SE3IA3S DEPT. : CHAPEL HlLL.'y. C CANNONS WEATHER Joe McCarthy's hearing large artillery 1ese days. Mostly fair with little change in temperature to day with an expected high of 64. The big guns are to De found on p. "2. CHAPEL HILL, N.C TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1954 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY VOLUME LXII NUMBER 116 Complete JF Photo and Wire Service m m d b m m m m m . b f h v f mm- m -m m u t z---m m r m mtw h -- mm r m m ---- a a PHAFMTI TOP) All IT SMlFIJR I'ISjnWSInllllP i ii i Policy iwitcn Mnnounceu I I u pera on f m B mm i enornere rt concert Leslie Chabay, Metropolitan Opera tenor, will sing tonight at 8 o'clock in Memorial Hall. , Students will be admitted to the concert free by showing their ID cards and townspeople will be ad mitted after 7:40 for one dollar. Wilton Mason of the University Music Department will accompany Chabay on the piano. Chabay is one of the busiest members of the Metropolitan and San Francisco Opera Companies. During 1947-48, he led the list with more than 70 performances to his credit. . Born , in Europe his real name - George Cuften To Give Talk To Phi Tonight Inaugural Services For Franz Roberts, Other Officers Set Dr. George Cutten, scholar and author, will speak on "A College Education What Is It?" tonight at the inaugural services of. the Philanthropic Assembly. Dr. Cutten, former president of Acadia University in Nova Scotia ' and Colgate University, past presx is Laszle csaDav unaoav maae aem oi me mauonai uuulu ui mc bis metropolitan debut in 1946yMCA, and Baptist minister, will after mieratine to the United address members and newly-in- Rtatpc fmm the unpronounceable ! stalled officers of the debating so town of Bekescsaba, Hungary. ciety in Phi Hall, New East, at r.hahav's study of music began 8 o'clock tonight. Officers to be at the Franz Liszt Academy at j installed are: Franz Roberts, Budapest; Then came additional j speaker; Richard Iobst, speaker LESLIE CHABAY Will Sing Tonight Plaza To Give Weil Lectures This Weekend Former President Galo Plaza of Ecuador, South America, will de tho annual series of Weil Lectures on the theme "Problems f Democracy in Latin America." in Carroll Hall Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights at 8:30. Plaza will speak on "North and South Americans: a Comparison" on Thursday, on "Eduador: An Experiment in Democracy" Friday rA nn "Tipmnpracv in Latin America: Past and Future" on Saturday. The Weil Lectures were esta blished 40 years ago by the famil ies of Sol and Henry Weil of The first lecturer was training in Munich, where he sang ' pro in operettas on the side. ' In 1932, the young tenor em barked on his first full-fleged op "eratic tour with a company pre senting "The Marriage of Figaro" hv Mozart as well as Handel s "Rodelinde" and Humperdinck's j tem; Larry Maddry, clerk; Lawrence Matthews, treasurer; James Duvall sergeant at arms; Wade Matthews, parliamentarian, and Bill Porterfield, critic Among Dr. Cutten's degrees are honors from Acadia, Yale, Colgate, New York State College for Tea Not Get S Athletes Will tore Profits tj mnrP ramous store profits will be earmarked for. athletic grants, Chancellor R. B. House announced yesterday. The policy of specifically designating 25 percent oi proii ; University-owned stores was thus - : lonHpr? after iust one year. This Luxon Kaises Course Load In Journalism "Hansel and Gretel." Then, in a trip back to Buda pest, Chabay met and married his wife. On an American tour, Cha bay picked up a very useful know ledge of English. He's familiar with American jazz and popular songs. In Zurich, hp took the thoroughly American role of Sportin' Life in George Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess. - Chabay lives with his family in a bungalow in the Colorida Rock ies in the summer. His love of the simple life he. finds there is re flected in the fact that his favor ite composer of songs is Franz cv.v,oT-t who is noted for elo- kJUUWV. w, - . quently simple songs. Likely, though the program for this eve- r.mff chers and Alfred University. He has served at Howard Avenue Church in New Haven, Conn., the First Church of Corning, N. Y. and was acting president of Colgate-Rochester Divinity School. (See CUTTEN, page 4) The number of required jour nalism courses-for students in the j ournalism school has . been increased from a minimum of six to eight, and the maximum from eight to ten, according to Dean Norval N. Lixon. Dean Luxon's recommendation was . given unanimous approval by the Administrative Board of the School of Journalism last February 25. The; Faculty Coun cil gave its approval last Fri day, Of the eight minium courses, four are specified. These are News Writing I, News Editing, History of Journalism, and the Legal Aspects of Journalism.' Dean Luxon said the new policy will go into effect next fall, making this year's juniors the first to participate in- the new program. Wake Forest Students Damage State Building uoiasuoru. iv.. xne apvcut"v the late President William Howard) jnged by the Student En- RALEIGH, March 8 4Fh- f ourteen waice roresi uiiege ! athletic subsidy. inriiiHins? three football players, pleaded guilty today in City Court to . malicious damage to two buildings at North Carolina State College. Prayer for judgment was continued by Judge Albert Doub. The group admitted spreading paint around imi0 --- tw0;nolds uoiiseum ana cm uirec smc he'll sing a Schubert song or to Memorial BeU Tower at in Memorial Hall. rniicge last Wednesday The appearence of Chaoay fall, $10,000 of the $40,000 profits were turned over to athletic grants. The policy switch came after much criticism from The Daily Tar. Heel and state newspapers. The action took place at-a meet ing of the standing faculty com mittee on scholarships (officially, the Committee on Endowed Schol arships, Loan Funds, and Self -Help Work). D D. CarrolL head of the schol arship committee, refused to com ment for publication yesterday. He said that he will have a state ment later. President Gordon Gray last se mester defended the Administra tion's allocation of $10,000 of cam pus store profits ot athletic grants- in-aid. He said it "should have gone to athletes under the circumstances." The circumstances he referred to, President Gray said, involved two factors: (1) When the Trustees in 1952 told the University that campus profits must go for sutdent schol arships, it gave the Administra tion a free hand with regard to "nature and number" of grants, profits must go for student schol lastic attainment a prime basis for making the" awards. 2) At the time of allocation of the $10,000 to UNC athletes, N. C. State College was giving $30,000 of its book store profits towards v . CHARLES KURALT Announces For Editor . UP Momination Being Sought By Candidates Both editorial candidates for The Daily Tar Heel, Charles Kur alt and Tom Peacock, will try for the University Party nomination tonight. - Peacock, sports editor of the paper who announced Sunday he was running, declared yesterday he'd seek the UP's backing; And Kuralt, columnist and reporter, said he was seeking it also. Talk in political circles yester day seemed to indicate that it's anybody's race at this point. The fraternity-dominated UP will be picking from among two fraternity men. Besides editor, the UP. will nom inate senior class officers. Tnft Regarded as one of Latin Ameri ra's more demorcatic 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. One of the signers of the Unit ed Nations Charter in 1944, wnue Ecuadoran Ambassador to Wash ington, he stands with the United States and principles enunciated in the Charter in the matter of fore ign policy. Plaza is a firm believer m the Roosevelt-Hull "Good Neighbor" policy. An achievement - in which he takes great pride is the found ing of the non-sectarian co-educational American School of Quinto. Galo Paza is the eldest of the seven children of General Leoni das Plaza Gutierrez, twice presi dent of Ecuador, and Dona Ave lina Lasso Plaza, a direct descend ant of the Conquistador San doval. He was horn February 17, 1906, in New York during his father's year of service as his country's Minister to the United States. Plaza attented high school in Ecuador, the University of Cali fornia, the University of Maryland, and the Georgetown School oi Foreign Service. He returned to his homeland in 1933 to take over the eight Plaza haciendas which had been slowly becoming less profitable during his father's sevon years in exile. Several years later he was elected to the municipal council of Quinto, becoming president of that body, and a year later was elected mayor of the Ecuadoran Capital. Toward the close of 1938 he was appointed Minister of National Defense and in 1944 he was named a1? Ecua dor's Ambassador to Washington. Returning to Ecuador in 1946, he occupied himself once again with . farming and business interests. His election as president .came in 1947 after he had served as Sena tor from the Pichincha province in Which Quinto is located. tertainment Committee. Duke Students Arrested Here Carolina's first football week end of the year was a quiet one, at least for Tar Heel students Not so with Blue Devil breth ren from Durham. , Booked Friday night in Chapel Hill's Police Station were Edward Lambeth and B. Jon Jaeger, both of Pittsburgh . and Duke, who were picked up lor drunkenness and displaying beer in public. As if this were't enough, they soon were charged with damage to jail property-and finally with disorderly conduct. According to Captain Blake of-the Chapel HU1 Police, the two damaged a water fountain tore up part of a commoae, dim polished off a good night's work by setting fire to the cell bed- Press Club Billy Arthur speaks . tonight at 7:30 to the Press Club in room 306 Bynum Hall. President Gray made it clear at that time that athletes wouldn't necessarily continue to receive a slice of the profits. The $10,000 athletic slice of the profits was allocated by the facul- (See BOOK PROFITS, page 4) nigh They were listed as Robert Bar tholomew, John Robert (Booby) Frederick and Joseph Leonard White Jr., football players; and John Lee Dawkins Jr., William Harry Swicord, Gordon Powers Walsh, Richard Gaddis Whisnant, Richard Perry, Joseph Thomas Crawley Jr., William H. Richard son Jr., Joseph Edward Brannock Jr., Donald C. Roberts and Ken neth WaddelL RaiDitrh Detective Cant. R. E. XlrUl v A C?- ' ' Goodwin said the 14 were cited to j j. fn,ir.rf on investigation court iiuivwm& o . Editor Names Jerry Reece Daily Tar Heel News Editor Daily Tar Heel Editor Rolfe Neill yesterday appointed Jerry Reece of Andrews to the post of News Editor of the campus paper. Reece will take over the post left vacant when Ken Stanford was appointed Managing Editor. A junior majoring in journal ism. Reece started work on the CUUlk iUiiv"o - , . - .... by the Raleigh Police Department, j paper in the fall quarter of lyoi. the State Bureau of Investigation j Hg hag worked for trhe Smoky and Wake Forest Police Chief Ri-Mountain Times, Bryson City and ley Wiggs. . ! The Cheroeke Scout in Murphey. sat: Fo ! -Keece is a o Phi Kappa .nar.nnS and the letters "W.F. bigma social iraiwuiy. were painted on parts of the Coli seum building. He also reported that "W.F.C." and "Wake Forest" were painted on the Memorial Tower. The dam age was estimated at $500. He is the son of Mrs. W. A. Reece of Andrews. I The appointement will be sub ject to the approval of the Pub lications Board. Mrs. Rhyne came to America in . . -. . i- x 1 1946 alter traveling . a, ; n thoushout the world. She received ; ? ?d lr: ner d.a. m r m is auu a uv-t,- , at the University of Gijon, Bur- JERRY REECE Gets New Job Madntyre Breathes Sigh Of Relief Refutes Stand By Opponent On Editorials Candidate Declares Freedom Real Issue In Coming Election Charles Kuralt, Daily Tar Heel f reporter and columnist, yesterday became the second candidate to declare himself in the race for the newspaper editorship. Kuralt will oppose fTom Pea cock in -the campus-wide -election this spring. Both are seeking po litical party nomination. Kuralt, in nls initial campaign . statement, challenged Peacock's views on the role of the editor of the student paper. Peacock, pre sently serving as sports editor, expressed the opinion that The Daily Tar Heel should reflect the opinion of the student body, and should be as conservative as the student body." .. Kuralt said that student opinion "must always be represented," but editorials in the paper should "not be mere 'reflections' of things everybody already knows. If the maioritv agrees, so much the bet ter, but "editorial freedom must not be restricted by force of numbers." . "The Daily Tar Heel," Kuralt said, "has not always been free. Its present freedom was obtained by editors who were not afraid to judge facts rationally, and then to speak out forthrightly in support of their convictions." Kuralt, who wrote sports stories for The Charlotte Observer for three years and news and sports for The Charlotte News for one year, had a comment on Peacock's injection of sports into the cam paign. Kuralt promised complete cov erage and fair editorial treatment of athletics, and called sports "a unifying and important part of life at the University.". "But sports," he continued, "is not the issue here. There is little disagreement between Tom Pea mrk and mvself on the subject of I sports. What there does seem to be Supper Forum In Lenoir Hal This Evening The World Understanding Sup per Forum will discuss "France and the Modern World" tonight from 5:30 to 7 o'clock in Lenoir Hall. Ram Desikan of Madras, India, will act as moderator. , ,. :ama4. nn ic the function of i UldCtgl CCUl&Ui V" J Both speakers of the forum, editorial coiUmn-and that is Mrs. Dwight Rhyne and Jaquesmore to the point since we are Hardre', are natives of France, but . . , Pf1itor " currently reside in Chapel Hill. the editorial column and that is candidates for editor.' fThe news pages, independent (student columnists, and letters to gundy Jaques Hardre' received his which the editor does not exer cise censorship. The editorial col umn alone is reserved to the use of the editor, and he must not . Ul LUC CiVA-I B.A. in Paris and continued his make Qf it a gort of daily Gallup 1.1 . m studies here, wnere ne reteivcu poU It is his duty to conSider an his M.A. and Ph.D. noints of view, and take an honest Anwnne wi shin? to have supper, etanrt without resoect to the num- ilill V"V cj " - - with the group is asked to go Der or nature of tfte opposition. through the cafeteria ne at 5:u. The second floor front dining room will be reserved for the group. The forum is sponsored by the YWCA-YMCA World Relatedness Committee. Hill Hunting For TV Tower Is No Easy Task By Pat Snook When the Consolidated Uni versity of North Carolina re cently announced purchase of land on which to erect a televi sion tower, at least one man behind the scenes could breathe a sigh of personal relief. For Chief Engineer Alan B. Maclntyre has spent the best part of many months looking for the particular spot in North Car olina where he could erect 72 tons of welded steel to the best engineering "advantage, without threatening the air safety of tbe state. The Federal Communications Commission granted the Univer sity a construction permit for its non-commercial, educational tel evision station on September 30 but with a few reservations: the transmitting tower must be located no more than 20 miles from Chapel Hill, it must be at least 190 miles from Greenville, S. C. (where another Channel 4 television station is located), and it must not intrude on he air lines' approaches to airports. Search For Peak After these restrictions were applied, the University was left with an eight-mile triangle of land in which to look' for a peak. For television waves will travel only, to the horizon the higher up in the air they start from, the farther they will go. Officials wanted to beam the University's sound and pictures from at least 1,000 feet above the ground in order to serve s the lareest number of North Carolina families with direct television service. Mr. Macln tyre's assignment, therefore, wa to find the highest accessible point of land possible the higher the ground, the shorter the expensive tower would have to be. - For a man who was formerly a research associate working on a Navy project to develop a gra phical data analyzer, this might seem a pretty simple assignment. There are maps which show where hills are and how high they are. Except, surprisingly enough, there just simply weren't any contour maps of this particular part of North Carolina. And extensive chart- ings of this type are costly: Goes Hill-Hunting So Chief Engineer Maclntyre bought an 'altimeter the kind airplane pilots use to determine flying altitude climbed in his automobile, and went hill-hunting. He drove to what seemed to be a high point of land, took a reading, examined the view around him, picked a seemingly higher point, and headed for that. After many miles and many hours, the highest peak was found, three miles from Pitts boro and halfway between Ra leigh and Greensboro. A fine choice, it was agreed. Then one of those things hap pened which help to explain why television station organization (See HILL HUNTING, page 4) Cadmus Will Represent Unc At Health Meeting Dr. Robert R. Cadmus, director of North Carolina Memorial Hos pital, represented the American Hospital Association last Friday in New York on a committee plan ning for the fourth National Con ference on Health and Colleges, to be. held May 5-8 at theHotel Satler in New York. Gorham Signs Bill Giving Victory Village $3,000 In addition to his work on The Daily Tar Heel and the Charlotte newspapers, Kuralt wrote and re ported news for Charlotte's WAYa, WBT radio and television, includ ing play-by-play broadcasting of pro baseball games. He also broad casted Carolina baseball last year for WCHL. . . . . K.lt nations winner in the "Voice of Democracy" contest. T.ae year he help jud?e the samq contest along with Ralph Bunche, Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark, and publisher Henry Luce of "Time" and "Life" magazines. A statement written by Kuralt on defense against communism was translated into 20 languages for broadcast over the Voice of America. An essay on the same subject was carried by The Wash ington Post on its editorial page. The editorial candidate won an Edgar Bergen scholarship to North- President Bob Gorham signed western University, but gave it up the student Legislature bill to 'in order to come to Carolina. He give Victory Village $3,0C0 in im- j has appeared on all four major provements, it was learned yester- , day. I For a time, there was some j question whether Gorham would approve the Student Party spon sored proposal. The improvements were a plank in the SP's "good deal" platform last fall. radio networks. YWCA Mfit All girls attending the state YWCA conference at Guiford Col-' lege in Greensboro this weekend are to met today at 4 p.m. in the YWCA.