U U C -:IIBEAIU "SERIAHS DEPT. VEATH ER Fair md warm With 91 Yes terday' high lI low 55. The assistant Ci". tlie tlean of - stS-' fient cooled . thera. -off. See page 2 mailt - W 1 1 W(C 111 .6 MMiiS&l VOLUME LIC NUMBER 176 CHAPEL HILL. N,C, SUNP AY, MAY 18, 1952 . EIGHT PAGES TODAY nn ARwn- airv- PvPft a .w (VAr Concerning Student Union IE sue yiragemeirili Members of a delegation which talked to Chancellor Robert B. House concerning a new student union here reported yester day "encouragement" towards early realization of the project. Bill Rothi Graham Memorial director and one of three who talked to the Chancellor, said of the Friday meeting: "Support is coming from all sides, and we are hoping that we will soon be in a position to form a large committee representing all the various friends of the University who are interested in seeing a new student union built here. "As a result of the enthusiasm shown thus far, plans are being formulated for preparing a detailed brief on local student union needs for presentation to the state Advisory Budget Com mission within the near future." . . ; - The other members of the student union group talking to "the Chancellor were Ken Pcnegar,; recently re-elected chairman of the GM board of directors, and Jimmy Wallace, GM activi ties director. ' I .4- . ' ' ' u u i t c molina Places 3rc? Behind Blue Devils Oil Up Pogo M anager s ubas Is vice TVrrnnins took a lead in the ' x first event and widened the gap after almost every succeeding one. The victors managed to taKe only one first place and a tie for another, but it was the seconds, Pogo's national campaign director, Walt Kelly, yesterday sent The Daily Tar Heel a long-winded letter concerning his Atthe samatimc Kelly said the "I Go Pogo"- booster but , I tons had been surreptitiously lost at the freight office by a man who is backing an opposition can didate. However, Kelly said an investigation group discovered the the crime and criminal and the buttons - are now on their way. Distribution probably will be made Tuesday. Kellv's letter said in part: "It is evidently time to oil up vnur tuba and load it with sand wiches. The small voice from the grass roots asking for Pogo for Grad Student Is Winner Of Script Prize Elizabeth Lindsay Neill, a grad uate student here in drama and meraiure, yesxeraay v. rt ft nnr : onn President has grown to a roar. notification mai sne wu i ft inite that a march for .script she entered in the l on Chicago Dr. Christian radio contest. w - nt convention time. i,T-:n.- um rIc Afnr- "About a month ago we re- XVI LSS a VUJV. w 1 I biditus Fixus" will be-presented jsponded to a number of decep-. i tively mild inquiries from college j groups aDOUt ine cnaiicca ui & funning for the presidency. We . i nn Vo)rin the i nao a pui mawc n-.., - The winner has had extensive slogan i Go Pogo." Counting : CVia mkfrA-ntc 1 : ? m lctionllv our pennies, wc uiw- " sometime during the 1952-53 pro gram series over the Columbia Broadcasting System network. drama exoerience. She produced "Blue Jean Gal" at Carolina last summer on a Playmaker experi mental bill and did the same work for "The Overture" this winter for the 153rd student production lineup. Her plans are for pro fessional and college theater. Miss Neill attended Hollins College from 1944 to 1948 where she did acting and play produc ing. In the summers of 1945 to 1948 she did continuous acting and technical work with the Patchwork Players.- She holds an advance certificate in acting irw this group. In 1949 she went to the Egri School of Writing and was stu dent assistant to Lajo3 Egri. Vandenberg Has Cancer WASHINGTON Gen. ' Hoy t S. Vandenberg, 'Air Force Chief of j Staff, - has abdominal cancer, it was learned yesterday from an 'unimpeachable source." A major placed an order for 25,000 but tons and hoped we'd nave re quests for that many. Word got around that the buttons were available along with the candi date and the mail became flooded with letters demanding emblems, cnpprhps. soao boxes and torch- r-' - - , . light parades. In a weeK, sir, we had lost all our buttons. Tn date the I Go Pogo move- lmont Mas exploded at Syracuse University, Harvard, the Univer sity of Wisconsin, Yale, r uraue, Tnrlinna University; Temple, Con- MT.T.. University of Hous- ton, Cornell, University of Chi- cago, Dartmouth, University o r-oiifr.rnia. Rice. Williams, Welles ley,; University of North Carolina, UCIiA, University of Virginia, Wabash, Hendrix and Kaacime. . "This interest has all been of o 'innntaneous nature. No public r " i . - j n n nr ! relations man nas uicai , or.fi none is at WOrK on it.- xt j comes at a time when most of the schools in the land are occu- i iori witli finals and the myriad : public relations, be was lount iVitiw bf classroom' ana j in the ntagon;: tyflM thb closing days of the1 keep the announcement from -be-1 campus in xn t, j DON'T THINK your eyes are deceiving you. This formation of seven Meteor jets is headed straight into the sky. The spec tacular photo was made from an accompanying jet craft, which flew in line with other planes as they maneuvered ov er the Sue Canal, Egypt. . Seniors Get; Two Movies Monday Nite Seniors and their dates are. in for a surprise tomorrow night at the annual senior late show. "It is a new movie which has not been shown anywhere around here," E. Carrington Smith, manager of the Carolina Theater said yesterday. It is in technicolor. In addition to the feature, plans are underway to show "In r the' Name of Freedom," a movie about Carolina, r . "Because many students have not seen this movie," Archie Myatt, senior class president said, "we feel this would be an excellent -opportunity, to show it." V - " Senior girls may sign out for late permission to attend the show. " ; . Eight Ex-Students : Get USN Commissions NEWPORT, R. I. May 17 Among 550 men awarded ensign's commissions here recently irom the Navy's only Officer candi date Scliool were eighty Univer Qitv of North Carolina graduates: .Trrv Sternberg. 1951; Harry Cur tis Stone, Jr.; 1951; Colvin Theo dore Leonard, Jrt 1951; Stephen BP Smith; 1947; Joe It. Beard; 1951; Rial Cooper Jones, 1951; ,Fred S. Patterson, Jr.," .1950 and Guy Carr Evans, Jr., 1951f:!u! -, Outstanding Performances Mark Meet; . Roger Morris Sets University Record by Frank Allsion, Jr. . The University of Maryland successfully defended its ; Southern Conference track cLmpionship on Fetzer Field here ; yesterday afternoon, amassing 57 points in winning the 9Rtli annual running of the championship meet. w , ' Carolma 37 points to finish third behind Duke. shnwinff death down -the line, s " - CJ - ,. , - 500 At Duke Invade Gped Dormitories (Special to The Daily Tar Heel) DURHAM, May 17 An esti mated 500 male students invaded East Campus of Duke University this morning following a current fad on college campuses of storm ing coed dormitories.. , Screens were ripped off several windows of women's dormitories, panels in doors in Southgate Dormitorv were reported to have been broken, and explosions were set off during the . hour and a half -long demonstration of stu dents. - TEAM SCORES Maryland - 71 Duke 46 North Carolina - 374 ...27 ... 2VA ...15 .. 13 ... 4 ... 2Vz ... 1 Virginia Tech Virginia Military ........ West Virginia ... .......... N. C. State South Carolina ..... Wash. & Lee ........ Davidson thirds, and fourths that counted. Leading the field was Vir ginia Tech's Stu. Johnson, who dinned off an amazing 47.9 in the auarter and then came back to anchor the Tech mile relay team to a blistering 3:19.8 performance. Carolina's Gene Brigham came in for his share of the honors in winning Carolina's only blue ribbon with a 1 :54.7 showing in the half; Brigham nipped defend ing - conference champion Al Buehler of Maryland at the tape to win the Hendrix Memorial Trophy award. -Virginia Tech's Don Cochran's 203 ft. 58 in. javelin toss in Friday's trials weathered the finals and won the gold medal in that event. Tar Heel Shot' Putter Roger Morris set a new University of North Carolina record in the shot put with a 48 ft. 10 in. heave. The husky Newark, N. J.,ifresh- (See MARYLAND, Page 5) Police reported no injuries and that the explosions were believed to have been dynamite caps. Meanwhile, Duke's president, Dr. Hollis Edens, warned the stu dent body yesterday that he has asked Durham police to make j arrests in any further action such as the Saturday morning demonstration. A report by police Lieutenant N. H. McCullers said "We did not attempt to arrest - anyone, or in any way get involved other than that we stayed with the crowd. There was no voilehce other than several window screens were torn off, and the paneling in two or three doors broken, he added. He also said that all extra officers were sent home at 3:30 a.m. and there was no further trouble during the night. GufHne Is I1 I v - i I ' t 1 . . '.-TSx....... ........ . I 1 I- I t lM, ,. mjTt'i ii ili ". ' i-tnt i- On DR.1 PAUL rgi JT7HHIE , Dr. Paul Newman Guthrie, pro fessor of economics in the School of Business Administration, has been appointed a public member of the Federal Wage Stabilization aD-MJ4 ttiII . aeoiiTY'io ' full.' - time duties withT tthe board around June 1. Dr. Guthrie's , appointment Tas made effective immediately, but as a result of his teaching duties at the University, he is now Uble to devote only part-time to the assignment. The Wage Stabilization Bt&rd, which has recently been in the national ' spotlight as si i result of the steel dispute; - is composed 1 of six members representing labor, six reoresentins management and six renreseminR ine dudiic. ing ' made. i ' 1 . n. xiowen "3 -3 CC ii Cent tflrAnf