATHER, Sunny and continued mild today. Expected higS, 73. Yesterday's high, 75; yesterday's low, 42. MURALS Complete, semi - final football results on p. 3. Complete .JP Photo and Wire Service VOLUM LXII NUMBER 33 Complete TP Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY James Mclntyre Named GM Assistant Director James Herbert Mclntyre of Ellerbe has been appointed assistant director of Graham Memorial, it was announced yesterday. He will -work with student activities and SUAB. Mclntyre received a BA. degree in education here last June. He is a second year graduate student in the mathematics department. Since coming to Carolina he has "been a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece, the Order of the Old Well, president and treas-; urer'of the Order of the Grail, chairman of the Budget Commit tee, member of the Dance Com mittee, secretary of the YMCA, secretary-treasurer of the student body, secretary of Phi Beta Kappa, member of Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Mu Epsilon professional fraternities and Saint Anthcfcy Hall social fraternity. Mclntyre plans to marry Miss Kitty Ensminger from Blackburn College, Cariinville, Illinois, dur ing the Christmas holidays. He attended Jones Business College in High Point for one year. He served in the Navy for four years. He was secretary for the Field Commissioner for the L:ted Kingdom and Admiral's Writer for the Commander of the U. S. Naval Forces in Europe, fie traveled extensively while he was with the Navy- Mclntyre worked with the Paris Peace Conference for four months. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Nov. 3 (JP) Secretary General Dag Harnmarskjold said today a mil lion dollar U. S. loyalty probe now almost 80 per cent completed has turned up no evidence against' any American citizens now '-employed by the United Nations. The U. S. government ordered the investigation of 1,800 Ameri cans on the U. N. staff last Janu- nary after a score of them refused to answer congressional queries " about Communist ties. All those who refused were fired before the 1(1 NEWS PiraiEF probe began. The U. N. has so e college. far received the results of 1,400 ! In this sJ'stem UttIe Provision separate FBI-conducted investiga- for electives is made, as each lions More are coming in every course is carefully planned to fit day but high sources said they int0 a Pre-designed, integrated pat did not expect the remaining to tera with tte field oI concentra oontain any information reflect-. 11011 the mam objective, ing on the loyalty of those checked. ! Te new St. Michaels plan 67 x NOVARA, Italy, Nov. 3 the greatest percentage of do A jammed court room clamored SIve lwo year szuay Dy Low today for acquittal of three Ital- mS staff and Academic Dean nars- . J x . , . .. , . r0f the collese Trophies wnl be presented to ians on trial m the wartime cloak-jul U1C -u"ce- I r and-dagger murder of U. S. Maj.l This "search group objects to the two organizations which make uv rx-v the current practices in American the biggest per capita donation. TuZ "e:-dcone2eS of .eachtag subject i. One wUI go to the group with, t,0 , fpnc 1.-.' units too smaU for effective' learn- membership over 100 and the niid STfoTSSl and also to the teaching of other to a group with under 105 ha r mvo prrnr in failin : to turn over two American co defendants to Italy. Ex-Lt Aldo Icari of Pittsburgh and Ex-Sgt. Carl Lo Dolce of Rochester, N. are on trial in absentia for the slaying of Holohan behind the ! axis lines in iortn naiy in. it. , Holohan objected to giving Anler- ican money and arms to Comma- nists among the pro-allied guer- SIX SOUTHERN GOVERNORS are attend a conference of Dixie chief executives. They are lert to n9nr: uovs. merman ia,maage of Georgia'; William C. Marland, W. Va.; Robert F. Kennon, Louisiana; Johnston Murray, Oklahoma Theodore R. McKeldon of Maryland, the only Republic attending he anmial conference and Frank G C!m!n Tennessee The Democratic governors agreed the Republicans are a long way from estab-. 7Zln . South bit they were somewhat divided on President Eisenhower's pop. ularity. AP Wirephoto. Visitor Slates Mansfield Talk Here Thursday Professor Ian Alistair Gordon of the University of New Zealand is visiting here today and tomor row and will talk on Katherine Mansfield at a conference for stu dents in English at noon tomorrow in the Library Assembly Room. Professor Gordon, a native of Edinburgh, is a graduate of the University of Edinburgh with an M.A. with honors in English. He is professor of English language and literature In Victoria Univer sity College of the University of New Zealand, dean of the faculty of arts in tnat college, and vice chancellor of the University since 1947, Professor Gordon is author of the following books: "Modern Scottish Poetry," "English Poetry" and the Georgies," "John Skelton, Poet Laureate," "Teaching of Eng lish," "English Prose Technique," and "William Snerston's Miscell any." A study of Katherine Mans field by Professor Gordon is being published by the U.C-LuA. press this year. No Quarters No Semesters At St. Michaels WLNSOOKL VL, Nov. 3 St Michaels has replaced the old de ree pattern with a new system using year-long courses ending in one final exam, according to an information bulletin published By jtruucauou is a Lvux-y ear l rug rain ...u.u : u n. "MUUCU 5UUJclu " """J , reiatea. Students, the report said, do not tie in information learned in the first semester with that learned in the second. Neither do they tie in the subject matter of - more, students leel it umair to be JJJS they have already learned and been tested on. huddle on the steps of the Homestead i MCAMPUS W SEEN J Youngster examining weighty texts of Carolina student and asking, "Why do you have to study all this stuff just to teach kindergarden?" Modem dance class practicing in Graham Memorial and draw ing hall full of spectators. . Pre-holiday prod as gay, holly covered signs go up 'in post of fice learning that overseas pack ages must be mailed early. 'Beat Dooc7 Is Cry As Blood Drive Begins The annual Red Cross Blood Drive gets underway here today in Graham Memorial at 11 with sponsors and campus organizations working to beat last year's poor showing. The drive has been given an added boost with the injection of a "beat Dook" goal and the rival- ry between the campus's two mili tary organizations. Bill Aycock, chairman of the drive, said yesterday that he hoped this year's donations would exceed last years total of 500 pints. He pointed out that at that time "Car olina contributed less blood per student than at any other major North Carolina college." "Duke doubled us in donations last year. That must not happen again," a member of the sponsor ing Semper Fidelis Society added. The rivalry is the result, of an effort by the UNC Air Force ROTC unit to become the largest participant in the campus drive. The NROTC got into the act yes terday when the AFROTC news paper, "The Ram Jet," urged Air Force cadets to "give blood to beat the NROTC." "The unit is going all out to make the Red Cross drive this year the most successful it has ever been," Wing Public Informa tion Officer Ken Myers said. He added that the bait for the dona tions will be the promise of AFROTC-financed dates for the three donating cadets who hold lucky numbers drawn after the finish of the drive and free passes for members of the squadron with Faculty Members Will Attend North Carolina College Confab c,.i t foi the principal speaker on yes- Sbir ; ' at Hot Springs, Va where they $400 - u r I ' 5 - ;k rJ- i . f " i t . " w i . I - W.TKxft- . M . v v 1 GEN. GEORGE C. MARSHALL, Nobel Peace Prize winner for 1953, and Mrs." Marshall look over numerous congratulatory tele grams in their Pinehurst, N. C. home- NEA Telephoto. Virginia Maybe Football Trip Cancelled The special train scheduled to take Tar Heel fans to Columbia, S. C. this weekend for the game has been cancelled. A train for the Virginia has been arranged in its place. The student legislature, the University Club, nd the cheering squad are working with the ad ministration trying to either can cel all classes on the day of the Virginia game or excuse those stu dents who will take the train to Virginia. Tickets for the Virginia trip will go on sale in the Y on Wednesday Nov. 11 and will remain on sale until Thursday, Nov. 19. A round trip ticket to Charlottesville will cost students between $7.50 and $9.50. The train will leave Durham! around 4 p.m. Friday, Nov. 20 and should reach Charlottesville about 4 hours later. The band will go to the game via the train and the cheering squad plans a pep rally when the train pulls in. The return trip from Charlottes ville will begin at approximately 1 ajn. on Sunday morning after the game and should end in Dur hii rirvoto i tha fMi-rf onnnai " r.M,wJwork conference of representatives ! School, the committee on stand-! ards; Roy Armstrong, director of admissions, committee on college admissions; Dean of Men Fred W. Weaver, committee on student relations; Dean Guy B. Phillips of tfia zhnni nf PYhifoHnn mrn A tee on collaboration with the State Department of Public Instruction; i- Dr. A. M. Jordan, professor of education, committee on coopera tive research, and Dr. J. Mine? Gwynn, professor of education, committee on publicity. During tomorrow afternoon's session Charles F. Milner of the University's Department of Visual j Education will participate in a dis cussion on "Teaching With Audio Visual Aids." The principal address of the conference will be delivered to morrow afternoon by President l P. L. Elliott of Gardner Webb . College, president of the Confer ence, on the subject, "The Chal lenge and Responsibility in North Carolina Education."' Reports cf the various ' commit tees will be made during tiie final session Friday, prior to elec tion of offciers for the coming year. mi ham in the morning hours around 5 or 6 a.m. 'Head Cheerleeader, Jim Foun tain, said he would still like to' have a pep rally in Columbia this Saturday before the game if enough Tar Heels make it. He urges" all Carolina supporters to stop by the Columbia Hotel which will be the team headquarters this weekend. Wesley Foundation Stuart Jones will tell about his experiences last summer in a Eu ropean Work Camp tonight at the Wesley Foundation "Meet "N Eat" at 6:15 in the dining room of Le noir Hall. Clark Tells Work Conference Schools Can Solve Problems The schools can solve the eco- they want to be and because the nomic problems of the world, an internationally known specialist on economics in education told school men from the Carolinas and Virginia here this week. Dr. Harold F. Clark of Columbia University, who has made a lengthy study of economics and social studies and special investi gations of the relation of educa- .tion to economic and social wel- ' f are 1x1 more n tea countries, I of the Association of Public School Systems in this area. Stressing his theme that the economic base of the country can t u .""UUSXI lue cnoois, Df 5lark said iVIhose countries whlch Pr are so because Editors Parley Set Tomorrow The public relations committee an open house tomorrow at 4:00 upstairs -m Graham Memorial. The editors from major campus publi cations will be present. The editors will speak on their respective organizations and how those interested in them may par- ticipate. Pete Adams, chairman of me committee, win introduce tne editors. All freshman boys and junior girls are invited who signed their activities cards with the prefer ence of The Daily Tar Heel, Yack,-ety-Yack, Tarnation, or Carolina Quarterly work. Cards have been sent out to those who are interest ed,, but any additional interested persons are also invited to attend. T irshm Co a. 0 Athletes To Receive $10,000 Portion Of Big Grant-ln-Aid Pie By Charles Kuralt Campus store profits, $40,000 from the sale of books and Cokes and chewing gum to students, are being turned back tor students in the form of scholarships, it was announced by the administration yesterday. And 25 percent of the total $10,000 is going directly to athletic scholarships. Holiday Is Off; Classes Slated This Saturday There will be classes this Satur day. President Bob Gorham said yes terday that because of the admin istration's decision suspension of classes for a caravan to the South Carolina game was "out of the question." Gorham made his statement aft er a meeting with Chancellor R. B. House who reportedly said that under the semester system, Satur day is no different from any other day, and that any student cutting class to go to the game would be marked unexcused. i n tt : 3: at tadnceuur nue muicaieu uui he thought that the promotion of j profit3 into scholarships came in a caravan to South Carolina wasthe of 1952 The decision not started early enough to arouse it t ide 25 t f enougii iHUueiu wicrwt, auu wi- ham. Chancellor House was not available for comment. Gorham-indicated however, that Chancellor House had agreed to consider the possibility of suspen sino of classes for a caravan to the Virginia game November 21, provided that Gorham can present - . him evidence that a sufficient number of students are interested in participating in the caravan. Gorham plans to call a meeting i of his executive council this some time this week to discuss the mat ter of suspension of classes and plans for the promotion of a car avan to Virginia. He may set up a booth in Y Court for those who wish to participate in the caravan to sign, he said. schools don't show the people how to improve thtmselves . . . Eco nomic importance in the world can be achieved through the schools." He compared Colombia, South America, with Denmark, and said the former country is one of the richest in the world in resources, with millions of acres of rich land, the lowest electric power rate in the workL and the lart oil resources. "And vet thor, thousands of people on the verse of starvation on" the Magdalene River through some of the richest land in the world. This is true because the people are not educated through the schools to take advantage of these resources." Dr. Clark said ,on the other hand, that Denmark, a country of sand dunes, no minerals, no tim ber, and short growing seasons, has within 100 years, become one of the 10 richest countries in the world. It is also the most lifer ate, he said, with a high de'gree of culture in the arts. The reason, j he faded, because the schools have taught the people to grow better pigs and better cow5.! Pointing out that some parts of I this country are more progressive 111311 otflers he said "If people want to starve m tne mountains a large portion of the State Col or swamps they wilL Those who lege campus store profits was go take advantage of what resources j ing solely for athletic subsidy, they have improve their economic! , , , , status." Cardboard Cardboard personnel will meet tomorrow at 7:30 in Graham Me morial Roland Parker Lounges one and two for Yack Photos. ; Movies of the Maryland game will 1 be shown. j Deliver For the first time, Carolina students are coming to school this year on funds created by pur chases at campus stores by fellow students. The $40,000 is the total profit, minus a small amount for upkeep, of the Book Exchange, Scuttlebutt, Lenoir Hall cigarette counter, Mon ogram Club Circus Room, and most vending machines on the campus. By Trustee order the profits must go for student scholarships. The $10,000 athletic slice of the profits was allocated by the fac ulty Scholarship Committee to a three man "Subcommittee on Ath letic Grants-in-Aid" headed by Director of Admissions Roy Arm strong. It is this subcommittee which is awarding the sum to participants in varsity sports. The Trustee order directing the Tfn:v pr-:tv t tu camDUS store fnh, tn avwe was maHf hv an administration committee last vpsr anr? annrnvpd hv f!hanrpllnr Robert B an'd President Gordon Gray. At that time, book store profit3 of at least $30,000 were going to athletes at North Carolina State College, J Last night, in a comment hur ried by the press of other business, Gray indicated he might have new views on the subject of a specific percentage of the profits going to athletes. "I am not convinced," he said, "that the profits should be ear marked for certain groups of stu dents at all." The National Collegiate Athletic Association, when asked by the University, ruled last January that only one Committee in a member school can award athletic grants, and that It must be the same com mittee which awards the school's other scholarships. This ruling puts in doubt the status of the subcommittee on athletic grants. Until now, this committee has awarded the schol arships to athletes. O. K. Cornwell, a member of the subcommittee and chairman of the University Department of Phys ical Education, said last night that the NCAA ruling makes the status of the subcommittee "question able." The $10,000 from campus stflre profits going to Carolina athletes is only a fraction of the amount presently being allocated at State of $30,000 are being used for ath College. There, book store profits Ietic grants-in-aid. But State ath letes have been told to expect only $15,000 next year, and it is assumed from administration state- ments that the - followin year, none of the State book store profits will go for athletic scholarships. If all the money at State were turned into a general sehol fund, athletes could presumably - - qualify, but would not have a set percentage allocated to them. The battle over athletic scholar- ships has a long history, beginning in 1951, when it was revealed that a uoara oi irusiees committee was appointed to . look into the question of book store profits at all three branches of the Consolidated University. That committee's report prompt ed the Board of Trustees to ply the profit from the student-sup- ported stores back to the students as scholarships.

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