Probl egro ems Trustees Approver Wilsons at Mttl As New Gil Vice President i VOLUME LIX CHAPEL Capers Slated For Saturday By Playmakers The Carolina Playmakers will hold their 27th annual Capers at the Playmaker Theater Saturday night beginning at 8 o'clock. .Everyone is invited, admission free. As in past seasons, the students in the dramatic department will sum up Playmaker activities and events in Chapel Hill during the -past year. They will give a Bronx cheer to artyness and sham, play maker officials said yesterday. Edgar Loessin, who holds the Kay Kyser scholarship, will direct and has gotten together a cast of over 20. He announced that the various episodes will be presented as a musical review, with the book review by Al Klein, the music by Frank Groseclose and the lyrics by Tom Kerr. The prologue is set on the Play makers touring: bus, and there are 10 dream sequences which begin on a lonely road, travel over the rough high seas, then onto the rocky road to Romea, to Verona, then to a hot, torrid dessert to ward Esvnt. final lv ending the dream trip in Chapel Hill. Larry Pearce is the assistant director, with costumes by Sara Stewart and lighting by Hansford Piowe. ur nub rut!; Two Charged John Lee Thomas, Jr., 714 Cam eron Ave;, was charged with reckless driving and illegal pas session of tax paid whisky after the car he was driving struck a light post last night, police re ported. Thomas' car, borrowed from his roommate according to police, careened 30 feet and into a va cant lot on Roberson Street about 9 o'clock last night, Officer C. J. Simpson said. Thomas is from Norfolk, Va. Richard Moffitt Palcanis, listed as a passenger in the car, was treated along with Thomas at the Infirmary for lacerations about the- face. Palcanis also was charged with illegal possession. Wilson Represents UNC At Inougral Dr. Thomas J. Wilson, Director of the Harvard University Press, will represent the University June 3 at the inauguration of the Presi dent of Boston University. Dr. Wilson is a native of Chap el Hill and was graduated in 1921. Oratory Contest The Mangum Medal Oratory Contest will be held tonight in Di Hall in New West at 7:30 o'clock. .The medal will be presented io the winner immediately follow ing the contest by Walter Tice, past president of the Di. The contest is open only to graduating seniors and the ora tions may be written on any sub ject. They are not to exceed 10 minutes in running time, how ever. The Mangum Award is the old est award on the campus, and was established in 1878 in mem ory of Willie P. Mangum, class cf 1S15. HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, Jim Mills Is Named Abemathy Winner James A. Mills, senior from Charlotte, has been selected to receive the Ernest H. Abernathy Publications Award, the Dean of Students office announced yesterday. Roy Parker, past editor of The Daily Tar Heel, received honorable mention. Dean Carroll Writes Piece For Journal Dean Thomas H. Carroll of the University, School of Business Ad ministration has written the lead article for the current issue of Advanced Management journal of the Society for the Advance ment of Management. Entitled "Keynote for Manage ment Industry Partnership," the article is an outgrowth of a forum held by educators, executives and specialists on the general subject of how management and schools of business can contribute toward maximum utilization of resources during the emergency period. Publications Board, Kappa DelfaTMeet'"'' ' i hfG?ntn" -Press-Syndicate, and THE PUBLICATIONS BOARDthe Acme NeWS SmiCe" will meet in the Grail Room of! In 1949 the award went to W. D. Graham Memorial today, at 1:20 Carmichael. Ill, sports editor of p.m. The Daily Tar Heel and chair- fc J man of the Publications Board. KAPPA -DELTA SORORITY i and last year it went to Harry will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock I Snowden, editor of the Carolina in the Grail Room of Graham 'Quarterly. Memorial. I Council Suspends Student . One student was suspended from the University by the Men's Honor Council last week for vio lation of the Honor Code, accord ing to Allan Milledge. chairman. The student confessed to the charge of signing ficticious names when taking books sf rom the li brary and then neglecting to re turn them. ' All of the books he had re d Freed For US. Department By Bill (Punchy) Grimes . Communications Center will temporarily lose one of its most versatile and experienced staff members when Edward Freed, producer of the technicolor cam pus movie, goes to Greece on an important mission for the State Department. Freed, who has been director of the motion picture division for the past 4 years, is scheduled to leave the United States about the middle of June. His project,! which is connected with the au-1 die-visual division of The Voice of America, will consist of the I making of eight to 10 color mo-; tion pictures in Greece. i The pictures will be edited in : the United States, translated to; Greek, and then sent back to ' Greece to be shown to the people. ; According to Freed, it is the' MAY 23, 1951 NUMBER 149 The award, set up in 1941, con sists of a $50 prize given annually to the person whom a selection committee adjudges to have done the most distinctive work in cam pus publications during the year. The committee is composed- of the Dean of Students, a repre sentative of the School of Journa lism, president of the student body, the chairman of the Publi cations Board, and the director of Graham Memorial: Mills, originally from Witchita, Kan., has an impressive record in publications here. At present the editor of the Yackety Yack, he was associate editor of the year book and Tarnation . last year. Also, he has been a staff photo grapher for The Daily Tar Heel and the University News Bureau for the past three years. A freelance, photographer on the side, he has had pictures used by papers throughout the state as well as by Time, Newsweek, (See MILLS, page 2) moved from the library were re turned after confession. The only other case tried last week was a violation of the Cam pus Code. The student was charged with excessive drinking and disorderly conduct. He was found guilty and placed on in definite probation. Bill Walker was appointed as the Council's Bad Check Representative. Will Go To Greece hope of the State Department that these films will aid in strength ening Greco-American relations. They will show Greece to the Greeks and thus help them to bet ter themselves and their living conditions. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Freed who will act as assistant writer. Freed said the State Depart ment has instructed him and his crew to stress personal contacts during the four to six months they are abroad. It -will be their duty to personally promote good will, lie said that -he will try to do this by showing them the fun damentals of the American way of life. He plans to use slides of the 'Uni eiity to illustrate U. S. educational institutions. This new position is considered GREENSBORO, May 22-A provision for a three man committee to work with a similar committee from North Carolina College in Durham to make "adequate and satis factory provisions for Negro graduate students" was approved yesterday as the Board of Trustees convened at Women's College in Greensboro for their semi-annual meeting. : In other business, the Board approved the appointment, ; : of Dr. Logan Wilson as Academic Students Here Initiated By Honor Group Twenty-one juniors and seniors in the School of Business Admin istration were initiated into Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary scholas tic fraternity, in ceremonies here Monday night. The initiation was followed by a banquet in Lenoir Hall. To' be eligible for membership '.n Beta Gamma Sigma students nust rank scholastically in the highest 10 percent of the senior class and the highest two percent of the junior class. The 21 initiates are William Henry Aldridge. Jr., Burlington: Frank Cornelius Bell, Jr.," Ashe ville; Albert Stowe Blankenship, Jr., Charlotte; James Oliver Cork- rell, Wilson; Harvey Colchamiro, Brooklyn, N. -Y.; Phillip Jackson Edwards, Raleigh; Freddy Lee Garner, High Point; Willard Branch Harris, Areola; James William Johnson, High Point; Oli ver Conrad Stewart, Jr., Chapel Hill; John Russell Wellons, Sel ma. , Edward Heathcliff Austin, Four (See INITIATION, page 2)' Family Relief Group Set Up A campus Committee for Fam ine Relief m India has been set up here to help raise money for 120,000.000 starving people of India. Due to unprecedented floods and general depleted economy, one-third of the Indian population is scheduled to die unless aid comes to them fast. To help ac complish this a booth will be set up in the Y Court between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. today and between 9 and 12 tomorrow to collect funds from the Carolina Student Bodv for aid to the stricken masses. .The churches of Chapel Hill are making their own collections.- Donations may also be mailed to the Campus Committee, Box (See FAMINE, page 2) Of State to be a feather in Freed's cap be cause of its importance in world affairs today. It will add to the long list of activities in which he has successfully participated, Freed began by teaching dra matics and became assistant to the well-known William DeMille, then of the University of Southern Cal ifornia. Later he held a position in Hollywood as supervisor for the U. S. Department of Education. ; lie joined the staff of the Univ.br i sity Communication Center in ' 1947 after acting as writer and di rector for the Department of Ag riculture in Washington. Ho has been in charge of sev eral important pictures made here including. "In the Name of Free ;dom," which will be released soon after his return. Vice-President of the Consoli dated University. "Dr. Wilson. who is Dean of Newcomb College and graduate chairman of sociol ogy, Tulane University, will ad vise and coordinate President Gray on matters of curricula. ' :' The new committee will get into action soon to advise the -Board on procedure for further' admissions. An . administration spokesman said that needed grad uate courses at NCC for profes sional fields would probably be taught by the faculty of the other three units on a rotation ' basis until a faculty and other facili ties can be provided for by NCC. So far, the Consolidated Uni versity has received five applica tions from Negroes to obtain the doctorate degree with one' appli cation to the Library Science de-" partment remitted. The committee will recommend to the Board its findings on whe ther or not NCC is prepared" to offer the courses in question byf' this September. On April 4, the Board adopted a resolution providing that When" applications are made to graduate ' schools by Negroes, they will be' accepted or rejected in accord-' ance with the approved rules of admission when such schools are not proyided by the State for Negroes." " In a comparatively quiet ses sion, the Board approved an Ad ministrative Code which defines the functions and duties of the .administrative branch of the Uni versity. Under the new code, Controller W. D, Carmichael, Jr., switched titles and became Vice President of the University. How ever, his duties will still be those of a Controller. . As Academic Vice-President Dr. Wilson will be ar ex-officio member of the faculties of the three institutions, of the Admin istrative Council, of. the faculty., of each school and college within each of the institutions, and of such committees which consider matters on curriculum. His principal activities will con sist of work in the field of alio- -cation' of functions and in the educatonal aspects of the long range development program un der the President's direction. He will serve in a staff capacity iri the office of the President and will work with and through the : three Chancellors. The new vice-president is a na- m t i 1 1 TV,...-... T T,- tlVC Ot iiUniSVllie, lt'.vis. lie educated at Sam Houston College, Southern Methodist, the Univer sity of Texas, where he took his M.'A., and Harvard where he re ceived an M.A. and Ph.D. President Gray explained that the new appointments are in line with the reorganization plan or the administration of the Consoli dated University. Former Assis tant Dean of Students Friday was named assistant to the President recently to operate in the field (See TRUSTEES, page 2) Degree Candidates All seniors and candidates for degrees this June will meet in Gerrard Hall at 4:15 this after noon to be briefed on the com ing Commencement exercises, ii was announced yesterday by J, C. Lyons, Faculty Commence ment Chairman. Instructions on the details of Commencement procedure will be given to graduating students and the schedule of events .for the graduation ceremonies wiH be gone over. The meeting is very impor tant. Lyons said, and all seniors should attend and be on lime.