Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 21, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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' WEATHER Mostly cloudy and warm -with occasional showers to day with an expected high of 68. Yesterday's high, 68;. low 50. WIT Remember clever Barry Farber? He's in print today with an admonition for Zota. See YOU Said It, p. 2. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 87 Complete JP Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1954 Complete JP. Photo and Wire Service FOUR PAGES TODAY noersforiaina roerrv an O fe, i 5SU -Cdriiell Wright 5?hoto DEAN OF WOMEN Katherine Carmichaei joins in the Bunny Hop at the recent Klppai Delta soror ity pledge dance. Shewn from left to right are Joe O'Brien, Gene Cook, Miss Carmichaei, and Fred Coker. ftl! BRIEF WASHSfGTON OP) Sen. Len non: (D-NC), one of 20 Democratic senators who today introduced a 95 million dollar school aid bill, said North Carolina will be eligible for $4,350,525 should the measure pass. The bill is designed to channel federal funds into states where the need for assistance is greatest and provides an allocation formula based on the number of school students and the per capita income of a state compared with the na tional average. Lennon said North Carolina would match federal funds on a basis of about Zv2 dollars for every 4l3 dollars of federal funds. RALEIGH (JP) V. M. Bostick of Cary, an unemployed tool maker, became the first man to officially enter the race for North Carolina's junior seat in- the V. S. Senate when he paid his S125 filing fee here yesterday. Bostick said he thought "there's a lot of things that ought to be done (in Con gress). If I go and try to do them myself, I can't complain" Senator Alton Lennon has already an nounced that he will run for elec tion to the seat, he now fills by appointment and an announcement of cadidacy is expected soon from former Governor W. Kerr Scott. iThe junior senatorial seat has been held by six men in the last seven years. Last Issue Today's issue of The Daily Tar Heel is the last one for this se mester. The next issue will be printed on Thursday February 4. Thj deadline for ccpy for this issue will be 3 o'c!ock, Wednesday afternoon, February '3. Refriqerators? USC Raid Uncovers Loot COLUMBIA, Jan. 0 If you think you're being oppressed "by dormitory managers who insist on taking down the girlie pic tures you've Scotch-taped to the walls, take solace in the ex perience of students at the Uni versity of South Carolina. In a recent raid on South Car olina dorms, officials confiscated a wide variety of loot, including: Two refrigerators, 'two wash ing machines, 34 hot. plates, 27 S " TO V Judge Was 'Man She Dated' Beauty Contest Loser Declares Competition 'Not On up & Up' ANN ARBOR, Mich., Jan. 20 Rosaline Sappington, a Univer sity of Michigan beauty who lost out in the contest to pick the "College Queen of the United States" in Miami Beach, Fla. last week, has declared the con test was "not on the up and up." In a letter tb The Michigan Daily, undergraduate newspa per, Miss Sappington declared she overheard the contest judges deciding on a winner the night before the contest was held. She said her hotel room was a cross the hall from the room of the contest . director and the night before the contest, she heard the judges decide that "the winner was to be a girl from Texas who goes to the Univer sity of Miami. They wanted someone who would be around Miami after the contest," the pre-law student said. , "I found out later that one of the judges was a man she dated," Miss Sappington de clared. Earlier, the third-place winner Alpha Gam Sorority Gals Play Dragnet And Win A peeping torn has made the Air pha Gamma Delta fire escape his watching place for the last few days. The girls finally turned detect ive. They sprinkled the escape steps and landing with talcum powder in hopes of securing his finger prints. And Tuesday night they did. irons, 16 percolators, six toast ers, 31 unsafe extension cords-, a floor fan, a waffle iron, six un safe lamps, two soldering irons, an electric motor and a projec tor. Officials, who reminded stu dents that all the items were il legal under dorm rules, are re turning the contraband after owners sign pledges not to use it again. -.as if ?4 in the contest accused the win ner of wearing falsies. The champ, Toby Gerard of Miami, declared that wasn't true. She said last" weekend, "No one could possibly know!" Chicago University Organizes Public Communication Course CHICAGO, Jan. 19 A new graduate program in public com munication has been organized by the Social Science Division of the University of Chicago. The program is designed for students interested in journalism, public relations, and propaganda or communication research. Beginning in 1954, the degree of Master of Arts in communica tions will be awarded to students who successfully complete the training period. The training will be focused on understanding the communication process and its ef fects on opinions, attitudes, and behavior. Lectures in social psychology, sociology statistics, political sci ence, business administration, edu cation and other fields will be part of the instruction. The interdisciplinary program includes courses on the relation ship between organization of the communication industry and the nature of its products. Other cour ses supplement undergraduate preparation in the basic social sci- Navy To Honor Six Graduates At Noon Today The Naval R0TC unit will hon or six graduating midshipmen in a special review today at noon on .the intramural field. The seniors who will graduate at the end of this semester are R. B. Boyd, D. C. Carroll, R. A. Hood, J. B. Jackson, A. C. Newborn, and W. R. Watson. These men will be' in the "posi tion of honor" as the entire batal lion, preceded by the drum and bugle corps passes in review. All six seniors will soon be com missioned in ceremonies at the Na val Armory. They will then depart for active duty with the Navy or Marine Corps. Six-year-old son of grad stu dent taking . his life in his own hands by inching his way along ttiree-inch ledge around More head Building. .' 1:20 a.m. vignette: Plymouth convertible making quiet, headlight-less rounds of campus brick walks. '. Sign on fraternity house door, encouraging for those who be. moan the lack of interest in nat ural phenomena at Chapel Hill: "A Junior Forest Ranger Lives Here." Pi Kap Prexy Spikes Rumor About Firemen Pi Kappa Phi President Jerry Ridge recently spiked a rumor that the local fire department had been negligent in the way it handled the fire which destroyed his fra ternity's house last month and that it had not; arrived promptly. Ridge, on behalf of the fratern ity, thanked Town Manager Thom as D. Rose for the way the firemen blaze for fouf r -i scgSedly fought the or five weather. hours in 12 degree The delay in reporting the ' fire is said to have come about when Pi Kap Jerome Taylor found the telephone in the burning house out of order. He then dashed out to the telephone booth in front of Fowler's Food Store, but was sty mied again since he had no change. Taylor was then forced to run to the fire department, while thejlar interest." He said there was blaze was gaining momentum. more tnan a 2Q per cent increase The fire department did report promptly but found the freezing ! weather an obstacle. ence disciplines. College graduates with an under graduate major in social science can normally complete all re quirements for the M.A. in com munication within one year. A scholarship fund has been set up for men who plan careers in journalism, and research assistant- ships in communication are from time to time available. Special consideration is given students with previous experience on col lege and high school publications. Further information about the new degree program may be ob tained from the Committee on Communication, University of Chi cago, Chicago 37, Illinois. VOLUNTEER STAFF About 5,000 unpaid volunteers furnish data daily to the U. S. Weather Bureau. i fi , " 1 it $ i uonnacU A DEMONSTRATOR discusses the use of radio'sotopes in agriculture in connection with the travel ing atomic energy exhibition being shown today th ough Sunday on the ground floor of the Morehead Building. The exhibit is sponsored jointly by the UNC Extension Division, the National University Ex tension Association, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the American Museum of Atomic Energy. alance Baptist Probe Will Continue Until Summer RALEIGH, Jan. 20. (JP) A spe cial Baptist. committee studying re ported liberal trends in the Bap tist Student Union has been given more time to complete its work. The request was granted yester day by the general board of the Baptist State Convention. The board asked that the committee make every effort to submit a re port to the next board meeting in July. The committee, headed by the Rev. Perry Crouch of Asheville, was named last November in the wake of charges that there were liberal tendencies in the Baptist Student Unions when it came to Baptist doctrine. The board wound up its annual meeting by adopting a 1954 budg et calling for expenditures of $1, 963,000 within the state. This com pares with a budget of $1,597,05Q in 1953. . T? DOardY after hearing an ap- r1- James W. Ray, director of the BSU" program, rd stored to $1,800 the budget for BSU expenses at the University of North Carolina. The figure had been cut to $1,200 but Ray pointed out regardless of the "findings of the special investigating commit tee hte BSU program undoubtedly would continue. In his report, Dr. M. A. Huggins, executive secretary of the Conven tion, noted two things "of particu in local church expenses includ ing new buildings and a small in crease in gifts for all denomina. iional causes. The Liberty and South Yadkin Baptist pastdfS conference offered an anti-Catholic resolution which was referred to committee. One proposal asked that the convention employ a man to "counteract this serious invasion" by Catholic mis sionaries. During a meeting of the educa tion committee, Dr. Harold ITrib ble, president of Wake Forest Col lege, reported the institution is within: two million dollars of its 174 million goal providing for the removal of the campus to Winston-Salem. The move is sched uled to be completed by the sum mer of 1955. N. C. Architects To Hold Winter Meet Here Today The North Carolina Chapter ofjwhen j had a che to vote,' the American Institute of Archi tects will hold its winter meeting in conjunction wun tne mia-year meeting of the North Carolina Architectural Foundation at the Carolina Inn today and tomorrow. Science Says Frost . ?': - 1 .jlltfliii ' ! f v 1 Film Star Shelley Winters sptay with tears in hlr - as she te"S ws"ien in Rome that she file suit for legal separation from actor Vittorio Gassman "and divorce him is soon ?s he pays me $95,000." She said ther Was a second condition td the di vorce that Gassman will have to guarantee in writing he will marry Anna Maria Ferrero, beau tiful 18-year-old Italian girl playing Ophelia to his Hamlet in a tour of Italy AP Wirephoto. Tool Maker Is Seeking Work As Lawmaker RALFJGH, Jan. 20 (P)-R. W. Bostick of Cary, out of work as a tool maker, put in his application today for a political job. On his first try at a public of fice he aimed high for the U. S. Senate. He filed his name with Raymond Maxwell, secretary of the State Board of Elections, as a candidate for the Democratic nom ination in the May 20 primary. Bostick said he decided last night to enter the race after think ing it over for two months. His quick decision put him ahead of two experienced politicians ex pected to be the principal con testants for the nomination. Sen. Alton A. Lennon, appointed by Gov. Umsfead, has announced he will run but has not paid his filing fee. Former Gov. W. Kerr Scott has stated he will announce on or before Feb. 10 whether he will oppose Lennon. He explained he has always voted the Deemocratic ticket but moving around in his work as a tool maker, he had been unable to register. His last job was in Cleveland, Ohio, last summer, he said. He has been unemployed for the past several months, he added. 'Alumnus Now' Poet Mentions In Annual Visit By Ken San ford and Jennie Lynn Poet Robert Frost suggested here last night that "something short 'of religion, perhaps the un derstanding of poetry, could coun terbalance science." "I have certain anxieties about .he liberal arts and how we can cr unterbalance science," Frosh said. "Is there no place where science cannot come?" Frosh asked. "My policy if I were running a college would be to find something short of religion where I could say to science. 'You can't come here.' There is such a place. Science can not touch shades of love and hate and being sensible. "The reason for the going back to the poetry of the a.ses is to make sure in our rvn breast that love .'afe and being sensible were the same then as now." iThe audience that came to hear the white-haired, 79-year-old poet filled every seat in the auditorium and overflowed onto the stage and stood in the aisles. Speaking Ot Jlis annual visits to the University, Frost said, "I Come here a good deal from affection and just college pride. I am an alumnus of this institution since last June. The University gave him an honorary degree in June, 1953. "As I travel about the country and visit the colleges, I observe many college presidents. I would classify them as two kinds. There are presidents who have a con scientious concern for poetry where science can never come. Then there are college presidents who have a weakness for beautiful things where science can never come. 'Toetry Ibmething of a tone. ! Poetry in prose and verse is some thing which says how the prose and verse are to be taken." In commenting on people who take his poetry and read things into it, Frost said, "I make 'em and you take 'em." Frost read a poem, '"Tis Almost the Year 2060." He said, "It almost is, you know. Some of you will see it, won't you? That makes me laugh. "The way to criticize a poem," Frost said, "is to see if it is hurt by being in poetry to see if it wouldn't be better in prose. I am interested in rhyme and meter." Between readings of his poetry, Frost made comments like: "You better watch out what you write in verse or you'll turn out prophetic; my motto is never give the right reason for what you do; poems are like adventures you write them for word luck.? He also read "The Road Not Taken," "A Soldier," "Desert Places," and two old favbrites: "Stopping By The Woods on a Winter Evening" and "Birches." Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Clifford P. Lyons intro duced Frost as a man "with only one snow on his head after 80 winters." 1 Primary Flight Training Put In Civilian Hands WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 (.!') The Air Force is proposing to con vert the last of its government operated primary flying schools Goodfellow Air Force Base, Tex. itno a basic school for multi engina airplane training. This step would leave the entire primary training program in the hands of the nine ciilian schools. It is interpreted as further evi dence of the Air Forces satisfac tion; with the civilian tra:ning methods and the cost saving they provide. It also will mean an enrollment increrse of slightly more than 10 per; cent at each of the civilian operated schools: Notices of the change have gone out to all the schools.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 21, 1954, edition 1
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