AH candidates note.
Then go and vote.
Therell be no part y victory
For everybody is "UP"
Serving: Civilian and Military Students at UNC
volume lii sw
Business and Circulation: 8641
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1944
Editorial: F-SUi: News: F-3146, F-3147
NUMBER SW 30
uisBeinse Mount
Time Draws Near
it
it
it
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Carolina Workshop -
s-
Panel Discussion
Deals With Artist
As World Citizen
A panel discussion on the role of
the artist in today's world, with writ
ers, artists and musicians participat
ing; a bill of three new original plays,
a dance recital, a concert by the Wo
men's Glee Club andthe presentation
the program of the third Spring Festi
of a new radio play are features on
val of the Carolina Workshop to be
presented here throughout next week,
April 17-22.
The Carolina Workshop is an or
ganization of students and faculty
members Jiaving asits purpose the in
tegration and promotion of students'
activity in writing, music, theatre,
radio, fine arts, photography and
dancing especially in the creative
fields. It was organized in the fall of
1941.
Chairmen
Kat Hill, editor of the Tab Heel and
Professor Samuel Selden of the, De
partment of Dramatic Art, are serving
as chairman and faculty adviser of
the Festival program.
Opening Monday night in Graham
Memorial at 8 o'clock, the panel dis
cussion will "lead off the week's events.
Speakers will be Clare Leighton, well
known writer ; Professor J ohn Toms of
the Music Department; William Meade
Prince, acting head of the Art Depart
ment; Paul 'Green, the playwright, and
Professor Clemens Sommer of the Art
Department. "Phillips Russell, jour
nalism professor, will serve as inter
locutor.
Glee Club
The Women's Glee Club, under the
See WORKSHOP, page 4
Female Glee Club
To Climax Tour
With Concert Here
Climaxing a triumphant tour of four
service camps of this area, the Uni
versity women's glee club will give the
same concert of popular and semi
popular music for the benefit of towns
people and students in Hill Hall Tues
day, April 18, at 8 p. m., John Toms,
Director, announced today.
Elinor Link, Lois McCauley, and
Whitfield Lloyd, who compose a trio
which will assist the glee club, are all
voice majors. They are all good to
look at and sweet to hear and" will
leave their studies of art, songs and
opera to sing "My Shining Hour,"
"There Are Such .Things," and "Oh,
What a Beautiful Morning."
The glee club will sing Winne's
"Amarella," Scott's "Think On Me
Koutz's "The Little French Clock,
Romberg's "Lover, Come Back To Me"
See GLEE CLUB, page 4
Camel Cavaran Comes
Performs Monday
At Memorial Hall
By Mildred Johnson
The regiment of cadets, officers, and
crew will be in for a topflight enter
tainment when the Camel Caravan
rolls into Chapel Hill to entertain Navy
Pre-Flight personnel here Monday
evening.
Following the special pre-flight per
formance which is scheduled at 7:00
in Memorial Hall, a second showing
starting at 9:00 will be staged for the
University and townspeople.
Hanlon to Emcee
Tommy Hanlon, emcee, comedian,
and magician, who brings the star
packed Camel Caravan here, knows the
solution to the K. P. problem and will
let the service men in on the secret
when he performs his "Case of the
Vanishing Chicken." As Hanlon says,
"If you can't see it, you can't clean
it." 'Every G. I. will appreciate the
nifty solution, suitable to any snafed
detail, when Hanlon makes a fowl,
feathers and all, disappear right be
fore your eyes. -
Also included in the Caravan of
talent are the Morgan Sisters, a trio
See CARAVAN, page U
111!
Winslow
Economist
Dr. Winslow
Goes To WPB
Dr. Rex Winslow, of the Carolina
Economics department left Chapel
Hill last night on an indeterminant
leave of absence to accept a position
on the War Production Board as chief
of contract terminations in the statis
tic and research division of the WPB.
This is Winslow's second leave of
absence since he came to Carolina in
1929 as an Economics instructor. In
1 1940 he was given leave to accept a
position as associate economic advisor
to the office of the Secretary of Agri
culture. Dr. Winslow was born in,,Indianola,
la. Following four years at Simpson
College where he received his AB de
gree he taught in the Iowa public
schools. He took the work for his
MA degreee at the University of Illi
nois, for his doctorate at Carolina. He
taught at the University of Illinois
and the City College of New York be
fore coming to Carolina.
In addition to his work as an eco
nomics professor Winslow has been
serving currently as adviser to all
economics majors, as educational di
rector for the engineering science and
management war training program,
and as liason officer between the Uni
versity and the Southeastern insti
tute for 'commercial organization of
executives.
Winslow's work will be taken over
in the economics department by teach
ers Brown and Lloyd.
Pi Phi Open House
Members of the Pi Beta Phi sorority
will entertain at open house, 109 Hills
boro street, Sunday afternoon from
5-6:30 o'clock for the University Par
ty candidates. Everyone is invited to
attend, and meet the candidates.
it
I . ' "& L A : -j
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f l ' - 4 I i ' '
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teJ r x- ' - - fsr.:or -.' . :
TOMMY HANLON, emcee and magician on the Camel Caravan, is shown
performing his remarkable vanishing chicken trick. That's a mighty swell
looking chicken and it has very pretty lags. The bundle of beauty giving the
bird to Hanlon is. one of the show's Camelettes.
Council Festival Week Begins Monday
Army Order
Abolishes
Deferments
By Bob Rolnik
A sweeping directive by the national
selective service board, early this week,
killed virtually all student opportuni
ties for draft deferment. :
Notification of the action was sent
to President Frank Graham on April
7, by Leonard Carmichael, director of
the national roster of scientific and
specialized personnel.
The move abolishing existing defer
ment quotas will not affect the enroll
ment at Carolina at the present time
as radically as was supposed, explained
Dr. W. D. Perry, military information
director on the campus.
224 Are 4-F's
Out of the 786 men enrolled during
this spring, 224 are 4-F, approximate
ly 200 are below age and only 74 men
had been deferred and are now subr
ject to an Army call.
Under the abolished quota system,'
35 chemistry and eight physics stu
dents were deferred, while 31 men
were included in the pre-med, pre
dental and theology quotas. However,'
there are a number of underage stu-j
dents who have anticipated entering
the various quotas.
According to the announcement on
April 11, by the national selective ser
vice board in Washington, only four
classifications of students remain on
See ARMY, page U
Legislators Bass 4
Bill Giving Frosh
Right To Organize
Class -organization was installed
once more at Carolina when the stu
dent legislature passed a bill unani
mously at its Thursday night meeting
providing for freshman class organi
zation. The bill, which superceded the emer
gency bill passed last spring abol
ishing class government, calls for a
president, vice-president, secretary
and treasurer of the freshman class.
Freshmen will be classified as all
students who have-not completed more
than three quarters of two trimesters
work.
The election date of freshman class
officers will be decided by the commit
tee which drew up" the Bill. Machin
ery for the elections will be handled
by the elections committee of the leg
islature. The new speaker of the legislature,
to be elected April 18 in the general
campus elections, will take over the
top legislature post at that body's
next meeting on Thursday, April 20.
To Carolina
p. V
wm
Umstead
NC Symphony
Plays Classic
In Hill Tonight
Paul Stassevitch, distinguished New
York pianist, will play Tschaikowsky's
"Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in
B-flat" when he solos at the SEC and
State SymphoYiy Society sponsored
North Carolina Symphony Orchestra's
concert of classical music in Memorial
Hall tonight at 8:30.
Patsy Umstead, 16-year-old daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Umstead of Dur
ham, played Mendelssohn's "Concerto
No. 1 in G Minor" on the piano when
she soloed with the orchestra at the
free children's concert held in Hill
Hall at"2: 30 this afternoon.
Stassevitch, who was born in Sim
feropol, "Crimea, began the study of
violin at the age of four and the pi
ano at seven. At 16 he studied under
Leopold Auer in St. Petersburg and
made his debut as violinist in 1914 in
Moscow. His debut in "Western Eu
rope came two years later in Oslo, and
in 1924 he made his New York debut
in Carnegie Hall with the state sym
phony orchestra under Josef Stran-
See SYMPHONY, page b
Tar Heels Debate
Georgia Tech
In Two-way Meet
Plans were completed . Tuesday
night for the intercollegiate debate
which will be held here Saturday eve
ning, April 23 between North Caro
lina and Georgia Tech of Atlanta, Ga.
The University will be upholding the
negative side of the International Po
lice Force resolution. Bill Crisp and
Rene Bernard, President and Execu
tive Secretary respectively of the De
bate Council, will comprise the team
which meets Georgia Tech here.
On the same night, North Caro
lina's affirmative team will invade
Georgia Tech in Atlanta to complete
the reciprocal arrangement of these '
two schools for two debates. Kitty i
Kelly and Betsy Ross Howe, winners
of the Intramural Debate Tourna
ment, will form this team.
The Debate Council formally au
thorized the Executive Secretary to
arrange, if possible, an extended
three day tour for two Carolina De
baters during May. Tentative plans
schedule William and Mary, Univer
sity of Richmond, and Johns Hopkins
University to be engaged.
The Debate Council now meets at
8:45 every Tuesday night in the Grail
Room of Graham Memorial.
IRC To Meet
Sunday Night
The next meeting of the Interna
tional delations Club will be held in
the Roland Parker Lounge of Graham
Memorial, Sunday night at 7 o'clock,
chairman Wesley Bagby announced
today.
Topic for discussion will be "How
should we deal with 'war criminals'.'
Announcements will- also be made
about the forthcoming speaker presen
tations of the club. Visitors are in
vited.
61 Persons
allot in Coming Race
Suspense in campus politics mounts this week as the actual campaigning
for University and United Party candidates gets under way. Campus leaders
for next year will be decided by votes cast in Tuesday's election.
Charlie Frank Benbow and Harvey White will oppose each other for the
top campus pot of president of the student body. University Party candidate
Benbow has been a member of the
Play makers
Will Present
Experimentals
The Carolina Playmakers are pre
senting their 96th bill of experimental
plays in the Playmakers Theatre on
Wednesday, April 19, at 7:30 P. M.
All are new one-act plays written by
students in the course in playwriting
conducted by Professor Koch. This
production is sponsored by The Caro
lina Workshop Festival.
First on the program is "Hotel
Armageddon," by Carrington Cross, of
Uichmond, Virginia. Subtitled "a fable
of the last resort," it tells what hap
pens when Aloma Carroll, a movie star,
played by Kat Hill, meets Mr. Lambert,
a hotel clerk, played by J ames T. Smith,
in a place out of this world. Tom Avera
appears as the romantic lead, Lt. Craig
Williams, and Kathleen Arnold plays
his wife, Elise. Other members of the
cast are Martha Gillespie, Harvey
Auerbach, Bill Ayers, Sherman Laza
rus, Fred Salk, Warren James and
Jack Brock. The author is directing
and the stage setting is designed by
Randall Brooks.
Hanig's Play
David Hanig, of Trenton, New Jer
sey, and holder of the Kay Kyser
Scholarship in Playwriting, offers on
this bill a play in blank verse, "Thirty
Minutes Out of Midnight." The scene
is a park bench in the City, and the
play is a psychological study of a man
and his attempt at psychic murder.
Tom Avera appears as Joel, the gentle
man in question, and Renee, the girl
friend, is played by Mary Thomas.
Dean Newman, Leah Richter, and Bill
Ayers complete the cast. The direc
tion is by Betty Taylor and Peggy
Caudill designed the setting.
Kat Hill, of New Bern, North Caro
lina, and editor of the Tar Heel, of
fers a comedy of the news behind to
morrow s neaulines, Morning Hidi-
tion." With the stage heaped in desks,
typewriters and old newspapers, and
a litter of wolves and newshounds
turned loose, only the gayest, madest
things could happen. Tom Avera,
James' T. Smith, Fred Salk, Kathleen
Arnold, and Carrington Cross play the
paper waiters. Joan Martin, as the
mag editor, Druelya, and Stanley Cor-
bett, as the freshman, Archibald
Lavander Smith II, offer relieving con
trast. Millicent Hosch is the director,
and James T. Smith designed the set
ting. As heretofore, Proff Koch will intro
duce the playwrights and invite com
ments and suggestions from the audi
ence. Everyone is invited.
Phi Beta Kappa
Initiates Members
At its meeting on April 13, the
North Carolina Alpha chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa initiated the following
juniors:
Thomas Clark Fitzgerald, Jr. ; JLuby
Alexander Harper, Jr.; John Charles
Morrow, III; John Moore Ruth; Bev
erly Nathaniel Sullivan, Jr.; Clifton
Forest Westi Jr.; and Jesse Noah
Williams, Jr.
Three seniors: Sarah Irwin Davis,
Helen Byrnes Lanneau and Polly
Frances Squire.
By virtue of the by-laws of this
chapter the junior having the high
est average automatically becomes
next year's president. Jesse Noah
Williams, Jr., is the new president.
Clifton Forest West, Jr., was chosen
as vice-president and secretary.
Dean House and Dr. E. L. Mackie
were reelected to the executive coun
cil, and Dr. Almonte C. Howell was
also chosen for the council.
Slated For
Student Council for two years and an
honor roll student for three years. He
is an SAE, a member of the Grail, Gim
ghoul, the student audit board and a
former member of the UNC boxing
team. United Party nominee Harvey
White is chairman of the CPU, a mem
ber of the Interfraternity Council,
treasurer and vice-president of the .
DKE fraternity and a member of the
present campus cabinet. He was on the
editorial staff of the 1944 Yackety
Yack and sang for two years in the
glee club.
Coed Campaign
For the first time in University his
tory a coed is opposing a Carolina gen
tleman for the speakership of the stu
dent legislature. Libba Wiggins, Unit
ed Party candidate, is president of the
CICA, secretary of the Valkyries, a
member of the Women's Senate and
YWCA. Charlie Vance, University
Party candidate, is well acquainted with
the machinery of the legislature, hav
ing served throughout this year as par
liamentarian and chairman of the ways
and means and rules committees. Vance
belongs to the Sigma Nu fraternity and
the Grail. He is treasurer of the In
terfraternity council, manager of the
sophomore football team and has main
tained an honor roll average.
' For'Tar Heel chieftain the Univer
sity party has named Horace Carter,
AS, V-12, while the United Party is
backing Jimmy Wallace. Carter is now
serving as co-managing editor of the
Tar Heel and working at the Univer
sity News Bureau. For the past five
years he has free lanced for a num
ber of North Carolina papers and has
been on the staff of the News and Press
in Albemarle, the Winston-Salem Sen
tinel and the Navy paper in Charles
ton. Wallace has been on the staff of
the TAR HEEL for three and one-half
years, serving as reporter, editorial
writer and columnist. He has also writ
ten for the Carolina Mag and is a mem
ber of the CPU. For three, years he
was freshman counselor and is a for
mer member of the Graham Memorial
board of directors.
Feminine Dynasty
Two coeds oppose each other for the
editorship of the Carolina Mag, Shirley
Hartzell and Barbara Swift. The win
ner will be the third consecutive girl
to edit the Mag. At Sullins junior col
lege where she spent her first two years
See POLITICS, page 4
TH Staff Members
Give Endorsement
By Kat Hill
W. Horace Carter, AS, V-12, man
aging editor of the TAR HEEL, and
candidate for the editorship, received
the staff endorsement at a meeting held
Tuesday afternoon of the editorial,
news and sports staff of the paper. ,
Carter, who is running for editor on
the University Party ticket, has served
a managing editor of the TAR HEEL
since February, when he succeeded
Lloyd Koppel. Prior to his appointment
to the managing editorship by the PU
Board, Carter served as sports editor
of the TAR HEEL. A former Carolina
student, he returned to Carolina this
fall from the fleet. A major in the de
partment of journalism, Carter has be
hind him already a long record as a
newspaperman.
For the past five years he has free
lanced for a myriad of North Carolina
papers and has been on the staffs of
the News and Press in Albemarle, the
Winston-Salem Sentinel and the Navy
paper in Charleston. For two years he
has worked with the University News
Bureau, and during his second year at
the University worked as night editor
of the DAILY TAR HEEL.
Carter's opponent in the forthcoming
elections is United Party's Jimmy Wal
lace, who will make his third try for
the editorship.
9