I V Briefs From UP Cfli i si I- t if J ft! is Reds in Iran Send No Report To UN Council Tehran Believes Soviets Have Left New York, May . & UNO Secretary General Trygve Lie says he has not yet received any report that the Soviet evacua tion of Iran has been completed. He has promised newsmen that any such report, from either country, would be made public immediately. The council has set midnight tonight as the deadline for the Russians to clear out of Iran. However, the official" govern ment spokesman for Iran, Prince Firouz, hints that a statement on the Soviet army evacuation of Iran may be issued after mid night. Firouz says that so far as he knows the 'Red army has completed its evacuation of Iran but no official word on the with drawal has come from Soviet authorities. Ask UN Consideration For Displaced Persons New York, May , 6 Repre sentatives of the United King dom.: and Czechoslovakia want the UN's economic and social Council to take the problem of displaced persons and refugees under "its wing. The job is cur rently handled by UNRRA. Steel-Making Halved By Soft Soal Strike New York, May 6 The Amer ican Iron and Steel ; Institute says the nation's steel mills will operate at about 58 per cent of their full capacity this week be cause of the coal strike. Operation "Musk Ox Finishes in Canada Edmonton, Alberta, May 6 "Operation Muskox" a com bined military and air force ex ercise to test the mobility and efficiency of the armed forces under Arctic conditions has ended. Sixteen snowmobiles and their soldier crews have arrived in Edmonton, Alberta, after 32 hundred mile trek across Cana da's northlands. Criminal Prosecution H Sought for John Lewis Washington, May 6 Criminal prosecution of John L. Lewis and other leaders of the coal strike has been demanded in Congress by Senator Scott Lucas of Illinois. Lucas said the leaders of the 36-day strike in the soft coal mines should be tried for endangering the national health. Economic Stabilizer Bowles re peated the administration's warning that the coal strike is a national disaster. Civilian Pro duction Administrator John Small accused Lewis of harming -the cause of labor, and blamed strikes, not price control, for holding up production. Hemisphere Defense Asked by President The Whrie House, May 6 President Truman has asked Congress to approve an expanded program of peacetime military collaboration between nations of the western hemisphere. Under the program, America would help its neighbors train and equip their armies according to American standards. It also pro vides for a joint chiefs of staff, to coordinate the mutual de fense plans of all American re publics, as provided in the act of Chapultepec and the U-N charter. VOLUME LIV P Puts Up Johnny University Party Releases Slate for Studenffiouncil Publications Board Slate Chosen by UP Nine Are Nominated For Student Council By Jo Pugh The University Party releas ed its nominations for mem bers on the student council and Publications Board after a meet ing yesterday afternoon of the steering committee of the party. To occupy the men's seats in the student council, Cal Warren, Alex Veazey, Pat Kelly, Allan Pannill, Whit Osgood, and Jack Lackey were nominated. Women candidates for student council are Fran Satterfield, Judy Swain, and Nancy Laird. Members to be elected at large for" the council are George Sten house, Leonard Blumberg, and Anne Trimble. Publications Board Nominees for members on the Publications Board are Howard Merry, rising junior; Ray Con ner, rising senior; Roland Gid uz, rising senior; and Betty Gaither, member at large. : r The student council, under the new constitution, is composed of 12 students who hear appeals from the men's and women's (honor) councils and pass on the constitutionality of the acts pas sed by the student legislature. Qualifications Cal Warren, running for the student council, has been a mem ber of the Council for Religion in Life, on the dance committee, and on the interfraternity coun cil. He has worked in the busi ness office of the Tar Heel and is a member of the University Club and the Order of the Grail. Alex Veazey is president of the junior class and a member of the interfraternity council. He belongs to the German Club and is in legislature and also on the track team. Nominee Pat Kelly is on the -a i m honor council, student wenare board and the student legisla ture. He has been on the inter- dormitory council, president of the YMCA, and associate editor of the Tar Heel. Pannill is speaker pro-tem of mm the legislature, having served ...... See UP Page 4 X ' ; Phi To Discuss Politics Tonight Campus leaders are expected to air their views tonight in Ger rard Hall on the controversial question of fraternity control in student politics when the Phi Assembly debates the topic. The issue is one of long standing at Carolina and observers antici pate a hot debate. Speaker Smith, has issued an invitation to the entire stu dent body to attend, and special invitations have been given. to prominent members of both cam pus political parties as well as a number of well known inde pendents. ' The meeting will begin at 8 p.m. y n THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- CHAPEL HILL, N. C, To Combination Demonstration Planned as Climax to Year In Which Newspaper Returned to Daily Issue All students are invited to a varied program of tours, demon trations, and entertainment tonight in Graham Memorial, climax ing a year of publication of the student newspaper and its trans formation into the only college daily in the Southeast. Eddie Black, operator of "Blackie'sf Candlelight Room" in the tase ment of the student union build ing, will present a floor show in connection with the DTH's program; the series will begin at 7:30 o'clock in. the main lounge, the tours and demonstra tions will begin about 8:15, and the floor show will be at 9. Miss Martha Rice, manager of GM, will introduce Robert Morrison, editor of the DTH, and set the pace of the series. Morrison will trace the evolution to a daily during the past year, and will present Gene Aenchba cher and Bill Woestendiek, can didates for editor of the DTH, who will outline their platforms for the further progress of the student daily next year ; - After these events scheduled in the mainlounge of the student j buildiner. there will be a series of talks, demonstrations, and tours conducted by members of the editorial board of the DTH. Westy Fenhagen, managing See DAILY TAR HEEL Page U ion Post Meets Tonight Officers for the "Bill Thomp son" Post of the American Le gion on the campus will be elect ed in a meeting to be held at the Veteran's Club tonight at seven thirty. All veterans, whether mem bers of the American Legion at present or not, are invited to at tend the meeting. It was decided to name the new post in honor of Wil liam Manley Thompson, of Mountain Lakes, N. J., the first University student to, be killed in World War II. There have been approximate ly forty Legion Posts formed at Universities in all parts of the country. This post will be the third one to be formed in this state, with N.C.,State and Wake Forest already having formed units. Fifteen new members in ad dition to transfers are required to form a new post, and many more $han this number are ex pected out for tonight's meeting. Any veteran who already is a member of another post may have his membership transferred and become a charter member of the new organization. Mitchell Society, Meets Tonight in Phillips P. E. Shearin will speak on "Cosmic Rays" and W. R. Strau ghn will speak on "Germicidal Properties of Isoproyl Alcohol" at the 449th meeting of the Eli sha Mitchell Scientific Society tonight at 7:30 in 206 Phillips Hall. Leg " II Wi TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1946 Jones -For Party and Tour Coeds Change Weekend Rules Information Cards To Be Filled Out " . -. - -i At a recent meeting of the coed Inter-dormitory Council a new system of signing out for the weekend was adopted. Un der the new plan coeds will fill out a card including her name, destination, address, time leavT ing, time of return and the name of the person who gave her permission to leave for the weekend. f. These cards are now being printed and will be given out to the coed dormitories during the week. This new system will not go into effect until the coeds are notified in their house meetings. Also at the meeting the coun cil made a bill which has been sent to the coed senate for ra tification. This bill includes the regulations for the summer ses sion. The only regulation which will be different in the summer session is tnat coeas may stay out until 12 midnight on the weekends instead of one o'clock. WPTF to Broadcast Women's Glee Club The University Women's Glee Club will broadcast a half hour program over WPTF to night at 10:30. Presenting a versatile selection of melodies taken from their Spring Con cert given last Thursday, the one hundred and fifty coeds will sing musical-comedy and popu lar numbers, religious songs and tunes in the folk mood. The Glee Club, under the direction of Paul Young, will broadcast from Hill Hall. Orange Selective Service Rejects Almost 50 Per Cent Orange is considered an ave rage North Carolina county, ex cluding the 10 most populous ones, and its record of rejections by the State Selective Service is a shocking one , 42.3 per cent turned down "on the basis of some sort of mental diagnosis." And this on top of the fact that Chapel Hill, largest town in Orange county, has more educat ed people, both white and Negro, the statisticians say, than any town of its size in the country ! About Average It thus appears that North Carolina has a bad record for re jections based on mental diag nosis, but the record probably is not worse than that of the average Southern state in tnis respect, George H. Lawrence, eel UNITED PRESS Secretaty I. May Queen Rules Campus On Saturday The chosen queen will reign over campus May Day festivities Saturday afternoon, May 11. Under the direction of the Caro lina Independent Coed Associa tion and the Pan-Hellenic Coun cil, the queen and her court, who 1 A were cnosen irom trie senior women, will be presented at 5 o'clock in the Forest Theatre. For the entertainment of the queen and her company, a pa geant, "Rip Van Winkle's Dream", will be produced. The theme for the pageant was writ ten by Olive Anne Burns, Rose mary Cleveland, and Marcella Harrer, members of Chi Delta Phi. Music, which will include the May Day Carol, is to be fur nished by the Woman's Glee Club. The Dance Club will par ticipate under the direction of Mrs. Albright. The May Day pageant is part of the plans for the May Frolics week-end. The idenity of the queen and her court will not be revealed until the afternoon of the festivities. Union To Sponsor Pre-Election Prom Informal entertainment will be combined with campus politics Thursday evening, when the Pre Election Prom, under the spon sorship of Graham Memorial, will be held in the main lounge of the Student union. If late permission can be se cured for coeds, the dance will be held from 9-12 o'clock, Gra ham Memorial director Martha Rice stated. Otherwise it will be gin at 8:30 o'clock and end at 11:00. The major candidates from both campus parties for student offices in the coming elections will be presented during the dance intermission. The well-known Carolinians band will play for the affair, which will be completely infor mal.' of Chapel Hill, Field Secretary of the North Carolina Eugenics Board, told the North Carolina Medical Society in a report at its closing session at Pinehurst recently. The report was based on a survey which Mr. Lawrence be gan last summer under the spon sorship of the Eugenics Board. The . survey showed, among many other things, that approxi mately 6,000 men between 18 and 38 had been registered for the draft in Orange county. Of these; 2,431 were accepted for military service, 1,460 were re jected, and the remainder, about 2,100 were deferred for various reasons. Of the 1,460 rejected, 822 were turned down after men tal diagnosis. Nominations Tar Heel Program May Queen NUMBER 72 - Treasurer Presidential Convention Set For Wednesday Board Nominees Are Allen, Giduz By- Bill Rutledge The Student Party last night, announced Johnny Jones as Secretary-treasurer to run on the Student Party ticket and nominated two memters for the PU Board and Student Council Coeds. Jones Listed Jones, a rising senior from High Point, N. C, is a member of the executive committee of the Junior class, on the special elections committee, and is presi dent of Everett dormitory. Com ing to Carolina in 1939, he went out for football and track and the following year for varsity track. He was a member of the Phi Assembly and on the execu tive committee pf Stacy Dormi tory. In High School, he par ticipated in varsity track and wrestling, varsity football, work ed on school paper, and was a member of the Monogram club and a Senior Hi-Y. Jones entered the Armv Air Forces in 1941 and served as a personnel officer and in other various administrative positions, being at one time custodian of four government funds. He re turned to Carolina for the fall term last year. In the SP, he is chairman of all men's dormitor ies and member of the steering committee. J Publications Board ! Publications Board nomina tions were Roland Giduz and Eddie Allen, both staff members of the Daily Tar Heel. Giduz, a Junior from Chapel Hill and a journalism major, has worked with all departments of the Daily Tar Heel in 1942-43 and is now a night editor of the newspaper. He returned from service with the 100th Infantry Division and See SP Page U AVC Opens Drive For New Members A membership drive has been inaugurated by the Chapel Hill Chapter of the American Vet erans Committee. Membership is open to all veterans, regardless of race, creed, color, and sex, who are interested in the social, econom ic, and political issues confront ing his community, nation, and world. Those veterans interested are urged to attend the next meeting of the local chapter which is to be held tonight at 7:30 in 305 Bynum Hall. Yack Money Needed All organizations which have not paid for their space in the 1946.Yackety Yack are asked to do so immediately.. Payments may be "made any afternoon, at the Yack office in Graham Me morial. Deadline for payments will be next Wednesday, and penalties will be imposed for failure to do so.