Ctje Mmlf EDITORIALS: freedom of Speech Coed Government THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- VUMEXLVm BasineM: 9W Circulation: 9116 CHAPEL HILL, N. C FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1940 NUMBER 156 lUCtoriil: 435l New 4351 ( Klfkt: 690 OP II trr TEATHER: y y ar af vstrmer I 1 5 LP Y Y II ill 1 if Wilis W DM Rm Jf f WWB ffl May Frolics Begin With Concert Today Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra will begin the May Frolics dance weekend with a public concert in Memorial hall at 3 o'clock this afternoon. Kenneth Royall, Jr., secretary-treasurer of the May Frolics committee, said yesterday that jitterbuging will be banned from dances. Although V( evening viauvca. wuvuu 3Boking is allowed in Woollen gym-ai-ni, the promenade around Bow-man--Gray pool will be open to those desiring to smoke. The initial dance of the weekend is a tea dance to be held from 5 o'clock ta 6-33 this afternoon. .Tonight's dance will begin at 9:30 and continue through 1 o'clock. Tomorrow's tea dlnce is to be held from 4:30 to 6:30. Sponsors and escorts will be present ed at the dance tomorrow night from 9 through 12 o'clock. Ckaprones for Dance ' Ctaperones for the dances are as follows: Dr. and Mrs. Frank Graham, r.d Mrs. J. C. Lyons, ur. ana J R. Godfrey. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. fr. Ly!e Sitterson, Dr. and Mrs. William Perry, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard, Mr. and Mrs. R, H. Wettach, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Mowry, Mr. and Mrs. 3. H. Kobbs, Jr., Mrs. Frank Miller, Mrs. H. K. Owsley, Mrs. E. G. Harde man and Dr. E. J. Woodhouse. The deadline for purchasing bids, which are ten dollars, is 5 o'clock this afternoon. They may be obtained from Kenneth Royall, Jr., at the Deke house. No tickets will be sold at the door during the dances. "Doctor" Tommy Dorsey received kis degree from the University of Buffalo students and his nickname, "Mac," from members of the band. Weighing 170 pounds and 31 years old, Dorsey will feature Jo Stafford and Frank Sinatra, vocalists with the band. At times, Dorsey will play leads on his trombone. News Briefs Roosevelt Declares Germany, Norway In State of War (By United Press) WARM SPRINGS, Ga., April 25 President Roosevelt Droclaims Nor- - way .r.d Germany formally at war; invokes full power of United States neutrality law, extends cash and carry relation to Norway and prohibits cse o American ports or territorial waters to submarines of new belligerents. forces retreat enemy p res in Norway, but LONDON Allied became of "increased jure" on two fronts British deny that British had been "cut to pieces and forced io withdraw an order"; former First Lord of Ad isiralty, Duff Cooper, says German arrcy, ravy and air forces must be (i'?stroyed if European peace is to be S'Jarar.teed and this can not be done "without hurting German people." HEF.LIX Germany claims Allied rcf caught in mid-Norway between -"'f tirhtcning drives and threatened u.-j and perhaps final warning" to -nlth bombing raids on the British STOCKHOLM Two hard-driving Grn"j.r. motoring columns sweep northward through central Norway Kas'r.ir.g British and Norwegian de un to tighten Nazi grip on lower ra cf country; British column fttctts mountain peak of Roeros and kRks ith Germans to stem Nazi drive. PARIS French naval forces claim krasan submarine, a torpedo launch an to patrol boats sunk in Skager- Fv0ME--Italian ministry of colonies .ts Great Britain and France of fcis huge army in Near East with tttM:oji of attacking Italian-African mions and extending the war. WESTERN FRONT German de 4chtnt routed in skirmish. WASHINGT0N House foes of a CV,t wage - hour law won iiucd on page 2, column 1) FETZER SPEAKS TO LETTER MEN THIS AFTERNOON UNC Club Expects Representatives From 60 Schools "Coach Bob" Fetzer, director of athletics will open the third annual state high school Monogram club con ference this afternoon with a short talk on "Scholarship in Athletics." The conference, being sponsored by the Carolina Monogram club, is ex pected to draw delegates from sixty high schools from all over the state. Also on this afternoon's program is a talk by Richard Worley, exche quer of the Grail and outstanding stu dent athlete. Tonight, Head Football Coach Ray Wolf will speak to the members of the conference, after which he will show motion pictures of several Carolina athletic events. Tomorrow morning the delegates will convene in a business session to elect officers for the next year. Pre sent' officers are Bill Simmons - of High Point, president; Ed Short .of High Point, vice-president; Wells Til lery, treasurer; and Dave. Morrison, president of the Carolina Monogram club, secretary. The conference members will be guests of the Carolina Athletic as sociation at the AAU track meet to day and tomorrow, and the freshman baseball game with Durham today. The UNC Monogram club banquet, which was announced in yesterday's Daily Tar Heel as slated for last night, will be held Tuesday night at 7 o'clock in the . banquet room of the University dining hall. Coach Bill Alexander, head football mentor at Georgia Tech, will speak at the dinner and Skipper Bowles' band will fur nish the music. Hart To Lecture Sunday Night at 8 In Hill Music Hall Dr. Hornell Hart,' professor of sociology at Duke university, will speak on "Life Ought to be Thrilling" Sunday night at 8 o'clock in Hill hall. An author, lecturer, and teacher, Dr. Hart is widely known in the east and is becoming increasingly popular in the South. He has taught at the University of Iowa, Bryn Mawr, and Hartford Theological seminary, ana has been a professor at Duke since 1938. His speech is being sponsored by the University Christian associations .r,ri will rnmnlete the series of Uivi- nuu delivered here this TCI - J year. UNC Debaters to Vie With Randolph-Macon r-o-i ;. Xehwfers will meet a team from. Randolph-Macon college at "9 o'clock tonight in Graham Memo rial to vie on the isolation question. Phil Ellis and Joe Dawson of the Uni versity will uphold the negative, and Anne Felts and Mary Ellen Parker are the opponents. Rabbi Sandmel Conducts Services Rabbi Samuel Sandmel will speak on the "Jewish Idea of Freedom" at Hillel foundation services tonight in the banquet hall of Graham Memor ial. Hi talk will follow reform ser vices beginning at 7:30 and orthodox services beginning at 7:15 in the Grail room. f ) Two Presidents Elected Yesterday Mr. . X S x if ivy; v-.v , Reading left to right are Dave Morrison, elected yesterday to the presidency of the student body, and Pinky Elliot who was officially named president of the rising junior class. Research Scientists To Open Five-Day Conference Tuesday A five-day conference spotlighted by the presence of some of the nation's leading social scientists opens here next Tuesday with the annual meet ing of the 'Population Association of America in joint session with a Uni versity Conference on Regional Re search and the Measurement of Re gional Development. The University's Institute of Re search in Social Science is sponsor ing the conference, which will serve as a "dedication" of the renovated, four-story Alumni building as the new and permanent home of the Institute and the departments of sociology and public welfare. t Current research in population will be the theme of the Population As sociation, meeting in continual ses sion May 1-2. Preceding this confer ence on April 30, leading population experts, including Warren S. Thomp son of Miami university and the Scripps foundation for population re search, and Rupert B. Vance, profes (Continued on page U, column S) Dees Trails by 60; Lobred, Jennings Win Campus Offices; Elliot Tops McKinnon by 3 By Philip Carden Dave Morrison, polling 925 votes to 865 for Bill Dees, won the presidency of the student body in yesterday's run-off election, as the Student party partially salvaged last week's defeat by taking two of the three campus offices, sweeping the senior class and plac ing one officer in both the junior and sophomore classes. Chief victories for the University party were Pinky Elliot's three-vote win over Bill McKinnon for the junior class presidency, and Hal Jennings comeback from a FESLER, HEALY WARN STUDENTS SELECTING JOBS Graham Memorial Sponsors Talks In Main Lounge Dr. James Fesler, professor in the University political science depart ment, and Patrick Healy, Jr., execu tive secretary of the North Carolina League of Municipalities, spoke last night at Graham Memorial's regular vocational program. The topic for the evening was "Occupational Op portunities in Public Administration." Dr. Fesler spoke on prospects in Federal administration, explaining the various means by which eollege gra duates may enter that particular field. He declared that the Federal govern ment is a good employer, because it carries not only a fair salary but a certain amount of prestige. He said that the average college graduate looking for a position with the gov- (Continned on page A, column 3) Initial Pharmacy Dance Begins at 9:30 Tonight lii V& Xlwft liSv,x ill ill 11U M ' Newer . Ill ' cuo III II II - - : x - I r; III :&7Wi v ,r r'Y mJLml : & ' : " ' X - f i I i W r Blanche M cjace - I vv f "Cr, , bur-rut ' r CAvrsetu- ffc. V I - - lr ,, , n- I V - A, " I 1 V V , - J3 heavy default last week to best Jim Mallory, only Carolina party candi date in the run-off, for vice-presidency of the Athletic association, 886 to 842. Yesterday's balloting drew 1,890 voters, ranking well with previous years general elections and greatly surprising most political observers. Morrison's only comment last night was, "I am the happiest boy in the world tonight. I won over a splendid boy. I sincerely thank the student body for this confidence and pledge every endeavor to fulfill it." Leonard Lobred's 28-vote victory over Richard Morris for senior mem ber on the Publications Utiion board ranked second only to Morrison's win as a balm to the Student party. Totals were Lobred, 877, Morris, 849. Gaylord, Baker Win In the senior class Don Baker de feated Frosty Snow, 287 to 216, for vice-president, and Louis Gaylord won over Joe Welborn, 256 to 239, for Stu dent council representative, to : give the Student party almost complete - victory in the class. Stacey CrockettjU who won the secretaryship in the first election, is the only UP candidate hold ing a senior elass office. Mac McLendon, who won over John Diffendal 258 to 225, for vice-president of the junior class, is the only Student (Continued on page A, column 2) Stick Announces Plans for NCSPI Conference Here ' cWBTr JOSS? Freddie Johnson and his orchestra will play for the annual pharmacy school dances in the Tin Can beginning to night at 9:30 with a formal. Tomorrow afternoon from 4:30 until 6:30 there will be a tea dance and at 9 o'clock the final dance will begin. Sponsors with their escorts for the set are: Miss Nancy Click, Elkin, with Henry Dillon, Elkin, president of the pharmacy school; Miss Frances Kelly, Mount Holly, with Wriston Smith, Kannapolis, vice-president; Miss Margaret Banyas, Glenn Robbins, Ohio, with Leo Lorch, Castle Hayne, secretary-treasurer; Iiss Janet Hobbs, Cherryville, with Alf Costner, Lincolnton, student council representative; Miss Joyce Campbell, Lucama, with Ed Campbell, Lucama, student legislature; Miss Louise Templeton, Mooresville, with Bill Sheffield, Warsaw, chairman of the dance committee; Miss Anne Boyette, Smithfield, with John McNeill, Whiteville, member of the dance committee; Miss Blanche Burrus, Canton, with Ed Royall, Elkin, member of the dance committee; Miss Bess Brown, Wilmington, with Solon Minton, Warsaw, member of the dance committee; and Miss Dorothy Duckett, Charlotte, with Jesse Pike, Con cord, member of the dance committee.3 " " ' High schools in all parts of the state have been invited to send delegates to the fourth annual meeting of the North Carolina Scholastic Press insti tute, to be held in Chapel Hill Friday and Saturday, May 3 and 4. The list of speakers for the meet ing of high school journalists will be headed by Tom Bost of Raleigh, Capi tol Hill correspondent for the Greens boro Daily News, who is considered the dean of North Carolina newsmen. Bost will speak to the budding news papermen at the final session of the institute. to be held in Gerrard hall at 6 o'clock Saturday night, May 4. Other prominent journalists from some of the larger North Carolina dailies will speak and lead open forum discussions On sports, society, 'editor ials, news, features, business and photography, according to David Stick of the Raleigh Times, who is director of the NCSPI. Stick Expects Many Delegates Delegates from between 30 and 50 schools are expected to register on the opening day of the meeting, but no accurate prediction can be made in this regard until the early part of next week, Stick said. Each school is limited to four regular delegates, in cluding a faculty advisor and .one member of the junior staff of the school paper. Prior to this year the NCSPI has been an indpendent organization, spon sored by the Daily Tar Heel and other campus groups. Expenses have been taken care of in the past through contributions from interested indi viduals and organizations on the cam pus. Magazine Deadline The deadline for the May issue of the Carolina Magazine is May 8. Adrian Spies will be in the of fice from two to five this after noon and tomorrow afternoon. Next week regular office hours will be from 7:30 to 10 each night. An especial call is being made for fiction. All members of the staff are requested to come to the office as soon as possible. v .."-.-

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