MAY 18 M) EDITORIALS: jj Fair; EATHER: I II Ufs Ktep Out of War lj More on Ftna.nct a continued toarm THE ONLY COLLEGE DA ILY IN THE SO UTHEAST- TEL VOLUME XLVIH Botlnm: 98ST CitaUtioa: 9S86 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1940 ZditoritI: 4356 1 New.: 435! i Xlgkt: 6906 NUMBER 175 mm Grail Makes Awards Inauguration Night Ceremonies Combine On Monday Night The Order of the Grail will combine its annual Awards night with the in auguration of newly elected campus officers when that ceremony takes place in Memorial hall Monday night at 8 o'clock. Jimmy Davis, president of the stu dent body, and Melville Corbett, pres ident of the Women's association, will laake their farewell speeches. They yi both then turn over their offices to Dave Morrison and Jean McMas ter, student leaders for the coming year, who will make their inaugural addresses. Davis will conduct the formal inaug uration of all the officers, who will be inducted as a group. The Grail awards will consist of placques and cups given to athletes in all sports who have received the highest scholasiifiL averages. Intra mural awards to the fraternities and dormitories will also be made at this time. Winner of the Delta Kappa Epsilon trophy will be presented by that fra ternity to the outstanding social fra ternity on the campus. Zeta Psi was the recipient of this award last year. The Patterson award to the best student in athletics and scholarship will not be presented Monday night. News Briefs Nazis Crumple Allied Lines in Belgium; Gamelin Admits Situation 'Critical' Senate Appropriations Sub Committee Approves President's Defense Program (By United Press) PARIS, May 17 Powerful German mechanized divisions today crumpled Allied defenses in Belgium and drove deep into France toward Rheims 75 miles from Paris pushing through desperately fighting defenders sup ported by Generalissimo Maurice Gamelin who told them "to accept death rather than abandon terrain." (Berlin said that victorious Ger man armies have taken Brussels, Lou vain, and Mechlin the latter less than 15 miles from Antwerp and that Allied forces all along the front were en route.) The situation of the Allies along the entire eastern flank of a 200-mile battle line where 2,000,000 men were struggling in the greatest battle of Continued on page 4, column 2) McKeever Calls Frosh To Dine WCUNC Group Hobart McKeever, president of the Freshman Friendship council yester day issued a last call for any first year men who want to help dine and dance the freshman YWCA delega tion coming down from WCUNC to day to visit the council and campus. All interested students should reg ister in the YMCA at the informa tion desk this morning and then come down to Graham Memorial this aft ernoon at 3:30 to prepare to greet the ?rls who will arrive around 4 o'clock. The afternoon program will be put Continued on page 4, column 5) Summer Self-Help Applications Due applications are now available in .Student Aid office in 208 South building for all students interested in doi stlf-help work this summer in th library, dining hall, Book Ex change, Graham Memorial, laundry apartment or other University divi sion. applications must be on file by Monday, and the job awards will be -shortly after. "-lf-htlp jobs for the summer ses v'v artf liniited and there are no 'A funds available. Those students holding self-help jobs who plan j itt( fid summer school, who need e work and whose grades have been factory will be very carefully idertd by the committee in deter- "tong the number of awards, accord s? to Ed Lanier, self-help director. ; FROSH REGISTER FOR FALL SOON Advisers to Meet Class Next Week The present freshman class may arrange their fall quarter registra tion during the next two weeks so that it will not be necessary next Septem ber to see their advisers or stand in line except to clear with the business office at the very end of the checkout line, Dean C. P. Spruill of the general college announced yesterday. Each student will see his adviser be tween Monday and Friday of next week to fill out the form to be used for the fall quarter. Preferences re garding class hours or teachers may be indicated on the form. In making out their programs for next year, freshmen should remember to include freshman subjects which have not yet been taken. Beginning with the present class, junior stand ing and transfer to the commerce school or the college of arts and sciences will be limited to those who have completed their freshman re quirements. Each student will leave his com Continued on page 4, column 5) Band Presents Concert Tomorrow Campus jitterbugs suffering from an overdone of swing are in vited to recuperate and return to sanity at the open air concert of the University Band tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock on the cam pus near the Davie poplar. Con ductor Earl Slocum is leading the band in its traditional series of bi-weekly programs, composed of popular, classical and semi-popular numbers. Jan Savitt Tells Maestro Played Symphonies at 14 By Vivian Gillespie Seven years with Stowkowski, then to the top of the heap as a popular band leader that's Jan Savitt's suc cess story. ' Jan sat on the sidelines while his band played and told his story how his family came over from Poland when he was a baby and settled in Philadelphia, where the symphony or chestra under Leopold Stowkowski was playing, and how he refused a scholarship to the University of Penn sylvania in order to play with the symphony at the age of fourteen. The "Tophatters" developed from an NBC studio orchestra which Jan led at station KYW in Philadelphia, after he left Stowkowski, and the "shuffle rhythm" which he arranged put the band among the top orches tras. Still Uses "Shuffle Rhythm" "I haven't abandoned the shuffle rhythm as so many people think," Jan declared. I am limiting it to the tunes which fit it. The shuffle rhythm is used only in pieces for which it is the true tempo. Otherwise a band becomes tedious just like eating six gallons of vanilla ice cream." , x "When art orchestra has as good a Continued on page A, column 4) Simons Roof Calls For Poster-Writers Everyone interested in writing texts for posters, banners, etc., for the "Keep Out of Europe's War" movement, should meet with Simons Roof at 10:30 this morn ing in the outer publications of fice on the second floor of Graham Memorial. Others interested in working for the movement should report to the Daily Tar Heel office between 2 and 4 o'clock this afternoon. Playmakers May Build , New Theater By Martha LeFevre "The Carolina Playmakers may be able to work in a new $300,000 theater next year if our plans continue to pro gress as they are now," Professor Frederick H. Koch, founder and di rector of the dramatic art department, said yesterday. Three years ago the Rockefeller foundation contributed $33,000 to the department and pledged an endow ment fund of $150,000 if that sum was matched by the University. Plans for the new theater and dramatic art building were drawn up by the entire Playmakers staff with the aid of Wal dron Falkner, Washington architect. Since then President Frank Graham has appealed to the University alumni. "Dr. Graham says we are going to get it, and hopes to do so through the gen erosity of interested alumni. If that fails and there is no other way, we will have to go to the state legisla ture for the necessary funds," Dr. Koch explained. Present Building Old The building now used, which is one of the oldest on the University campus, and the first state-supported theater in America to be devoted to the development of a native drama, will be replaced by a dramatic arts building containing class rooms, two stages, rehearsal rooms, offices, and a workshop. Provisions wiU be made for the cinema and radio courses that were inaugurated by the department this year, and for one of the largest dramatic museums in the South which "Prof" Koch has gathered to gether during the 21 years of the Car olina Playmakers. Need Larger Facilities "Work has grown so that we are no longer able to give our students adequate facilities to carry on this work," the Playmakers' director point ed out. "The new theater wilr en able us to stage large productions such as "Johnny Johnson," and Gil bert and Sullivan; it will relieve us of the necessity of having rehearsals in class rooms and the basement of Caldwell Hall; and it will eliminate the great loss we now suffer by not having adequate storage space for scenery and wardrobes," Dr. Koch said. Rise of 'Shuffle Rhythm'; Senior Ball Tonight Completes Set - m sA 111 T , i : f 4 -r il l pull f, vr xr;., v jy;;r. j V - - 1 mmmm: V - ' x. , ,' " ' L s ' I Tar Heels Face Vengeful "Dukes In Attempt for Big Five Tie The Third Baseman Charlie Rich played a major part in Carolina's win over Duke Wednesday. He hit a single in the first inning with the bases loaded to send in the Tar Heels' first runs, and added two more hits during the afternoon. His line in the box score showed three hits for five trips to the plate. Graham Memorial To Revive Concerts 'Under The Stars' Reviving the presentation of weekly "Music Under the Stars" programs, Graham Memorial student union will present a recorded concert in Kenan Stadium tomorrow night at 8:30. Following the success of the pro gram given during Senior week, Bob Magill, director of Graham Me morial, and Gibson Jackson, head of the student union record department, have decided to continue the concerts as a regular Sunday night feature for the rest of the year. Jackson has arranged a varied pro gram of musical selections suitable for every musical taste. Concerts are expected to include -classical, semi- classical and popular compositions,! given from the latest records. Magill also promised good weather for the remainder of the programs. He even guaranteed stars, in order to make the title of the series as accurate as possible. "There will be stars. I assure you of that fact," he said. "There have always been stars in Chapel Hill. Sometimes you can't see them, but they're there." J-.-.'..V-'T ' .--.'.X .V!V.V.V.-.' .".-.A I " ' ' ' - ""HI Either Benton or Cheshire to Pitch Under Greensboro Lights Tonight By Bill Beerman Carolina's march toward its first Big Five championship since 1933 continues tonight in Greensboro when the Tar Heels meet Duke in the second engagement of a three-game series. The final battle, which will determine whether or not Carolina can claim LIBRARY TO SHOW SOUTHERN EXHIBIT WPA Indexing To Be Displayed An exhibit showing the work that the WPA has done here in organiz ing and indexing southern manuscripts will be on display in the ground floor showcases of the library, Monday through Saturday of next week. The Works Progress administration has had an average of five to six work ers at the library for the last six years doing this work. The manu scripts are filed according to collec tions in the library vaults. There are more than a million and a quarter al ready filed there. In the near future an index of the entire collection will be published. This work, which is being directed by Continued on page 4, column ) Playmakers To Portray Life in 1906 With O'Neill Comedy, 'Ah Wilderness' It will be like the old family al bum come to life next week when The Carolina Playmakers draw the cur tains on "Ah, Wilderness," Eupene O'Neill's nostalgic comedy of Ameri can life, in the Playmakers theater Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Director Elmer Hall and his associ ates for the production are turning every trick they know to conjure up an authentic picture of small-town family life in 1906. Actors, scene designer and costumer are uniting their talents to recreate the warm hearted, wistful mood which O'Neill evokes in his story of young love in the days when motor cars raced down the road at 10 miles an hour. -f irst place in the state loop, is scheduled for Emerson stadium Monday after noon at 4 o'clock. The unexpected, devasting 26-3 drubbing of the Dukes by Carolina Wednesday so humiliated the inhabi tants of the Methodist Flats that they are likely to go to any extremes to re gain lost prestige. Wake Forest, in using Tommy Byrne to lick the Blue Devils three times this year, shoved Duke out of the conference and Big Five elite for the first time in many moons, and should the local nine make a clean sweep of the remaining two games, it will be the worst Duke sea son and the finest Carolina season since baseball originated in Coopers town, N. Y. ' Coach Jack Coombs of the Durham crew, who never dreamed he'd Kve to see the day when his boys would take such a terrific beating, managed to save a couple of pitchers from the half dozen he used Wednesday. Bill Mock, the right-handed youngster who lasted one-third of the first inning against Continued on page S, column 6) Larry Wismer, assistant technical director of the Playmakers, has de signed sets for "Ah, Wilderness" which are faithful in every detail to the period. For the main action of the play he has devised an interior set which perfe'ly captures the spirit of the gingerLiad style. Costumes for the show have been designed by Irene Smart, who was responsible for the swank clothes of "Kiss the Boys Goodbye." In assem bling costumes for "Ah Wilderness," Miss Smart went to the original sources the fashion magazines of the period. Heading the cast of "Ah, Wilder ( Continued on page 2, column 5) Senior Sponsors, Escorts Featured Jan Savitt and his orchestra, who, captured the rhythm-loving boys and girls of the campus yesterday after noon and last night, will complete his engagement tonight at the Senior ball. During this evening, the Senior ball will feature the grand march in which the following will take part: Benny Hunter, president, with Lucy Belle Eckles, Hopkinsville, Ky.; Mickey Warren, secretary, with Hamilton Long, Morganton; Morris Rosenberg, treasurer, with Evelyn ParadMes, At lanta, Ga.; Mac Nesbit, student eoun-' cil representative, with Emily Siler, Waynes ville. Dance leaders, Jack Fairley with Mamie Grace Smith, Greensboro; Billy Winstead with Betty Lamb, Charlotte; Martin Harmon with (Continued on page 2, column 5) Attention Mr. Clark: Swastikas at Carolina Is there a fifth column menace in Chapel Hill? Bill Stauber is the Daily Tar Heel's fifth columnist, but he isn't considered much of a menace. StilL a lot of people are wondering. For in the past three days two Nazi flags have been found fluttering in the breeze on the University campus. On Wednesday morning a homemade Nazi banner was hanging on the bell tower, just beneath one of the clocks. Yes terday morning another one was found on the water tank. Anyhow, the fifth column, a prank ster, Stauber, or whoever it is, has had his efforts counteracted by two local women who informed University authorities that there is a state law that the American flag shall be fly ing at all state institutions. South building consulted its law books, read the statute and complied.