Wm EDITORIALS: NEWS: Colleges Organize Lucille Mixes CRIL Speaker - .So. Little Effort Menagerie Mirror The Ram Sees Serving Civilian and Military Students atUNC BodaeM and Circulation: tUl CHAPEL BILL, N. C TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1945 EditorUI: F-3141. New: F-31. F-3147 NUMBER SW 43 joiiitMierE Universities FQ)ffiii Permanent' Grow CRIL To Bring Prominent Atlanta Sociologist Mere Sunday vvruuXfLU Liill OVV Professor Is Authority On Race Question Reid Will Assume Hill Hall Rostrum Coming to Carolina next Sun day night, April 22, as the third of a series of nationally-known speakers will be Dr. Ira De A. Reid, head of the department of sociology at Atlanta University, one of the South's largest Negro universities. He will speak in Hill Hall. Dr. Reid is associate executive di rector of the Southern Regional Coun cil, of which Dr. Howard Odum, head of the University department of so ciology, is president. A recognized authority on the race question, Suri dayV speaker is also editor of Phy lon, the Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture. Well Known Author He is the author of a number of books and monographs dealing with many aspects of the question. Among them are "Adult Education Among Negroes," "In a Minor Key," "Negro Membership m American Labor Unions," "The Urban Negro Worker in the United States," and, with Ar thur Raper, "Sharecroppers All." Dr. Reid is an alumnus of Morehouse- College, the University of Pittsburgh, and Columbia University, where he received a Ph.D.. degree hi the social sciences. Befoi'coming t- Atlanta -Univer sity in 1934, . Dr. Reid was associated with the Urban League movement. He was industrial secretary of the New York Urban League and later served as director of research for the See DR.. REID, page i. $- w'"C" "11 . :-: ": . ? " vj""..-- ' ,:!: j'XvTOXv; : -t 'vX'M-iw:':-:-:'.-:-;-: - DR. REID Heated Discussion On UNC Politics Sparks Di Meeting At the regular meeting of the Dialec tic Senate last Wednesday night a heated discussion developed on the floor when campus politics were intro duced with a bill which would require the abolition of campaign expenses in student government elections. Substitute bills were' offered by many of the Senators of the Di as well as visitors for the evening. Hot contro versial issues which centered primarily around differences in opinion over values of political parties in campus politics were fought iri a violently de bated battle which resulted in an armed peace between factions on the floor. Due to the interest in the question of campus politics which was exhibit ed in this meeting, the Di has decided See DI SENATE, page 3. Coed -Banflnet Slated Thiirsda Bretton Woods Topic For CPU Hot Discussion Thompson Elected New Vice-President Members of the Carolina Political Union and visitors for the evening met around the roundtable in the Grail Room in Graham Memorial Sunday night for an informative discussion on the Bretton Woods proposals for an international monetary fund and an international bank. Prior to the opening of this discus sion a factual report on thej recent Chapultepec Conference was present ed bv Mvra Sklafev. ' ; ,: , . 1 speak on "Playinsr the Part," and Training Program To Begin Today; Graham Will Speak A formal installation banquet Thursday night at 6 o'clock at the Carolina Inn will highlight the an nual coed leadership training program to be held today, Wednesday and Thursday of this week. Dn Frank P. Graham, president of the University, will be the featured speaker, and all coeds are urged to attend. Kitty Kelly, retiring speaker of the Coed Senate, which is sponsoring the program, will preside. Top. Woman s Government association officers elect ed in March and new coed organiza tion heads will be presented and in stalled. Incoming members of the Co ed Senate, the honor council, and WGA representatives to Legislature will also be introduced. j Purpose Of Program Two-fold purpose of the leadership training program is to give practical training to all newly-elected officers of coed organizations and at the same time to develop the potentialities of non-office holding members. Two mass meetings, to be held in the North-South room of Graham Me morial, have been scheduled for all coeds who are officers or members of any campus organization. Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock William Poteat, assistant secretary of the YMCA, will World Economics Conference Scheduled Here For April 21 : A conference on Regionalism in World Economics, the first of its kind to appear on the University's campus, is to be held here, April 21. The conference is co-sponsored by. the Institute for Research in Social Science, founded in 1924 by Dr. Howard W. Odum to encourage and stimu late research in the social sciences and to serve as a training center for research and planning personnel; and by the Institute of World Economics, formed in 1941 in Washington tci study the problems between nations and to examine the plan of the United States in the emerging world of economy. Dr. Gordon Blackewll is director of ton Woods proposal was Bill Crisp who presented a summary of the re suits of this conference. After this report the 'floor was thrown open for questions, criticisms, and general dis cussiori in which visitors were en couraged to take part. The general opinion expressed seemed to be favorable towards these proposals and to believe that the in ternational monetary fund and the in ternational bank would be important steps on the road to world peace. Pos sible influences of Bretton Woods on the coming conference in San Fran cisco were also discussed. In a short business meeting held af ter the discussion period, Roy Thompr son was elected to fill the vacancy cre ated by the resignation of Libba Wig gins, vice-chairman of the Union. Next week the discussion will center around Harry Truman and the pos sible changes in the future course of our government under his direction. A factual report will be presented be fore the discussion period by Bill Smith. Since it is believed that Harry Tru man is the man of the hour in the United States, all students are invited to attend this special session of the Carolina Political Union next Sunday night at 8 o'clock in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. Lucille Mixes Quaint Cocktail Of Journalism, Matrimony By W. H. Hipps, Jr. If wedding bells ring anytime soon for Lucille Cathey, she can blame, or thank Professor J. Roy Parker s class in country newspaper produc tion. - i Lucille says she is not planning to marry anyone before June 25 at the earliest, because she wants to get her A.B. degree in journalism at the Uni versity. We discussed her part in what is becoming known all over the Univer sity campus as "Lucille's Matrimonial Bureau" over the supper table. The first question to ask was, nat urally, "How did a' pretty, brown haired, blue-eyed girl get mixed up with journalism and marriage at the same time?" . Hillsboro Paper Cause "Well, the country newspaper class here at the University uses a weekly paper published at Hillsboro as a sort of laboratory. One day last se mester, we saw an advertisement m the 'Personals' column of the paper which created quite a stir of interest in the class." When asked if she had a copy of the advertisement with her, she re plied by showing me a clipping which read: "If you want to get married, write Box 853, J , Idaho. Send stamp." "I wrote to the address listed in the ad," Lucille continued, "and re ceived from them a printed form let ter telling me the purpose of the Union Club which had sponsored the ad." After rummaging around in her pocketbook for a few seconds, she handed me the sheet. If You Want To Marry Her name was written in pencil at the top and the president of the club had signed in pencil at the bottom. Here are some of the more interest ing statements taken from that form sheet: "Yes, we can help you find a husband or wife as this club is strict See MATRINMONY, page 3. Wettach, wife of Dean Wettach of the Law School, will talk on parliament ary procedure. Both meetings will last about 20 minutes. Following these will be group meet ings directed by retiring student lead ers to instruct newly-elected officers. Monday night at 7:30 o'clock the fol lowing discussions will be held : presi dents and vice-presidents, Sara Mc Eachern and Libba Wiggins; secre taries, Winkie White and Tommy Slayton ; social chairmen, Arlene New ell and Nancy Greenwall. Wednesday at 7:30 o'clock the fol lowing are scheduled: treasurers, Dixie Bodge and Ann Webster; publi city chairmen, Brooksie Popkins and Arlene Newell; honor council and See TRAINING PROGRAM, page 3. the University's Institute as well as chairman of the conference planning committee. Miss Katharine Jocher is assistant director. Mr. Lewis L. Locher, head of the Institute of World Economics, is a noted economist, sociologist and au thor, and was formerly associated with the Brookings Institution, the Inter national Labor Office in Geneva, and the National Resources planning Board. The planning committee consists of G. W. Blackwell, W. P. Friederich, R. M. Grumman, and M. S. Heath. ; The conference will get under way at 10 o'clock Saturday morning in 403, Alumni building, after a wel come by Dr. Frank P. Graham. The distinguished speakers of the confer ence include Wroe Alderson, Phila delphia economist and experienced market analyst; Louis, H. Bean, econ omist with the Bureau of the Budg et; Samuel W. Boggs, Chief of the Division of Geography and Cartog raphy of the:U. S. Department - of State and professor at the Ameri can University: E. J. Coil, Execu tive Director of "the National Plan ning Association in Washington; Mor ris L. Cooke, consulting engineer in management and authority on multiple-purpose river development; and Amos E. Taylor, director of the Bu reau of Foreign and Domestic Com merce in Washington. At the morning session Dr. Howard W. Odum will sneak on "Premises of Regional Balance," Mr. Boggs on 'Transportation Factors and Region al Development," and Mr. Cooke on Regional Development Projects Abroad." A discussion will follow im mediately afterwards. A "Dutch" luncheon will be held at See ECONOMICS, page 4. From Dr. Frank Men and Women of Carolina: Much of the beauty and charm of Chapel Hill is in the trees and grass and flowers. The flowers come and go; the grass is with us always. To cut up the beautiful green campus with irresponsible and ugly paths is to mar the beauty and hurt the spirit of the University itself. It is a source of gratification to us all that the students themselves have taken the initiative to save the beauty of the campus. The Uni versity Faculty Committee on Buildings and Grounds and the Adminis tration are cooperating with the students by putting up money for the restoration of the top-soil and grass for the sake of the beauty and spirit of the campus. The test of the real freedom of the student body is the acceptance of responsibility for daily citizenship in little things, which become great things in expressing the real spirit of both freedom and democratic responsibility. The students themselves have developed a campus life, a freedom and responsibility of their own whose rootage is deep in the soil of this place and in the subsoil of one hundred and fifty years of history and tradition. It is our faith that there is no freer, more responsible, more developmental student self-government anywhere than the campus de mocracy grown here in the one hundred and fifty years since Hinton James became the beginning of student life at the University of North Carolina. The message of this century and a half to us in this complex world of strain and struggle is that liberty requires responsibility and that rights require duties, and that the risks of freedom require the protection of a simple respect for sobriety and human decency, rigorous thoroughness and honesty in scholarship, a daily regard for the charm and beauty of our grass, trees, and flowers, and a vigorous sense of honor in all relations. Something happens here when hills, skies, for ests, and youth get together. Sunset behind the hills, skyline above the forest, unbroken greenness, majestic trees, song and story, picture and play, prayer and aspiration are stuff out of which the human spirit builds the nobler mansions of the soul and releases the spirit of youth to have a creative participation in his own education. Here in the woods of Orange teachers and trees, campus and traditions, library and labora tories, within walls of ancient stone, in response to great human needs in North Carolina and beyond have, with the voices of one hundred and fifty years, called to youth to be intelligent, adventurous and courageous in their struggles and hopes of the American dream to make the world a freer and fairer place for all people as brothers of men and sons of God. Our little campus is a vital part of this world. Let us all join as teachers and students to make it more beautiful and free in its response to the noblest aspirations of youth. (Signed) FRANK P. GRAHAM.; French Group Calls Meeting For Saturday Lieut. Riviere To Assist Club Opportunities for students taking French here to gain conversational ex perience with masters of the language are presented by the coming re-organi zation of the French club, Le Cercle Francais. The first meeting will be on Satur day afternoon at 3 o'clock, and the plan ning program will be under the direc tion of University French faculty pro fessors Hugo Giduz, U. T. Holmes, James Smith, Raymond Andes and Cal vin Claudel, who are members of Le Cercle Francais. Lieutenant Guy, Riviere of the French Detachment will attend club meetings with a number of French cadets, and while students of French are practicing their French in conver sation, the cadets will be able to im prove their English in the same fash ion. Besides exchanging conversation, entertainment programs are being planned. Students interested in helping on the entertainment committee can contact Mrs. Vera Scales, 106 Church Street, phone 4241, or Calvin Claudel, 315 Murphey Hall, phone 3891 or Apart ment 24, Carolina Inn, phone F-2286. Special Election Chairman Walt Brinkley of the Legislature's elections committee announced a special election to fill the vacated Honor Council position of Dick Ford. The election will take place on this coming Monday, and only male civilians will be allowed to vote. Today is the deadline for handing in nominations to the "elections committee, and all candidates must present a record of campaign ex penditures to Chairman Brinkley by Friday. Hunt Selected To Represent College Group Poteat Presides Over Conference Representatives from 50 southern colleges from Virginia to Oklahoma met here Sunday and laid the groundwork for a permanent organization of south ern colleges with headquarters at Carolina and selected Doug lass Hunt of Carolina and Sgt. Maurice Clifford, ASTP, of Me harry Medical College, as the group's official delegates to the San Francisco World Security Conference. The plans for the conference were drawn up less than a week ago. Growing from the initiative of a group of students here, telegrams were sent to 50 colleges and univer sities in the South including both negro and white institutions to at tend the one-day meeting. As for financing, the conference adopted the resolutions committee proposal that each school represented at the conference "endeavor to raise a minimum of $50 to pay the ex penses of the two delegates." Alternate, delegates chosen to go to San Francisco were Charles Proc tor of Fisk University, and John Manahan of University of Virginia. Organization To Be Permanent Having voter to make their organ ization permanent, under the name See HUNT SELECTED, page U. Old Clothes Drive Ends Tomorrow; Blankets Needed The YM and YWCA campus drive for old clothes, in coordination with the National Clothing Salvage Drive, will be concluded in the Y tomorrow. Student managers Pat Kelly and Bar bara Blitzer have appointed chairmen in each dormitory, sorority and fra- ternity houses, as well as set up a booth in the Y. Monday's collection lagged behind the expected quota, and the deficit must be made up today and tomorrow if the Campus Quota is to be met. While the booth will be closed after tomorrow, a receiving station will be maintained for the remainder of the month in the Episcopal Parish House, by Mrs. Kay Farrell and Rev. William Poteat, local salvage heads. National Chairman, Henry J. Kai See CLOTHES DRIVE, page 3 Coed Speaker Has Weakness For Hats, ' White Shoulders ' By Mildred Kresnik "To know Lib is to like her," is, the comment voiced by the roommate of the Coed Senate's new speaker and echoed throughout the campus. When the gavel of the Senate changes hands next week it will go to a coed who has gained a reputation as a competent, hard worker with a delightful sense of humor. A good student, who loves people, Lib is fully aware of the re sponsibility upon her shoulders for the coming year, and with a serious ness offset only by a sparkling smile she pledges herself to the service of woman's government. Slim, auburn-haired Lib Schofield calls Macon, Georgia, her official resi dence, but her heart is in Chapel Hill The daughter of an army engineer, she has lived in many places in the South, but has spent her high school years in Chapel Hill where she de clared she'd like to live forever. Favorite Pastime One of Lib's favorite pastimes is reading and her pet gripe is the lack of time to make use of the library. ib is majoring in French and would ike to work abroad after the war. Her college career began in Lynch- burg, va., where she attenaea Ran dolph Macon for two years. Since See COED SPEAKER, page 4. LIB SCHOFIELD 8 B a r s t t e f Ic e r