Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 20, 1945, edition 1 / Page 1
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EDITORIALS: Chapel Hill Cafes It Could Be Worse The Ram Sees NEWS: UP Releases Slate Dr. Inman Fizz Ed Debate VOLUME LIII SW UfflveMty Party Names McKemzie, Tlhompsoe M otfisotii Aimd JdfotosfoiiLe To Head Elective Slate McKENZIE All students, faculty members, and attend the address of Dr. Samuel Guy Hill Hall. i Dr. Inman, adviser to the State Department and a member of the United States delegation to the recent Mexico ence a report direct from the confer ence. Author; diplomat, churchman, pro fessor and expert on Latin American affairs, Dr. Inman has represented the United States at several Pan American conferences and has worked with the OWI in its radio broadcast. Some of Dr. Iriman's best known books ate "Christian Cooperation in Latin America," "Latin America To day," and "Building an Inter-American Neighborhood," He has. also writ-, ten 66 pamphlets' and more than 566 articles. ; : In the February issue of the New Republic, appears Dr. Inman's latest article, "Catholics and Latin Amer ica." This article, on such a highly controversial subject, will no doubt arouse much discussion, both among the clergy and the laymen. The au thor presents his views frankly and bravely. In the creation of better relations between the Americas, - Dr. Inman stresses the importance of education al exchanges, that is, the exchange - of students, professors, and books. He then stresses the need of what he calls "spiritual ambassadors." In "PiDlems in Pan American ism," Dr. Inman writes, "We need a number of spiritual ambassadors going up and down this America of ours, cultivating understanding and friendship by interpreting to all the people the great truth that God has made of one blood all the nations." Not only an advocate of good inter American relations. Dr. Inman. be lieves in internationalism as , well During the life of the League of Na tions, he was one of its strongest and mnst faithful suDDorters. In 1935 he visitpd . 18 Latin American countries See INMAN, page S. Miillis To On Physical Ed. In Di Meeting The fiery question of compulsory physical education which has the dis tinction of heing the biggest gripe on Carolina campus will lend itself to de bate and argument tomorrow night at the meeting of the Dialectic Senate. Pete Mullis, director of physical education, will be the guest speaker of the evening. The bill which will be discussed by Di members and repre sentatives from all student groups reads: Resolved: That there be a com pulsory physical education program of five hours a week for male students and two hours for coeds. Further more, persons who are five minutes late shall be charged, with , absence, while those students who cut classes more than the number of times pro vided by the Board of Trustees shall j be expelled from the university. Because of the capacity crowd which is anticipated, the Di session will be held in Gerrard Hall instead of in the Di chamber. The meeting is scheduled for 9 o'clock p.m. Visitors are invited to attend, and the floor will be open to anyone who, wishes to speak. Speak Business and Circulation: SMI lis V ' ' , f ' , ' ' I i THOMPSON sents Diplomat Inman residents of Chapel Hill are invited to Inman tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in City Conf erence will bring his audi DR: INMAN ASTRP To Open ram In July All young men who desire to enter the Army Specialized Training Re serve Program will be given an oppor tunity next month to qualify for as signment to the program next July, August, or September, Dr. Edgar W Knight. Regional Director for the Southeastern states, announced. The test, which will be conducted throughout the United States in the high schools and colleges at 9 o'clock on the morning of April 2, is designed to determine whether or not a candi date has the aptitude and 'knowledge required for success in the Army Spe cialized Training Reserve Program. Young men whose 17th birthdays fall hetween October 1, 1944, and Aug ust 31, 1945, are eligible to take the test providing they have met the edu cational and citizenship requirements. Applicants for the examination should notify their school principals or college deans who will furnish them necessary formation, Dr. Knight said. Sound And Fury Tryouts for singing parts in a new Sound and.Fury show will be held Fri day afternoon, March 23, from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., at Memorial Hall. All students who would like to have sing ing parts in the production are urged to try out. The theme of the new show will be the "Roaring Twenties," packed with songs, dances and thrills . of the pe riod.. Tryputs for. dancing and acting will he held at another date. : Yack Pictures , All students who have snapshots which might be suitable for use in the Yackety Yack are requested to submit them to the Yack office, second floor Graham Memorial, or mail them to Box 987. All prints be come the property of the Yackety Yack and will not be returned. ! Please identify all .persons and j 'places on the back of the picture. V Serving Civilian and .CHAPEL HILL, N. 0, TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1945 F iv--' ' I fy'j' il i i to , , - r'.'v-fS'. rr r -" ii m in n ii mum mi i n n ii Tr" utiT n it - in i MORRISON CRIL Sponsors Martin Hall In GM Lounge German Reporter To Appear Sunday Martin Hall will be guest speaker Sunday, f March 25, at 8 p.m. in the Graham Memorial lounge, sponsored by the Council for Religion in Life. sJSorn and educated.in;Germany,and having traveled widely over Europe since 1924 as a free-lance journalist, Mr. Hall has personally seen the de cline of democracy and the rise of Nazism. He has had direct contact with Hitler and most of the pleading men of Germany. From 1933 to 1936 he covered the German underground movement for such foreign newspa pers as the Manchester Guardian. In order to avoid arrest, Mr. Hall was forced to flee from Germany to be later exiled by the German government. Hall then spent one year in Paris, com ing to the United States in 1938. Since that time Hall has lectured over the country and has published articles in various newspapers and magazines. In the summer of 1943, Mr. Hall was a member of the faculty of the In stitute of Relations at Reed colloge, Portland, Oregon, and at Mills college, Oakland, California. From fall, 1943, to spring 1944, Mr. Hall has been teaching a special training course at the Pacific School of Religion in Berk eley, and at the same time he has lec tured! extensively for forums and teachers' institutes. First In 'Great Name' Series Given On WDNC The Chapel Hill radio station, under the direction of Lucile Culbert and in conjunction with the University Music department, presented . Satur day over station WDNC in . Durham the first in a series of programs on Great Names in Music." The purpose of the series is to pro vide entertaining and informative programs and to give the performers valuable radio experience. Each program features some repre sentative works of a composer. Be tween numbers there are brief com ments on the life and work of the composer. On the first program were three of Johann Sebastian Bach's works: .Pre lude and Fugue in C sharp minor from The Well Tempered Clavichord; two movements from the Violin and Claviar Sonata in E Minor; and the chorale, "Now Let Every Tongue Adore Him," from the cantala Sleep ers Awake. - The first number was played by Richard Ford at the piano; the sec ond, by Dr and Mrs. Benjamin Swa lin on the violin; and the third, by Paul Young and the Men's Glee Club, with piano accompaniment by Charles. Stevens. The series will continue through June 9. Military Students at UNC 1 ' " ; ; JOHNSTONE Tomorrow Staff Meeting t There will be an important meet- ing in the Tar Heel office at 4:30 ; Thursday afternoon of all persons i who are now on the Tar Heel staff j and any new members who wish to j work on the publication. The Tar 'Heel is in need of reporters, desk t men, rewrite men and business staff members. All students who I would like to work on the paper are asked to be sure and attend the meeting. . New beats will be assigned ald the paper will be put into shape 'for "a new semester: Debaters Plan To Take Trips Potential Carolina representatives on the northern debate tour will as semble tonight at 7 o'clock in the Horace Williams lounge of Graham Memorial. Tryouts for the trip, which will include debates with five eastern colleges, will be concerned with three different topics. The topics are: "Resolved, That the Several nations should adopt the Dumbarton Oaks proposals"; "Resolved, That the Several States Should Lower the Voting Age Re quirement to 18 Years for All Citi zens"; and, "Resolved, That the Federal Government Should Enact Legislation Requiring All Labor Disputes to Be Settled by Com pulsory Arbitration." Launching Carolina's first tour of the season, Bill Crisp, Bob Rosen, Fred Chamberlain and Vincent Wil liams will journey to Atlanta this week-end to debate Georgia Tech, Emory University, and Agnes Scott. Rene Bernard, executive secretary of the Debate Council, has requested that all students, military, civilian or coed, who are interested in debating, attend the meeting tonight. Any stu- See DEBATERS, page 3. NROTC Unit Publishes Annual 'Catapult9 Albert Jacobsoh Edits Yearbook . "The Catapult," yearbook for the NROTC unit here, rolled off the press es recently and is now officially out. Although "The Catapult" is a regular monthly magazine, the yearbook edi tion contains 136 pages and is hand somely bound in Navy leather with the name; year and the NROTC emblem embossed in gold on the front. Pictures of the new Navy armory compose the front piece and the back space. Between the two spaces lie vari ous campus .scenes and sections ,on the staff, companies, graduates, aca demic classes, sports and recreation. Albert Jacobson of Asheville was editor, John Bacchus of Chatham, N. J. was business-manager, while Capt. E. E. Hazlett, Jr., commander of the unit, Lt. Comdr. H. W. Carroll, Jr., Executive Officer and Lt. William R. Mueller, USNR, served as faculty ad visor. In dedicating the book to Comdr. Editorial: F-J1U. News: F-JUt. T " - Ford, Mallard Ken For Key Offices CAA President Yet To Be Selected Releasing a complete slate of candidates with the exception of President of the Athletic Association, Winkie White, chairman of the University Party, fired the second salvo of a pitched political battle to elect a full slate of Mills, Gaither Get Key Posts On TH Staff Margaret Woodhouse president of the Publications Union announced the appointments of two major Tar Heel staff officials following the meeting of the Board Friday afternoon. Barron Mills was named managing editor and Betty Gaither business manager. Barron Mills of Laurinburg began his newspaper career as sports edi tor of "The Scotchman" when a fresh man in high school, the following year became associate editor and the third year' succeeded the editor. Not stop ning with holding the supreme office of one publication, he became editor of Laurinburg High School Yearbook during his senior year. In addition to experience on high school publications, he has had considerable experience as reporter on "The Laurinburg Ex change." Quite active as a news staff writer, Mills is a member of the Al pha Tau Omega Fraternity. ; " . Miss Gaither, a junior transfer from St. Mary's hails from Elizabeth City. She was, advertising manager of the college annual and has pur sued her interests in the business field here under the former business man ager, Preston Lemly. ' Miss Gaither is an Alpha Delta Phi pledge. Wallace Not Wanted By The Entire Staff Of The Tar Heel An error has been called to the attention of the Tar Heel concern ing a statement made in the last issue Concerning the endorsement of Jimmy Wallace. The staff of the Tar Heel did NOT endorse Wallace by acclamation. Many members of the staff do not support him; among these are Charles Wickenberg, editor. The original plan was to endorse a candidate for editor by using secret ballot, .allowing only active staff members to vote, and permit ting no discussion. None of these intentions were carried out. Several times in the past the staff has agreed to support a' candidate. The staff sincerely apologizes to the student body for the error in last issue and hopes that the dam age has been corrected. COMDR. HARRISS George L. Harriss, USN, former ex ecutive officer of the Unit, Editor Ja cobson wrote: "To Commander Har riss, somewhere in the Pacific, we dedi- -1. Nx c J - 9U1 NUMBER SW 40 campus officers April 5. Heading the UP's slate is Bill Mc- Kenzie, candidate for President of the Student Body. President of four organizations: German Club, May Frolics Club, Inter-Fraternity Council, and Kappa Sigma, McKenzie is also cltiirman of the House Privileges Board, a member of the Graham Me morial Board of Directors, and a mem ber of the Order of the Grail. Since coming to Carolina three years ago he has been a member of the Fresh man Honor Council, and the varsity track team. A senior from Winston-Salem, Mc Kenzie attended Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg, Virginia, where he was on the track team, the news paper staff and valedictorian of his graduating class. He is majoring in commerce. For Vice-President of the Student Body the University Party presents Dick Ford of Asheville. Ford attend ed Blind School in Raleigh before com ing to Carolina in 1942. He is a mem ber of the Order of the Grail, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia fraternity, the Univer sity Glee Club, St. Anthony Hall and Delta Sigma Pi commerce fraternity, and was tapped for the Golden Fleece thia year.. .As a freshman he was a member of the legislature, and as a sophomore he was secretary-treasurer of his class. ROTC Joe Mallard is the UP candi date for Secretary-Treasurer of stu dent government. Mallard has been in the Navy for four years, serving in the Atlantic and Mediterranean thea tres and was in the battle for Sicily and Salerno. He reported to Carolina last March and was elected to the leg islature as a V-12 representative the following spring. Mallard held a scholarship to a naval preparatory school where he was on the football and baseball varsities. From Jersey City, he is a V-12 representative to the Student Council, a member of the Campus Cabinet and was on the foot ball team last fall. The candidate for Editor-in-Chief of the Yackety Yack is Gene Johnstone, a ROTC from Birmingham, Alaba- ' ma. He was Associate Editor of the Yack this year, and upon the resigna tion of the Editor was appointed by the Publications Union Board to the edi torship. In high school Johnstone was art and photography editor of the yearbook. At the University of Ala bama he was Assistant Business Man ager of the Corolla, Alabama's year book that won the Interscholastic Press Prize that year. The only UP co-ed nominated for a top office is Connie Hendren from Washington, D. C. who is the candi date for editor of the Carolina Maga See UP SLATE, page 3. Issue Dedicated To Comdr. Harriss cate this book of the graduating class of '45, and with it goes the threat that he may now expect one, two, three or more of us to appear on board his ship, ready to take his orders and serve him in the duties he has taught us to per form. Comdr. Harriss, who graduated from the, United States Naval Academy in 1917, was executive officer of the unit here during 1943-44. When he was reassigned to sea duty in the Pacific last October, Comdr. Carroll succeeded him. ; On the fourth page opposite a large picture of President Frank P. Graham is a message to the NROTC cadets . from him.. Congratulating the gradu ates and pointing out that it was the first NROTC class to enter the Uni versity after America entered the war, he says: "The class of 1945 is distinctly the class of the sesquicen See NROTC, page 3.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 20, 1945, edition 1
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