Whs EDITORIALS: "You May See . Marine Writes Letter See Here College Conference Legislate re Selects Plan Coed Banquet Serving Civilian and Military Students at UNC VOLUME LIII SW Business and Circulation : 8C41 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1945 . Editorial: F-31U. News: F-3146, T-&U7 NUMBER SW 47 oe Here TtDmorFOw For Coiaf ereimce A a ice jjfSP1' " Coed Senate Plans Banquet For Thursday Three-Day Event Starts Tuesday . Sponsored by the Coed Sen ate, the annual coed leadership training program wilt be staged Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs day of next week with the two fold purpose of giving practical training to all newly-elected coed officers and at the same time to develop the potentialities of non-office holding members. Highlight of the week will be the formal installation banquet Thursday evening at 6 o'clock at the Carolina Inn. " Two mass meetings, to be held in the North-South room of Graham Memorial, have been scheduled for all coeds who are officers or members of any campus organization. Tues day evening at 7 o'clock Bill Poteat, assistant secretary of the YMCA, will speak on "Playing the Part," and Wednesday at 7 o'clock Mrs. R. H. Wettach, wife of Dean Wettach of the Law School, will talk on parlia mentary procedure". Both meetings will last about 20 minutes. Officers' Instruction Following these will be group meet ings directed by retiring student leaders to instruct newly-elected of ficers. Monday night at 7:30 o'clock the following discussions will be held: presidents and vice-presidents, Sara McEachern and Libba Wiggins; secretaries Winkie '. White and Tom my Slayton; social chairmen, Arlene Newell and Nancy Greenwall. Wednesday at 7:30 o'clock the fol lowing are scheduled: treasurers, Dixie Bodge and Ann Webster; pub licity chairmen, Brooksie Popkins and Arlene Newell; honor council and house councils, Pat Hughes Tharon Young. Graham Featured and President Frank P. Graham will be featured speaker at the installation banquet Thursday evening. Kitty Kelly, retiring speaker of the Coed Senate, will preside, and top Wom- an s Government association officers See COED SENATE, page 4 Person Hall Show Of Expert Photos Starts Tomorrow An exhibition of photographs by a group of the nation's leading experi mental photographers opens Sunday at Person Hall Art Gallery. The show, titled "Captured Light," will continue through Monday, April 30. Sponsored by the Norlyst Gallery of New York, the exhibit is an annual event to which photographers from all parts of the country are invited to submit works. Pictures included range from real istic landscapes and studies in texture, light, and shadow to abstract prints with , various photographic effects. Brief text panels show the methods used to achieve interesting and at times startling results, while at the same time the collection is a review of finest contemporary works. Many of the pictures have been shown in sa lons in numerous cities while others are the originals for reproductions used by advertisers and periodicals such as Verve, Fortune, and Vogue. An added attraction to gallery visits ors will be the temporary darkroom installed in the gallery. An oppor tunity will be given to those who have never worked in the medium to make shadowgraphs with various materials furnished. Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock a gallery talk "Photography Today" will be given by Kenneth Ness, acting head of the Art department. Gallery hours in the exhibit are from 10 to 5 o'clock daily and from 2 to 5 o'clock on Sundays. Read Editorial You May See Your Name Printed!" On Page Two. New Legislature Selects Douglass Hunt To Represent UNC Regionalism In Scheduled For Conference Is First Of Seven . outstanding economists and Saturday, April 21, for a one-day CRIL Will Bring Third Speaker Here April 22 Dr. Ira De A, Reid of Atlanta Uni versity will appear Sunday night, Ap ril 22 in Hill Hall as the third speak er presented by the Council for Re ligion in Life, Well-known through out the South, Dr. Reid talkson this campus for the first time. Dr. Reid, who is head of the de partment of sociology at Atlanta uni versity, one of the Southls largest negro universities, has been active in the work of the Southern Regional council. He has worked in close con tact with Dr. Howard Odum, presi dent of this organization and head of the University department of sociol ogy. Before coming to Atlanta univer sity in 1934, Dr. Reid was associated with the Urban league movement, holding the position of industrial sec retary of the New York Urban league and later director of research for the National Urban league in New York. Dr. Reid is the author of several books and monographs dealing with many aspects of the race question, With Arthur Raper, he has published the book, Sharecroppers All, a study widely used by students in the South. Other presentations of the CRIL to the campus have been Martin Hall, authority on the problem of post-war Germany, and Morris Ernst, attorney for the Civil Liberties union, who ap peared in connection with the recent Institute of Human Relations. Music Broadcast Students and members of the music facultv will perform over station WDNC from 12:45 to 1 p.m. today. The program featuring Robert Schu mann's works, consists of "Mond nacht," and "Dream Fancies," by Rob ert Kohl. Raleierh. Baritone; "Ro- nacht," by Robert Kohl, Raleigh, bari tone; "Romance" Op. 28, No. 2, and "Dream Fancies," Carolyn Bowman, Shelbv. Dianist: and "Die Lotus- r r a. ' Wallace Heads Dormitory Council Without opposition, Jimmy Wallace became the new president of the Inter- Dormitory council, in the elections held Tuesday night. He succeeded Tom Robinson, who had finished out the unexpired term of Grant Sorrell. Also elected were Charles Warren as vice-president, Dave Lilienthal as secretary, . and Tom Corpening as treasurer.. On the following night, Tom Robinson was elected as the In ter-Dorm representative to the Stu dent Legislature. The date for having a Yackety Yack picture was moved up to Thursday night, April 19, and the members de cided to meet in the lounge of GraJiam Memorial at 7:30 o'clock. The Coun cil had previously voted to include in the picture all former Inter-Dormitory council members back to the sum mer of 1944, as well as present mem bers. - At the Tuesday session, a motion was passed allowing dormitory man agers to vote in the council, -if elected to an office. . Dorm managers had pre viously been denied voting privileges under any conditions. World Economy One Day Stand Kind To Be Held Here sociologists will come to Carolina on working conference on Regionalism in EWorld Economics. This conference is being sponsored jointly by the Institute of World Economics, which has its headquarters in Washington, D. C, and the Uni versity 's Institute for Research in Social Science, headed by Dr. Gordon Blackwell. Dr. Blackwell is serving as chairman of the conference plan ning committee. Sessions for the conference, which is the first of its kind dealing with this subject to be held here, will get under way Saturday morning at 10 o'clock in room 403, Alumni, with Dr. Blackwell presiding. President Frank P. Graham will give the wel- coming address, following which will be r talks by the conference leaders. Dr. Odum First Speaker Dr. Howard W. Odum, head of the University Sociology department, will lead off with a discussion of "Prom ises of Regional Balance." Following this Samuel W. Boggs, chief of the division of Geography and Cartog raphy, U. S. Department of Sjtate, will speak on "Transportation Fac tors and Regional Development," and Morris L. Cooke, consulting engineer in management and authority on mul tiple purpose river development, will discuss "Regional Development Proj ects Abroad." Next on the conference agenda is a See REGIONALISM, page U i Ward Proposes Organization Plan For New Monogram Club The University Athletic Council met Tuesday night and approved the plan proposed by CAA President Bill Ward for reorganizing the Monogram club. The Monogram club has not func tioned since the inauguration of the V-12 program in 1943. It was dis solved then because the turnover in the student body was rapid and the accelerated academic programs of most of the men left them with little time for extra-curricular activities. Now that the service units on cam- pus have become more assimilated into University life the club can be returned to its former place of promi nence. Under normal conditions there are three student members of the Athletic council; the President of the Student Body, the President of the Athletic association and a member .elected by the Monogram club. Due to the inac tivity of this group in recent years the students have not had their full representation on the Council. First Meeting Ward has announced that an or ganizational meeting will be held in Classes Today After 11 O'clock Cancelled For Memorial Service A memorial service honor ing President Roosevelt will be held today at 11 o'clock in Memorial Hall. All classes in all depart ments scheduled after this time will be cancelled; also all stores in Chapel Hill will close. As the Tar Heel goes to press the Navy Unit on cam pus is expecting orders re garding a service. If these or ders come through by 11 o'clock the service will be held in Kenan Stadium for all Navy and civilian students and all residents of Chapel Hill. At Parley Smith Elected Chairman Of Ways, Means Brinkley Chosen V Elections Head In a routine meeting, the first for the new student legislature, Douglass Hunt was elected by acclamation as Carolina's repre sentative to the conference of Southern Colleges and Univer sities to meet here tomorrow. Hunt had previously been proposed along with three other candidates, Bill Crisp. Sam McEachern and Ralph Glenn, by . the convention com mittee. The committee turned the ac tual election of the delegate over to the student legislature which it con sidered a group more representative of the campus as a whole. The floor was opened for further nominations by the speaker pro tem, Allen Pannill, but no nominations were made, and following a period of discussion Hunt was elected by ac clamation.x Smith Selected A. B. Smith, who served as chair man of the rules committee for the last term, was unanimously elected chairman of the ways . and means committee," succeeding Libba ; Wig gins. Walt Br4nkley was chosen elections committee head succeeding Ed Gaither, and Charlie Warren was See SMITH ELECTED, page U the Monogram club lodge behind Woollen Gym next Tuesday night at 7:30. Any men students who have won letters in previous years and the following lettermen of this year's varsity teams in major and minor sports, team managers and men cheerleaders are eligible for mem bership in the Monogram club and are urged to attend this meeting: Football: Tom Abel, Fred Bauer, Jim Camp, Red Collins, Ed Golding, Sam Hay, John Kerns, Del Leather man, Ed Twohey, Bill Voris. Wrest ling: Bill Edwards, D. D. Franze, Wade Isaacs, Laurie Hooper, Jack Shaw, Dick Willingham and S. G. Smith, manager. Basketball: Bill Allen, Don Ander son, John Dillon, Jim Jordan, Walter Markin, Ira Norfolk, Bob Paxton, Clive Thompson. Baseball: Bill For rest. Boxing: Jim Lodge, Joe Mal See WARD PROPOSES, page 4 Campaign For Used Clothing Being Conducted; Collection Box To Be Placed In YM Building Campus Campaign Chairman Chosen Throughout the month of April a vast drive is being conducted for the collection of used clothing for desti tute peoples in the countries ravaged by war. Here on the campus the project is jointly sponsored by the YMCA and the YWCA with Rev. William Poteat and Mrs. Kay Ferrell as directors. Student chairmen are Barbara Blit- zer and Pat Kelly. The collection depot for this area is the Parish House of the Episcopal church. Clothing may be taken there at any time during the month. For the convenience of students desiring to aid in the drive, a box will be placed in the Y Monday through Wednesday. Local Chairmen Local chairmen have been appoint ed for each dormitory, fraternity and See CLOTHES DRIVE, page 4 Tomorrow r V. - -'-: s '' f I l SPEAKER HUNT Illegal Balloting Calls For Another Freshman Election Freshman elections held last Wed nesday to elect a president and vice president of the class have been de clared void by the Freshman Friend ship council. A check of the voting register revealed that at least three persons who were not eligible to vote had been marked off as voters. Jack Kirklapd candidate .f or Jfice president rolled up a sufficient margin to make his election valid in spite of the illegal ballots. Pat Kelly nosed out Farrell Potts by only three votes so another election will have to be held to determine who shall be presi dent of the class." The election was under the jurisdic tion of the Freshman Friendship council because the Elections commit tee of the Legislature was unable to take care of the election while the ma jor campus elections were being held. The FFC is trying to get the Elections committee to handle the next election but as the TH goes to press no def inite arrangements have been made, Pat-Kelly, president for a day, said that he was "definitely in favor of having another election" because he did not want anyone "to have any doubt about the honesty of the whole affair." Band Rehearsal University band rehearsals next week will be held on Tuesday and Thursday nights beginning at 7:15 o'cloclq, according to an announce ment made by Earl Slocum, director, last night. The practices were originally slat ed for Monday and Thursday, but a last-minute change has been made necessary. fA' -' v shirty! t V - ' , , .-T : -'" ' : :-,v.v.. f Z' ' ' ' j " ' ' " '' -i - ) ::--y-:f:-:-:-x-v: v .vywv j.jji " ' iJSc JUa..r...-L...?SltaJ!...A.J -.. . LmJI Group To Send Two Delegates To California Problems Facing Parley Is Topic With replies from 32 schools still to be received, delegates from 34 Southern colleges and universities had at Tar Heel press time accepted invitations to attend the widely important conference of Southern students on world peace plans to be held here tomorrow. To the 70 telegrams sent out last week-end to colleges all over the South, ranging from Virginia to Oklahoma, only four refusals had been received. Estimates are that about 50 will attend. Thursday night's session of the Student Legislature elected Douglass Hunt to represent Carolina at the meet. Sunday's conference will consider the problems facing the April 25 San Francisco United Nations parley and will coordinate a plan for study on Southern campuses of Bretton Woods, Dumbarton Oaks and other plans re lated to world peace organization. The group will elect two delegates to attend the San Francisco meeting as observers and representatives. Session Opens at 10 O'clock The session will open at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning on the fourth floor of the Alumni Building with Bill Po teat, assistant secretary of the YMCA, presiding. The opening ad dress -will be -made by an official of the Federal State department, unan nounced as yet, who will speak on "Dumbarton Oaks, Bretton Woods, and the Students' Responsibilities in the Peace." All students are invited to attend. Following this address will be a discussion of proposed resolutions concerning world peace organization and the election of a resolution com mittee to draw up suggested pro posals. Luncheon will be served at Hillel House to conference guests, who will reconvene at 2 o'clock to hear the resolutions committee's report. Its proposals will then be debated and adopted on the floor. Delegates will then elect their two representatives to the San Francisco meeting, a permanent chairman of the Southern students' organization and a permanent executive commit tee. Plans are that this committee will stay over until Monday to work out a more effective and lasting or ganization. The conference will close at 6 See CONFERENCE, page U AACC "Dutch" Lunch The AAC Club will entertain the Asheville drama groups, who are here for the festival, at a "dutch" lunch eon at 1 o'clock this afternoon at the Carolina Inn. y o e