a. & t t r w Xj i . l i SL"; I A:'3 DIP j.". V WEATHER Continued "warm with liijh. of ca. Yesterday' high lo w sc. PIX I i r Tour Sunday woria news in picture. See page 8. t' I VOLUME LX IIUMBER 152 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUITDAY. APHIL 20. 1952 EIGHT PAGES TODAY liny jjii1 IRIk I'm V- flk n - - f S. J - x3 jj--y nil f i a Sff y denf s Pi nd tP W C E ones U I I 5. fryiJV':t a nan. r'" I ifi) 3 HE'S 3i OMAHA The runaway Miss ouri river hurled a new threat at Omaha yesterday as collapsing levees inundated farmlands and wrecked destruction for 200 miles downstream. LOS ANGELES North Con tinental airways, operators of un scheduled transcontinental flights was grounded yesterday by gov ernment order following a crash of one of its transports nearby which took 29 lives, WASHINGTON Vapor trails in the sky over Alaska yesterday touched off a brief air alert throughout North America. The U. S. Air Defense command has as yet not determined whether planes actually were over Alaska. SEOUL American Sabre jets destroyed seven Communist MIG 15s over Korea during the week Fnrlmt Fridnv. Ohlv one U. S. jet was lost in air combat. WASHINGTO N The steel controversy reached white heat yesterday as the President threatened to Taise worker wages in the seized industry beginning next week.. - Brazil Topic For Y Forum Tomorrow "Brazil and the World Today' will be the topic under discussion tomorrow night in Lenoir as the YMCA continues its series of sup per forums on international af fairs. Students are reminded of the change in locale for this and fu ture week's meetings. The meet ings will be held in the south dining room on the first floor (toward the Bell Tower). Prev iously the supper forums have been held on the second floor. Haroldo Jezler, native of Sao Paulo, Brazil, and an assistant professor at the University of Sao Paulo, will be the guest speaker. Discussion will be led by a group of Brazilian .students from State college and Daily Tar Heel Editor Barry Farbasr. who was in Rio De Janerio last quarter. The forum will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. in the first floor dining room on the south end of Lenoir Hall. Students who wish to eat with the group are to go through the main line and then carry their trays to the south din ing room. - r Some specially prepared South American food will be available in the line for those who want to add that "extra touch." - ' New Blood Bcih campus political parties will choose new leadership to morrow night. The UP will elect a successor io Biff Roberts and the SP will replace XX M. Kexley. Beth Crovps . will meet in Grahexa I'lemori&l, Roland. Parker Icuug h!s ai.,7-o'clsciw -t " ....... Play Festival 40 Presentations Slated Here For Four-Day Program by Chuck Kellogg Play-producing groups from all over the state will descend on the Playmakers Theater Wednesday morning for the beginning of the twenty-ninth annual festival of the Carolina Dramatic associa tion. The play festival will continue four days, with three sessions of play presentations each day, John W. Parker, executive sec retary for the organization, yes terday said this year's piogram will be more ambitious and ex perimental that anything pre viously attempted. Over 30 dra matic groups from throughout the state will present 40 one-act plays. " ... The sessions on each day will begin at 9:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. There is a small admis sion charge to defray production expenses. Among the authors whose plays will be performed are such out standing names as Tennessee Williams, Eugene O'NeilL Anton Chekhov, Sir J. M. Barrie, Sher wood Anderson, Lord Dunsany, A A. Milne, Percival Wilde, Colin Clements and Elizabeth Lay. The last named writer is the wife of Paul Green, and the play to be presented, "When Witches Ride," was the first original script ever produced b ythe Playmakers. Other special features of the heavy program include the guest performance of a new play, "Where Is Thy Sting?" by the high school dramatic group of Spartanburg, S. C, a theater arts exhibit in Person hall, costume and make-up contests, the pre sentation of a puppet play written by Agnar Mykle, and a breakfast and business meetmgl for the guest directors in the Carolina Inn. 'Noses Under The Tent' Ga. i ech Admits Coeds In Close 7 to 5 Vote . Special to The Daily Tar Heel ATLANTA, April 19-1-Women got "their noses under the tent" at Georgia Tech here this week as the engineering school was made coeducational by a 7-5 vote of its regents. The action will apply to about 25 women seeking ad mittance to obtain engineering degrees, Chancellor Harmon , Caldwell said. The final vote by the State Board of Regents specified women should be ad mitted solely to study for en gineering degrees riot available ,t other state schools now open to them, .;L : - Thert: muzit be no change in . iha curriculum -or in sicrriLs THE REV. B. SPENCER Rev. Spencer Talks Tonight The Rev. Bonnell Spencer, a member of the Order of the Holy Cross, will lead a preaching mis sion at the Episcopal church to day, tomorrow and Tuesday. Mr. Spencer's theme will be the mission in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Services will be con ducted todaj at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. and Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Thefirst half hour of each service will be devoted to congregational singing. Mr. Spencer is a noted author and preacher. Two of his best known works are "Ye Are The Body," and "They Saw the Lord." a zing Probe Group Named A five-man committee of stu dents and faculty was named yesterday by Chancellor Robert B. House to look into alleged hazing here. Henry Lewis of the Institute of Government was named chair man of the. group. Other faculty members include Dr. Syd B. Alexander, health division, and L. C. McKinney, chairman of the faculty committee on fraternities. Gene Oberdorfer, delegata of the Grail, and A! House were the students chosen to round cut the investigating group. The group probably will hold its initial meet early this week. standards at Georgia Tech," the Toard asserted. Regent Chairman Robert Ar nold spoke against the change: "Maybe I'm an old Fogey, but I'm afraid the moment we get women on the campus they'll be coming in and saying we've got future mothers on our hands and we ought to pre pare them for it." Arnold said he had approched a number of leading Tech alumni, and has "yet to find one in favor of it." Regent Edgar Dunlap was a little more curt:" "Here is where women get their noses under the tent . . , Well have home economics xmd dressraal:-' in-st Tech yeL " . Thousands On Campus For '5th Affair; Take Over For Good Look At Carolina by Jerry Reece They 'came, gazed, and were impressed. ' . The several thousand students here yesterday for the ninth annual hich school dav were en- thusiastic as they talked about Carolina and its facilities. Lolling under Davie Poplar, two girls from Four Oaks high said, "We would love to enroll here. . . - we think the chemistry de partment is great." A group from Sparta high all tried to talk at once: "Different. . . . beautiful dogwoods . . Swain hall enchanting . . . kinda hot . . . crazy about that plane tarium." And so it went. The visitors poured in all day by cars and chartered bus. Many brought their own lunches which they spread out picnic style Jn the campus shade. Others packed in to the downtown eating places. For all there was but one topic of conversation: the University of North Carolina. A flock from Rankin high de clared: "Monogram club is beau tiful . . . we liked everything, especially the movie ("In the Name of Freedom," technicolor campus movie) our guide (Jack Atwater, senior from Burl ington) is great . ." And as the buses and bars left, you could , hear: . . third trip for us . . enjoyed it immensely. . . . planetarium show is our fav orite ... I would like to be en rolled here . . beautiful build ings, lazy atmosphere . nicest place we've ever been." . Dr. De Spur Talks I oriight On Freedom Dr. Endre De Spur of Pitts burgh, Pa., a refugee from Com munist oppression in Hungary, will give the first of two lectures tonight in Hill Hall at 8:30. The program will be in mem ory of Chapel Hill men who were killed in World War H The lec ture will be sponsored by the Chapel Hill community memorial fund Which was established in 1946. It's entitled ''Martyrs and Pilgrims for Freedom." Dr. De Spur's efforts to teach Western culture to his native countrymen caused the Hungar ian Communists to imprison him and his wife. Dr. De Spur is a noted violin ist and an authority on Gypsy music-He will speak again to morrow night in Hill hall at 8:30 on "The Mystery of Gypsy Mu sic." He will be assisted in the il lustration of his program by Ed gar Aid en, Wilton Mason, and Thomas Nichols. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan club will ! meet this afternoon at 4 o'clock-l. in the Rendezvous room. Graham Memorial RABBI A J. LELYVELD Ai For HilleL Opens Today The $80,000 new building for the B'nai B'rith Hillel foundation will be dedicated and turned over to the students at ceremon ies at 2:30 this afternoon. Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld, na tional director of the Hillel foun dation will be the principal speaker at the North, Carolina association of B'nai B'rith Lodges now taking place here. The building, located on West Cameron avenue, will serve as headquarters and a meeting place for Jewish students from Woman's College, State College and Duke as well as UNC stu dents. Hen Krieger, chairman of the board of trustees of "the North Carolina Hillel foundation will present the keys of the building to the president of the four Hillel units in the state: Ted Frankel, UNC; Marilyn Tolochko, Woman's College; Herbert Saywitz, State College, and Garry Goldstein, Duke. The annual awards banquet of the foundation will be held in the new building at 6:30 p.m. Awards will be presented to the outstanding members of the four Hillel units by Rabbi Samuel Perlman, director of the Hillel foundation. - o Harry The suggestion that soon io be ex-President Harry Truman would leach history or political science here got a firm squelch from the man himself at his news conference. The president laughed and said he definitely was not con sidering coming here after isav- ing the White XXousa. 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