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cx-2i ;:ui, n, c; I WEATHER Fair and little change in temperature today with an expected high of 58. Yes terday's high, 58; low, 30's. It IDEAS The editor also has some suggestions about the Uni versity. He gives them- on p. 2. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 93 Complete Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1954 Complete Photo and Wire Service " FOUR PAGES TODAY NSA Delegates Meet In Greensboro Friday GREENSBORO, Feb . 9 The Virginia-Carolina Region of the Na tional Student Association will convene its annual conference at Wom an's College Friday and Saturday. The workshop session is planned to exchange student government ideas and discuss mutual problems of the colleges in Virginia and the Carolinas. Colleges to be presented at the meeting will be Washington Col .lege of the University of Virginia, Schley Unsure Of Delegation To NSA Meet Chal Schley, campus NSA chairman, said "yesterday he "wasn't too sure" just who was going to represent Carolina at the regional conference of the group Friday and Saturday. Schley said he couldn't decide on representatives until the stu dent Legislature made an ap propriation for $25 in expenses, and the Legislature doesn't meet until Thursday. Members of the committee from which Schley will choose are Ken Penegar, Bev Webb, Joel Fleishman and Virginia Whiteman. Interviews For Coed Post Set Girls interesred in being chair man of leadership training may go to the Women's Council room in Graham Memorial, today. After looking over the material irom past years, candidates may formulate a program using their own ideas. An application should be filed Wednesday at the main office University of North Carolina, Vir ginia Polytechnic Institute, Greens boro College, Virginia State Col lege, Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia Union, Sweet briar College, and Woman's Col lege uxc. The conference will include five workshops, each of which will be led by a student from one of the colleges. Pat Thomas, Hagerstown, Md., Woman's College Carolinian editor, will lead the editor's clinic. Other discussion leaders will be Bob Bradshaw, Duke, clinic for student body presidents; Ken Pen egar, University of North Carolina, leadership training and continuity in student government; Vivian Verdell, Virginia State College, workshop on campus program ming, National Student Associa tion programs and services; and Lynda Simmons, Woman's College student from Atlanta, Ga., student participation in International af fairs. Officers for the Virginia-Caro-linas Region are: Chairman, Joan Chamberlain from Sweetbriar; vice-chairman, Leo Brooks, Vir ginia State College; secretary, Betsy Swain, Woman's College stu dent from Raleigh; and treasurer, Dot Orgill from Randolph-Macon Woman's College. fcAnpus SEEN Coed's comment on nickel Y Court coffee: "Maybe they ' haven't changed the price, but they've sure changed the cof fee." Efficiency department, back to nature division: Photo nega tives, securely fastened to a tree limb, hanging in the sun behind Graham Memorial to dry. Service Group Representative Is Here Today Dr. A. Burns Chalmers, educa tional secretary of the World Uni versity Service, will be on campus today to help Carolina get started in the World University Service program. At 1 o'clock he will meet in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall with Bill Wible's committee on University affiliations of the student government, which is try ing to complete plans for ex change students between Carolina and Goettingen Universiyt in Germany. Last year there were five stu dents and one faculty member from that university who were! of Sol and Henry Weil of Golds- Galo Plaza To Deliver Weil Talks Ex-Ecuadoran Prexy To Present Lectures Former President Galo Plaza of Ecuador, South America, a native of New York, will deliver the annual series of Weil Lectures here March 11; 12 and 13, it was announced yesterday by Dr. Alex ander Heard, chairman of the com mittee on the lecture series. Regarded as one of Latin Amer ica's more democratic leaders, the former Ecuadoran president, dur ing his four-year term ending in 1952, guided his country to a de gree of economic and social sta bility. In the matter of foreign policy he stands with the United States and the principles enumerated in the charter of the United Nations, of which he was one of the signers in 1944, while serving as Ecuador an ambasador to Washington. Mr. Plaza is a: firm believer in the Roosevelt-Hull "Good Neigh bor" policy. An; achievement in which he takes great pride is the founding of the non-sectarian co educational American School of Quinto. The Weil lectures were estab lished 40 years ago by the families coW's C ev In campaign Chapel Hill C Off :-j-4... I mm If Health Pro To Preside - Over Atlanta Symposium Dr. Daniel A. Okun, associate of Graham Memorial, and at this professor of sanitary engineering time candidates can sign for an interview. Interviews will be Thursday in the School of Public Health, will attend the Atlanta convention of the American Society of Civil afternoon from 4:15 to 5:30, at, Engineers to be held February which time the Women's Residence 17-19. Council will question the applica- Dr. Okun will preside over a cants on their plans for leader-1 sanitary engineering division sym ship training, and appoint the'posium on "New Horizons in San chairman, 'itary Engineering." f j ll t j 1 jj ' ,4 j Ij 1 jj jL i v & Unfit ; t : I I I .." - : i& z. ? i, '. here to study our student govern ment. Goettingen University has reported that they are now ready to pay the expenses of a Carolina student to study for one year on their campus. Arrangements must now be made for selection and transportation of the student. It is the hope of this committee that Carolina can develop a steady program of exchange students with Goettingen University. boro. The first lecturer was the late President William Howard ITaft Galo Plaza. is the eldest of the seven children of General Leon idas Plaza Gutierrez, twice presi dent of Ecuador, and Dona Avelina CPU To Raise Membership The Carolina Political Union, in an effort to raise its membership, has announced an intensive drive to attract students to its forums. Although a few years ago there i, were as many as luu students waiting to belong to the group, membership is limited to 25 to in sure lively and unrestricted dis cussions of issues of vital impor- PINT-SIZED kitten looks up inquiringly at incarcerated dog a the Animal Velfare League in Chicago. The canine prisoner seems equally bewildered by sudden lack of frasdom during roundup of strays in the city's drive against spread of rabies. Anti-rabies shots have been ordered for all dogs in Chicago and the league has set u a special inoculation center. AP Wirephoto. I : 1 j C 1 W. KERR SCOTT Haw River Squire off on Senate race Coeds To Entertain Women Trustee Visit Planned The 10. ICK onighf Will Dine With YDC, Talk At High School W. Kerr Scott, he of the slow drawl and the political ambition, kicks off his campaign for the U. S. Senate here tonight Scott, who announced last Sat urday he's after Alton A. Lennon's Senate seat, will come to town this afternoon, break bread at sup per with UNC and Orange County Young Democrats, and then make his first campaign speech in the Chapel Hill High School auditor ium at 8 o'clock. It is expected the speech will be similar to the earthy, pointed orations which helped elect Scott governor six years ago. Though tonight's talk is the official lid lifter in the Haw River farmer's campaign, Scott said upon an nouncing for the post he'd already visited 68 of the state's 100 counties. It is considered fairly certain that Scott's opponent, Alton A. Lennon, is in for some political barbs tonight. Lennon, who was appointed by Gov. William B. Um stead to fill the Senate vacancy left by the death of Sen. Willis Smith, hasn't filed for the race officially. But he has announced he will run. 4. Scott will undoubtedly point to his gubernatorial record in the talk tonight a record starred with progressive measures. And he'll be talking in friendly terri tory. Scott carried Orange County in both primary races for Govern- er in 1948, and later appointed women Trustees of the student hnsfpwe tn hA fnlWoH " Lasso Plaza, a direct descendant ;Consolidated University have been : by a toux of the Nurses' Residence ?e oi me wonquistaaor aan aovai. e to come to jj at 10 aJ1L uix A-Culuuj Monday and Tuesday, February 22 j The Trustees will meet with New York City during his fathers and as of WOmen women of the faculty and graduate year of service as his country's students, according to an an-'students for a coffee hour in Ke- minister to the United States. After graduating from high school in Ecuador, he entered the University of California, Berkeley, while his family sought refuge in the United States following the outbreak of a revolution in their country. In 1926 he transferred to the University of Maryland and left three years later without taking a degree in order to move into the position of civil attache in the Ecuadoran legation at Washington and to enroll for diplomatic stud ies at the Georgetown School of Foreign Service. Plaza returned to his homeland nouncement yesterday by Miss nan Hall following the tour. Katherine Carmichaei, dean of Luncheon with women students in women. Lenoir Hall will begin at 12:30 The purpose of the meeting here ! p.m. is to provide an opportunity fori Final event on the day's pro the women students to get ac- gram will be University Women's quainted with the women members Club Tea in Carroll Hall at 3:30 of the Board of Trustees and for Tuesday with hostesses from the P. Graham to the United States Senate. : Another Chapel Hill resident, state Legislator John W. Umstead, Jr., was considered one of the leaders of Scott's backers in the 1 Legislature. tance. "Founded in the 1930's, the CPUiin 1933 to take over the eight Plaza the Trustees to meet the girls and become familiar with their activities School of Business. Women on the Board of Trus tees are Mrs. Ed M. Anderson, The board members will arrive West Jefferson; Mrs. R. S. Fergu Monday afternoon at 5:30 and be , son, Taylorsville; Mrs.- Albert given rooms in the women's dor-1 Lathrop, Ashville; Mrs. Grace Tay mitories. Each Trustee will have! lor Rodenbough, Walnut Cove; a group of student hostesses who will accompany and direct her to the various events planned. At 6:15 p. m., a dinner honor ing the guests will be held in Spencer Hall. Several members of the University administration and other guests will be present. Fol- has continued to serve the campus j haciendas which had been slowly by providing a forum where stu- becoming less profitable during his dents of all political opinions father's seven years in exile. Sev could freely put forth their ideas eral years later he was elected to on any topic," Chairman Joel the municipal council of Quinto, ! lowing the dinner, brief meetings Fleishman said yesterday, "and it j becoming president of that body, j of the Women's Residence Coun is only right that, in this time i and a year later he was elected j cil, Women's Honor Council and when so much is at stake in the mayor of the Ecuadoran capital, world and the nation and every- j Toward the close of 1938 he was one is defending the inalienable appointed Minister of National rights to free opinion and free dis- ( Defense and in 1944 he was named cussion, students here should rally ! as Ecuador's ambassador to Wash to support an organization which j ington. is a concrete example of free dis cussion on the campus." "Our treatment of those soldiers who turned to communism and re mained and those who returned to this country," will be the issue discussed at this Sunday's 8 p.m meeting in the Grail Room. All interested students are urged to attend. He returned to Ecuador in 1946 and occupied himself once again with farming and business inter est. His election as president came in 1947 after he had served as Senator from the Pichincha province in which Quinto is lo cated. iThe Plazas have five daughters and one son. Mrs. Charles Tillett, Charlotte; Mrs. J. W. Copeland, Murfrees boro; Mrs. J. B. Kittrell, Sr., Greenville; Mrs. B. C. Parker, Al bemarle; Mrs. Charles Stanford, Chapel Hill; and Mrs. May Tom linson, High Point. the YWCA will be held in Gra ham Memorial in order to acquaint the visitors with the programs of these organizations. The guests will go to the Alpha Gamma Delta House at 9 p.m for a short meeting of the Panhellenic Council after which they will at tend a short meeting of the Inde pendent Coed Board at Alderman Hall. Later in the evening, resi dents of each women's dormitory will have a "study break" and light refreshments will be served. First event on the second day's program will be a breakfast with 5 IN BRIEF WASHINGTON - JF) - Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson an nounced yesterday that no Amer ican pilots will be sent to aid the French in Indo-China. Wilson also told a news conference a military victory over the Communists with out direct American intervention is "both possible and probable." He did say, however, that Lt Gen. John W. O'Daniel, commander of U. S. Army forces in the Pacific, "might be sent" to Indo-China. WASHINGTON Senate in vestigators reported yesterday that no shortage is seen in present cof- At Annual World Affairs Meet Here Eichelberger To Open U.N. Series Tonight A program of speeches and dis- National Council of Churches in UNESCO. Lester F. Zerfoss of the cusions on the United Nations Christ Dr. Lefever will also give begins tonight at 8 o'clock in Car-! a talk on "The Christian Student roll Hall with a speech by Dr. , and International Relations," at 3 Clark M. Eichelberger, executive p.m. in the Y Cabinet room. director of the American Associ ation for the United Nations. Dr. Amry Vandenbosch will snpat nn'"WnrlH Pparp Thrmiffh Dr. Eichelberger will open the San charter;' at Fourth Annual Conference on World Affairs with his speech on .11:45 a.m. Dr. Vandenbosch, visit- fee supplies. Chairman J. Glenn Beall (R-Md.) of a special bank mg subcommittee studying recent ! cation nad the United Nations Enka Corporation will then discuss issues and policies. Short talks will be given on "World Peace Through Changes Within the Present Charter," by Dr. Lenoir Wright, professor of history and political science at WCUNC; "World Peace Through Multilateral Parts Tinder the Char. . l r I e in? mirrnn i.ra b Drmpssnr ui . .. . v n r.i n i "Evolution of the United Nations 7 ZZ I ' ttxto i" iler- P ur' J- siting, assu. , j w it Tmnlirations For Charter "UA"i'luuc"tc ant professor of education at UNC; and Its Implications or Charter. caJ Science Department, was ad- 'n1 FWnrM Ppa-e Through Char Revision." All programs of the- . t th ,9.5 San Francisco 1 conference are open to the public. jXcTon l Umted NaSns ? ' At 10-30 am tomorrow Herbert Cofrence on umtea uons Brandis, Jr., Dean of. the Law - and 1S now teaching a course on , , T C TTnnsakpr Dean fo Cleveland;. TTvT - TT iocuuui, ui. w. - j rna v in 1 11 f 1 ni vprs 1 v College, will talk on "Adult t,au- The afternoon session of the There will be general discussions after each speech, and then small- spectacular price increases, said i At 11 a.m - a soeech. "Should conference will be highlighted by er. buzz sessions. The conference the high cost cannot be attributed 1 the United Nations Charter Be the Playmakers' presentation of is being sponsored by about 17 to a shortage in Brazil, source of Revised?" will be given by Ernest , "To Live In Faith," a play written women's organizations of both lay most of the American supply. W. Lefever, a minister with the for the National Commission and professional groups. VMJUMmMII.MwMW"Ba.JltHW.Blll''' '.WU.JU.iii ie, nm :-- .., 1 -.- '-ma;- c s : I i 1 -I f V " - I t i i Alleged Slayer Confronted By Davidson Boys DECATUR, Ga., Feb. 9 (JF) The alleged slayer of Patrolman J. L. (Jimmy) Mize was confronted by two Davidson College students today in connection with recent dormitory thefts at that school. Held at DeKalb County Jail without bond, Jennings Fields, 30, is also accused of wounding an other patrolman, J. R. (Jake) Davis. Fields allegedly shot the patrol men after they were sent to arrest J him. He is reported to have ( grabbed Mize's service pistol and shot him in the right chest Police declined to say whether Davidson students Ralph E. Petree and John A. McGee, both of Char lotte, had identfied Fields as the robber who took $317 from David- Eight Carolina students appeared son students in an early morning,111 Chapel Hill Recorder's Court yesterday before Judge W. S. Stewart. C H. Teague, E. D. Pardington, Door-To-Door Invitation Plan For Long Talk A. dozen student leaders inter ested in interesting more students in University opportunities evolv ed a plan yesterday on how to help do it. They decided to use a door-to-door campaign on the night of Sen. Russell Long's speech here Feb. 26, personally to invite stu dents to attend. The theory be hind the leaders' idea is that many students, once they discover what they've been missing, will begin to participate. The group represented every major campus organization and had at its meeting Dean of Stu dents Fred Weaver and his as sistant, Roy Holsten. It was the first of occasional such "dutch lunches" at which campus leaders and student affairs people will dis cuss Carolina problems. The persons present at yester day's meeting each agreed to con tact five friends. The night of the Long speech the groups of six will visit residence halls and invite stu dents to attend. Tuesday, March 2 will be the next meeting date of the leaders. Eight Get Fines In Court Here theft last Thursday. Two Clemson College students, Tom Dree and Tom Bookhart, have said they .are reasonably sure and C. S. Coval were all charged Fields is the man who stole $18jwitl1 usinS an expired state li- from them. cense plate. Each was fined court The itinerant airplane mechanic, .costs. reportedly a native of Darlington, "oger Herbert, R. S. Sapp, G. D. S. C. was captured after one ofiSnutn. and E. D. Bray were all the largest posse hunts in recent charged with speeding. Herbert Georgia history. iwas lined $15 and court costs, DR. EICHELBERGER Meanwhile, at Charlotte, N. C, Detective W. A. McCall said police there are studying the possibility of a Connection between the dor mitory thefts and a series of tlief ts 1 made at a Charlotte rooming house jin which $277 was stolen. Smith was fined $10 and costs, Bray was fined $5 and costs, and Sapp was fined court costs. Jackie Brooks, the only Carolina coed to be called yesterday, was fined court costs for parking in front of a fire hydrant. sold by Saturday. death on the Bowery life.' siaen. Marterie. -1 -xcuu iuuSc ui vjrxcuicuu jtiemonai me xexingion Dar, and Ed Hudgins at 4:00 p.m. i of the Greensboro bar.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 10, 1954, edition 1
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