r t vf ---. sS.rtjst CHAPEL HILL , II. C. 8-31-49 ' SOCIETY New Society Edi tor Deenie Schoep-' pe breaks you itt on Carolina Carous el. See page 2. WEATHER Sunnv and warm with 5 high. Yes terday's high 84; low 52. volu lx number 162 CHAPEL HILL, II. C FRIDAY, MAY 2. 1952 EIGHT PAGES TODAY 77 ' t'futA - --if ?40 KEPIS 27S ; llJ Strikes ny 860,000 workers yes terday crippled the steel, oil, communications, transportation; construction and utilities indus tries. Temporary control of the steel industry was back with the Gov ernment after a 5-4 decision by the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington and the court ad ditionally refused to bar the gov ernment from raising wages of steel workers while it holds ther seized mills. I A pessimistic attitude shrouded negotiations in the strike of some 90,000 oil workers as supplies, es pecially gasoline, showed the first signs of becoming short. WASHINGTON The American ambassador to Czechoslovakia talked with AP correspondent William Oatis in a Czech prison yesterday and found him in good health, the State Department an nounced. TOKYO Communist-led riot ers shouting "go home "Ameri cans!" terrorized Tokyo yester day in the third day of Japanese independence. The outburst of violence killed at least two and injured more than 500, scores of them Americans. PANMUNJOM The Commu nists asked yesterday for a full scale meeting of truce delegations for today, presumably to give their reply to a . United Nations plan to end. the Korean war. LAS VEGAS An atomic bomb blast over the Nevada desert yes terday gave the U. S. Marines their first experience in nuclear warfare maneuvers. MIAMI The wreckage of a missing Pan American Airways Stratocruiser with 50 persons aboard was reported sighted yes terday near the banks of the Ara guaye Kiver deep in the heart of BraziL There was no sign of survivors." WASHINGTON A new move to "draft". Gov. Adlai E. Steven son of Illinois for a presidential nomination is underway among Democrats opposed to Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. Although the Illinois politician, running for re-election, has said he will not take the presidential nomination; friends think he may change his mind. . LILLINGTON FBI agents (re portedly questioned a suspect; for eight hours here yesterday in con nection with Tuesday's $44,500 robbery of an Angier bank. The FBI would not comment.. . nYacks Coming Students were assured yes terday of getting their 1852 Yacktty ' Yacks inS plenty of lime before the end of the quar ' er. . ; '; '. : - .-' Yack officials announced that a partial shipment already has -arrived, and. the .remainder aro expected 'within the next two or thieo weeks " Distribution ol ' the - yfcirbcblis . will besin bs- -' -' wee'Liy:l15 rfd 21,"Buiirxf.T. oh X VETERAN SOCIALIST Lead er Norman Thomas visiting in Tokyo where anti-U. S. riots occurred yesterday called the disturbances a "minor dress re hearsal for revolution. Thomas called off an attempted speech when the. crowd began to get out of hand. See world news. w f ' I . X. A- OSCAU CHAPMAN, Secre laxj of Commerce, yesterday called for new peace efforts by the steel industry and the CIO and urged Congress to provide a clear legal basis for govern ment seizure of the mills. The situation is so confused. Chap man said .that he does not plan to grant immediate wage boosts. See world news. Today Last Day Today is the last day the books for pre-registratibn appointments will be in the General College office, 303 South Building. ':) V f v Key Word; 'Co-Operative Planning1 tirses, Faculty Solve by Ruth Hincks Co-operative planning is" the key word over at the new Nurs ing School. ;' . Faculty and students meet to gether to discuss social rules, uni forms and other sundry mattery not strictly related to scholastic curriculum. They; are now set ting up new social rules for soph omores. The rules will be pat terned after those - at "Woman's College. s ; : " -. - The student nurses, I under " the Department tt -Health Affairs," a division of the Consolidate ",Uni verjllyyiil:' h'2lpin.tb "rnikVihe rut-s -but rind it hard' to ;ba; 3 Liberty Flats' Final Play Slated For Next Week by Chuck Kellogg "Liberty Flats" by Lawrence E. Graves will be the final full length original script offered by the Playmakers in the current winter season. It is scheduled for two evening performances at the Playmakers Theater next Tuesday and Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Directed by Elmer Oettinger, a graduate--student from Wilson, "Liberty Flats" is an intensive study of the domestic problems within the Barnes household of Los Angeles. The son is thinking of marriage and the establishment of his own household, but first feels compelled to understand the unhappiness which has long exist ed in his father's home. Slowly he untangles the complex threads of his parents relationship, and is able to arrive at some conclu sions about his own prospects of matrimonial happiness. Lawrence E. Graves, the play wright, is a native of San Diego, Cal., and is now doing graduate work in the department" of dra matic art. In the fall of 1951 he was awarded a graduate assist- antship with the Playmakers, serving on the technical staff. Before coming to Chapel Hill, Graves received a BA. rdegree from San Diego State College, and gained theater experience with the Little Theater there, as well as with the San Diego Commun ity Theater and the Town and Country Players of La Mesa, Cal. rln 1950 he performed the roles of Daniel Webster and DeSoto in Unto These Hill," outdoor his torical drama at Cherokee, This will be - the first produc tion of one of Graves plays, al though he has written much poe try, and been praised by the play--writinff classes for his one-act scripts. For Appoint merits Students should make appoint ments for pre-registration which starts next week. - Student Janet Merritt-said, "It is wonderful to make the rules, but it's hard to do as we should instead of as we want." "It's a nice set-up. We like shar ing the responsibility," Ray Hyl ton, another student nurse, said. The . girls have closed study from 7:30 pjn. until 10 o'clock arid, must . sign in and out for go ing to the Library or dating on the weekends. Recently a sug gestion that they ; b. allowed ta go, , to -the Curve-in and Ranch House for supper was approved. U When the problem recently came up of what type uniform to';-' gJt er.ch; student nurse-' cle- ins Unamimnidy In. Vote T Becomes Effective Next Fall; Solons Also Consider Bill To Charge For SEC Shows - by Barry Farber The Student Legislature voted last night to take itself back to the students. A bill introduced by Julian Mason (SP) to shift the meeting place from the Dialectic Senate auditorium in New West to IFC Releases Clarification About Hazing The Interfraternity Council added "moral indignation" to its hazing list this week. Hazing previously had been classified under three headings: physical abuse, public display, and scholastic interference. Passed at its weekly meeting, the IFC statement said, "Moral indignities shall be defined as any action which by its ethical, moral and social implications , when viewed in the light of socially accepted standards of right and wrong creates in the individual a feeling of humilia tion and-or disgrace.' The IFC took the action to pinpoint the definition of haz ing which is only vaguely de fined by state law, it said. Charlie McCarthy Is At Symphony Concert "Voice-throwing Edgar Bergen and his side kick, Charlie Mc Carthy, popped up at Memorial Hall yesterday to the delight of some 900 Orange County school children. The ventriloquist was visiting Kay Kyser here after a perform ance in Durham Wednesday, and volunteered to appear before the children's concert yesterday af ternoon of the N. C. Symphony. Problems made them accordingly. Then the several styles were modeled befor faculty and students and the choice was made. The choice? A dark blue with white collar and cuffs. A full, fitted apron also is worn in the hospital but on campus without the apron the uniform looks much like a dress. "Smart,. . . attractive . . sporty and not the usual uniform," is how the girls appraise their hand iwork The , new nurses ' residence, planned and built for comfort and ; utility, has kitchens, fitting and'j bedrooms. The new; stiucture ; Trains ifer Gerrard Hall passed unanimously in the opening . session of the Thirteenth Student Legislature. The change will take place next fall. Mason said student interest might be encouraged if sessions of the Student Legislature were 1 1 J i St 51.1 . ing site with ample facilities for visitors. A bill to charge students ad mission to performances of their own Student Entertainment Com mittee was sidetracked and re ferred to the Finance Committee for further consideration. Stu dent block fees provide the funds A bill was introduced by Dick jfrt noKatli rn operational costs through the end of the spring quarter. The Legis lature will decide the fate of this resolution at the next meeting following a report from the Fi nance Committee. Jaffee said the sum would.be repaid with money accruing from U." S. de fense bonds held by the council Also on the agenda for next Thursday is a bill to provide for the appointment of a House Chap lain to open the sessions with prayer. A committee will meet during the week to process a list of over forty appomtmente to "stuaent government posts submitted by President - Ham Horton. vThe names will come before the Legis lature for approval during the final meeting of : the year next Thursday night. Other action taken by the fledgling legislators included al location of $10 to the Greater University Council and a measure to have all constitutional amend ments to be voted upon by the student body published in The Daily Tar Heel before the gen eral election. 1 Beach Weather "There's no doubt about it," the "weatherman opined, ritTi be, fair and warm through Sat urday and probably again Sun day." ":;;ri":' r :- D. B. Stone, U. S. Weather Bureau meterologist at Raleigh Durham Airport, yesterday forecast fine beach weather for all those heading east to take in Carolina's 300 mile plus coast line. , : , - The winds . will be ' gsnila1 to moderate and northwesterly. fyy-y 4-' d . o ciocir rr ! ' -jliJ. Ul?T !-