3 c", 'Library Serials 'Best. Chapel Hill, N. q 8-31-49 EDITORIALS WEATHER f Mr. Scoli Goes Forward Reports Were Incomplete We Must Love Duke! Cloudy and cool with possible rain. VOLUME LVII United Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C. TUESDAY,, FEBRUARY 22, 1949 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 10 1 I t rr w Q) J w 4 my I :! til VI A a i . v , v - : - J-v-?' .',".7' v --c-1, a----, . -- it S ' ' y v.?'- - W - - - - " " - - . ; '. ' j - r 'Sr'- :'- " i - , , - -; l - - ; , - - . r ' , v i- ' ' ,;';.- ' 't'- CROWDS STOPPED TO LOOK WITH AMAZEMENT as five of the U. S. Air forces newest and most powerful planes roared and streaked over the downtown area of Washington. Leading the parade was the B-36. the largest bomber in the world, shown flying over the Capitol. At. right, the fantastic B-49. Flying Wing, Uncle Sam's newest combat craft, is shown winging its way over the White House. Proposed Tuition Raise To Be Discussed By Phi The proposed tuition raise for students in the Greater University will be discussed by the Philanthropic assembly meeting in Phi hall, New East, at 7:30 tonight. ' By special action in last week's meeting Phi members voted to postpone consideration of the Fair Employment Practices com mission in order to give immedi ate attention to the tuition quest ion. The tuition raise has already been condemned by the student legislature, the Dialectic senate, the University Veterans . associ ation, the Young Republicans club, the Young Progressives, and other campus organizations. A member of the Ways and Means committee stated that in view of the lack of support on campus for the raise, tonight's discussion will probably be con cerned with ways of stopping Governor Scott's proposal. NORTH STATE ROUNDUP Scott Challenges RALEIGH, Feb. 21 (UP) A blunt challenge from Gov. Kerr Scott to get going on tax pro grams prodded North Carolina's lawmakers along as they re turned to the capital city today. Returns to D. C. MOORESVILLE, Feb.-21 (UP) Sen. Olin D. Johnston (D-S.C.) left for Washington to day but- his wife remained in a hospital for treatment of injur ies suffered in an auto accident. Wreck Cleared SOUTHERN PINES, Feb. 21 (UP) Railway crews early to day restored traffic over a sec tion of the Seaboard Airline railroad's track near Vass, rip ped out by a freight train de railment. Workers Return CHARLOTTE, Feb. 21 (UP) Some 300 workers at the Hos kins mill near here returned to their jobs today, ending a week old strike over a contract dis pute. Five Killed At least five persons were killed in North Carolina during the weekend, a United Press survey showed today. Three of them were victims of highway accidents. f Airmon I limn J I I I l i i C CHARLOTTE Feb. 21 (UP) Four airmen nit the Ik to safety today when their Vl' air force Becthcraft plane ran (J low on gas in swirling fogs on Ma dry Announces Government Week To Start Monday Mayor R. W. Madry yesterday proclaimed the week of Feb. 27 through March 5 as Chapel Hill World Government week. First, it is universally recog nized that the problem of secur ing a stable world peace is the most vital problem today, and failure to solve that problem may endanger or destroy the demo cratic way of life, the proclama tion stated. There is constantly increasing sponsorship for the creation of a world federal government as of fering the best opportunity for a solution of the problem, the proclamation continued. The proclamation pointed out that it is of cardinal importance that all Chapel Hill citizens fa miliarize themselves with such proposals in order that they may form intelligent opinions and reach wise decisions with respect to them. "I urge all of our citizens, whether of voting age or not, to make a serious and sincere et fort during World Government week to devote study and thought to the reasons prompting, the issues involved in, and the prac ticability of the proposals for world federal government," Mad ry said. Madry urged civic, religious, and other organizations to devote their meetings scheduled during the designated week to study and discussion of world federal gov ernment proposals. Russia Demands Three Witnesses PARIS, Feb. 21 (UP) Russia demanded tonight that France hand over as war criminals three witnesses who testified for Vic tor Kravchenko, author of "I Chose Freedom," in his libel suit against the Communist weekly Les Lettres Francaises. Soviet Ambassador Alexander Bogomolov made the demand in a not handed to th foreign office. The Russian note said the three witnesses served in the German army and took part in war crimes during the occupation of the So viet Ukraine. Russia invoked United Nations resolutions calling on member ntries to hand over alleged war criminals on request. Atom Laboratory Open to Public Here Tomorrow A laboratory m connection with atomic research will be open to the public here tomorrow af ternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock, Uni versity authorities said yesterday. The installation, sponsored by the division of biology and medi cine of the Atomic Energy com mission in cooperation with the University, is housed in an army surplus building between Phil lips hall and Venable hall. Officials said. that the labora tory will be used for the develop ment of research in radioisotopes. Dr. Arthur Roe, who is currently engaged in the organic phase of research with radioactive materi als, explained that radioisotopes "are unstable forms of chemical elements which are manufactured in tne uaK Kiage laooratory uranium pile. This pile," he con tinued, "is a controlled atomic bomb, so that materials put in it become radioactive due to prox imity of the uranium." Preliminary to the formal open ing, five University professors will hold a seminar on the use of radioisotopes in research tonight at 8 o'clock at the meeting of Sigma Xi, scientific fraternity, in Phillips hall. Discussion leaders will be Dr. H. D. Bruner, pharmacology ;v Dr. George Doak, public health; Dr. G. C. Kyker, biochemistry; Dr. Roe, organic chemistry and Dr. C. D. Van Cleave, anatomy. These men are all currently engaged in various phases of research with radioactive materials. 1 North Carolina is one of six states with facilities for the training of men at both pre doctoral and post-doctoral levels in the peacetime use of atomic energy. Other institutions in this state participating in atomic re search and training are Duke, State and Wake Forest. Responsibility Discussed Students Return From By Caroline Bruner .the week-end. The discussion. Tlnivprsitv students attending croups concerned three aspects the YM-YWCA-sponsored confer- ence at Montreat returned to the! campus Sunday night after a week-end of mountain climbing, i . i j : : . square dancing, ana aiscustmg various aspects of A Christians Responsibility." Housed in Assembly inn, a building made of native rock, students of the University, State college, Davidson, Elon and Guilford colleges and Duke uni versity chose one of eight discus sion groups to attend throughout Dr. Maclver Will Deliver Weil Lectures Scries Begins On March 1 Robert M. Maclver, professor of political philosophy and soci ology at Columbia university, will present this year's series of Weil lectures on American citi zenship in Hill hall, March 1, 2 and 3 at 8:30. Dr. Maclver, a native of Scot land, is well-known as a soci ologist in both the United States and Canada. He is the author of "The Web of Government," which has been ranked with John Stuart Mill's "Representative Government" and Aristotle's "Politics;" "Towards An Abiding Peace," and "The More Perfect Union," which was published last year. . 1 "The Perils of American De mocracy" will be the theme of his three evening lectures here. The Weil lectures, endowed by the families of Sol and Henry Weil of Goldsboro, have been an annual event at the University for 35 years. The first series of these public lectures was deliv ered by President William How ard Taft in 1914. Included among the Weil lecturers in recent years have been Roscoe Pound, Charles A. Beard, Felix Frankfurter, Herbert Agar, and R. H. Tawney. Dr. Maclver received his A.B. degree from Oxford university and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Edinburgh university. He was awarded the Litt. D. degree at Columbia and Harvard. . Before coming to the United States in 1927, he taught at the University of Toronto, where he was head of the , department of political science. He has been a Lieber professor at Columbia since that time. Some of his earlier books are "The Modern State, Economic Reconstruction," "Leviathan and the People," and "Social Causa tion." Freshmen Plan Future Retreat Freshmen attending the YM YWCA winter conference at Montreat last week-end enjoyed it so much that they met before leaving the mountains to make plajis for a future conference of special interest to freshmen stu dents. They plan to hold the confer ence during the spring quarter for freshmen of the University, State college, and the University's Woman's college at Greensboro, Bob Barrus, assistant executive secretary of the YMCA an nounced yesterday. Plans about a time and place to hold the conference will be discussed at a freshman fellow ship . supper Thursday night at 6 o'clock at the Baptist church. A committee will be set up at that time to conference. begin work on the of a Christian's Responsibility, to himself, to th.e campus, and to the world. Student leaders of the groups were Ray Mills, Sue Stokes, Bill Mackie, Al Lowenstein, Tom Donnelly, Sandy McEachern, Dick Murphy, and John Sanders. Resource leaders were the Rev. J. C. Herrin, Miss Betty Carpen ter, Dean Fred Weaver, Dean Bill Friday, Dr. Arnold Nash, Dr. Frank Hanft, Miss Nell Morton, and Miss Margaret Nash. H auser Is For Do Iv I Chuck Hauser, managing editor of the Daily Tar .Heel, who re ceived the Student party nomina tion for the editorship of the DTH last month, was endorsed for the post last week by both the Uni versity and Campus parties, Joe Leary and Banks Talley, party chairmen, announced yesterday. - Hauser is the second candidate for the top campus publication post to receive a triple endorse ment from campus political par ties in as many years. Ed Joyner, ' present DTH editor, ran under a ' triple endorsement last spring and was elected to the post over Art Melton, an independent can didate. Hauser's triple endorsement is the third in recent campus po litical history. Bill Moffitt, suc cessful candidate for the editor ship of the Yackety Yack two years ago, received the first triple endorsement. Moffitt, however, later withdrew from school and was replaced by a board of edi tors. Men's Glee Club To Give Concert Thursday Night The Men's Glee club of the University music department will present its annual concert on Thursday at 8:30 in Hill hall auditorium. Paul Young will direct the 160 voices of the club in a program which will include selections from the 16th century, a group of modern compositions, two choruses from opera, four folk songs, and an extended work by Philip James for chorus and in strumental ensemble. Thursday's concert will be the first performance of the glee club since the highly successful broad cast over the National Broadcast ing company network during last quarter. The local singei-s pxe scnted "one of thc best concerts of the series," according to net work officials. Rated among the glee clubs in the singers will follow concert with a seri best college nation, thc tne campus of out-in state aDDcaranccs which are planned to bring the best in choral music to North Carolina audiences. The first off-campus appearance will be at High Point on February 28. The glee club box office is lo cated in mill hall 109 and is open from 9 to 5 o'clock. Admission to Thursday's concert will be by season ticket or by single admis sions which are now on sale. All seats are reserved. Truman Would Alter Social Security Law WASHINGTON, Feb. .21. (UP) President Truman asked Con gress today for sweeping changes in Social Security laws to provide more and better federal aid for all the nation's needy. Montreat Speakers at the Montreat con- ference were Dr. George D. Heaton, minister of the Myers Baptist church of Charlotte, and the Rev. Mr. Howard C. Wilkin son, pastor of the Haywood Street Methodist church of Ashe ville. During recreational periods, conference attendcrs hiked to Mount Mitchell, had social get togethers, and attended at square dance Saturday night. A "caller" and his three-piece band played for the dance and taught stu dents new square dancing steps. Triply-E Tor H&q CTr CHUCK HAUSER Hauser has been a member of the Daily Tar Heel staff since the fall of 1946 when he entered the University as a freshman. He was appointed to his present posi- Too Far Students who returned from Ihe YM-YWCA retreat al Mon treal over the weekend had a good story to tell yesterday about the embarrassing posi tion Dean of Women Kather ine Carmichael found herself in. Through a mistake in room registration. Miss Carmichael wound up with a Stale college man fcr a roommate. After everylhing had been straightened out. Dean of Men Fred Weaver made Ihe classic remark of Ihe weekend: "That's carrying consolida tion a little loo far." Humanities Talk To Be Delivered By Dr. MacMillan Dougald MacMillan, professor of English, will deliver the fac ulty lecture in the humanities for the winter quarter on Friday night at 8:30 in Gerrard hall. Professor MacMillan has chos en for his topic "Speculum Con- sueteudinis: The English Comedy of Manners." According to one of Professor MacMillan's colleagues, "No one who knows the lecturer or the comedy of manners of the Restoration period will worry about the Latin title." This is one of a series of lec tures begun several years ago as a means of presenting various members of the humanities divi sion faculty to the entire com munity, students, townspeople, University staff, and visitors. The series has proved successful and has included lectures represent ing all the foreign language de partments, drama, art, music, archeology, English and Ameri can literature. Theater Stormed By Angry Jews BERLIN, Feb. 21 (UP) Angry Jews defied warning police shots and high-pressure fire hoses to- iiay to storm a theater and pre vent a showing of the British motion picture "Oliver Twist" on the ground that the portrayal of "Fagin" is anti-semitic. Three persons, including an American correspondent, were injured in the melee. It wras the second time in less than 24 hours that Jews in Berlin have express ed violent protests over the mo tion picture. Last night they halted a showing of the picture by yelling, stamping their feet and ripping up seats in the theater. it If L Pf L ILJ . ill K --Ji -i.-.- A- .V-V-'- ndorse I Editor i tion as managing editor after elections last spring He is also treasurer of -the Pub lications board, campus organiza tion which administers the fi nances of the DTH, Tarnation and the Yackety Yack. He was elected as junior member of the board last April. After serving as a reporter and night editor for his freshman year, Hauser was appointed DTH news editor during the fall quar- ter of 1947. He served in thatjtions to hcad lho party ticket in capacity until his appointment j tho spring elcctionS- Thc candi- last spring. Last summer, the candidate spent almost three months as a staff member of the United Press bureau in Raleigh. At the present time, he is the UP correspondent for the Chapel Hill area. in nign scnooi, nauser directed j nis publications talents towards magazine work. During his soph-1 omore vear he was art editor of i his school magazine in New Or leans. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Aeronautics Chief PlansTwo Talks Here This Week Joseph O'Connell, Jr., chairman of the Civil Aeronautics board, will deliver twp informal talks this week at the University, O. Max Gardner, Jr., chairman of the speakers committee of the Law School association, an nounced yesterday. The first of the talks will be on Aviation Law and will be held in the first year classroom of Manning hall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Topics discussed by O'Connell will include an analysis of air lines overseas traffic, the investi gation of an air crash, the use of investigation reports and person nel, and a survey of domestic air lines. On Thursday morning, O'Con nell will meet with students tak ing government and business courses at 10 o'clock in Bingham hall. Both meetings at which he will speak will be open to the public, and townspeople as well as students are invited to attend. League Meeting Will Open Today Over 150 people are expected to attend the second annual confer ence of the North Carolina Build ing and Loan league today at the Carolina inn. Speakers at the conference will include Dr. Malcolm McDermott of the Duke university school of law, Norman Strunk, vice-president of the United States Sav ings and Loan leaeue. and Dr. Clyde A. Milner, president ofj Guilford college. Registration will begin this morning at 8 o'clock in the lobby of the Carolina Inn. .The opening session of the conference will be held at 10:15 in the radio studio of Swain hall with R. L. Sykes, vice-president of the Building and Loan league, presiding. A speaking contest will be held at 10:45 and a luncheon will fol low' at 12:30 in the Carolina Inn. The second session will begin at 2:30 this afternoon and will ad journ at 4 o clock. Labor Law Advocates Accused By Senator WASHINGTON, Feb. 21. (UP) Sen. Wayne L. Morse (R.-Ore.) said today that employers who urge retention of the Taft-Hartley law are guilty of a "Judas betrayal of the capitalistic system." Picked to Run , For Treasurer In Spring Vote Candidate Is Student Solon The University party yes terday announced the nomin ation of Nat Williams, rising senior from Thomasville, Ga., for the position of secretary- treasurer of the student body. Williams' nomination rounds out the UP slate for the three student, bodv executive nomina- dacies of Dick Gordon anl Ted Leonard who will seek the stu dent body presidency and vice presidency respectively have al ready been released. A transfer from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Williams entered the University in the fall of 1947. He is a member of the Budget committee and the Stu dent legislature where he serves on the Finance committee. In addition, the candidate is a member of the Students for Demo cratic Action, the World Federa lists, the social committee of the senior class, and the editorial staff of the Daily Tar Heel. In high school he was president of the student council, president of his senior class and valedic torian. Before entering Annapolis he attended Marion institute prep school for two years where he was captain of the cadet corps. He was a member of the ring committee while at Annapolis. In the line of business ex perience, Williams managed a movie theater in Georgia for three years and managed a theater chain this past summer. He is a member of Kappa Alpha fraternity. THE WORLD IN BRIEF Armistice Soon RHODES, Feb. 21 (UP) Israel and Egypt probably will sign an armistice within 72 hours to end for good the fight ing in southern Palestine, offi cials hoped tonight. If they do, Israel-Transjordan talks will be started Friday and Israel-Lebanon talks will follow. Trouble In Peace CANTON, China, Feb. 21 (UP) Acting President Li Tsung-Jen encountered heavy going today in his efforts to consolidate the 'disintegrating Nationalist government, and it was believed Premier Sun Fo had rejected his plea to return to Nanking. Communist Purge PARIS, Feb. 21. (UP) Hatchet men of thc French Communist party are carrying out a purge of Red-controlled labor unions because of a ser ious loss of membership to con servative workers' groups, well informed sources said today. Italians Walk ROME. Feb. 21. (UP) More than 1,000,000 Italians walked to work today as a nationwide, 24 hour strike crippled most city and suburban transportation. Train Wrecks CHATSWORTH. Ga., Feb. 21. (UP) Eight cars of the Lou isville and Nashville railroad's Florida-bound '"Flamingo" left the rails today but thudded into a soft embankment that held them upright and no one aboard was hurt. Snow And Sleet CHICAGO, Feb. 21 (UP) Sleet and slushy snow made driving hazardous over a 'wide area of the Midwest today, while warmer weather raised new flood threats in the same region and sent water spilling over five levees in Kansas. I i i its wav here from Alabama. it V, i I X I