PAGE FOUR THE TAR HEEL TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1945 ? Philosophy Professor Is Parley Delegiate Professor L. O. Kattsoff of the Philosophy department will take part in the sixth conference on Science, Philosophy, and Religion to be held in New York City in late August or early September, according to an an nouncement received from the Phil osophy department. The theme of the conference is ''Bridges for Cultural Understand ing." .This series of annual confer ences is held to broaden the vision of workers in various fields by showing tne interconnections ana mutual in fluences among them. Each member attending submits a paper in ad vance. They are read at the confer ence but are sent to all the other members. The papers form the basis for group discussions, and are later published in volume form. FINK x i 'ft i 1 v Itlural Standings A League Phi Kappa Sigma Zeta Psi Med School No. 1 Phi Delta Theta Steele A 7 TH To Summarize CPU Discussions (Continued from first page) mediately cooperation with the Sum mer Institutes which Dr. Brown and his staff have already provided. Dr. Fink holds the Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania and the special professional master of social work degree from the Penn sylvariia School of Social Work. He was director of the social work train ing program at the University of Beginning with this issue, the Tar Georgia and has had experience in Heel will publish every Tuesday on standard field work and training the editorial, page a summary of the agencies in social work. J discussions from the CPU roundtable. Has -Distinguished Record J These summaries will be a condensed His record includes headworker, I review of the opinions on whatever T Y f ' ft 111 ' i TT ; I nrtliT'lQl ICCllO Yn 1T1A Jirtm-nnn 4 n university oetuement riouse. rmia- 1 uiovuooco m delphia: , Director, Transient Pro- its regular Sunday night meeting. gramy Department of Public Welfare, B League Sigma Chi I Smith Raiders Med School No. 2 ATO Bainbridge Aces Kappa Alpha C League Corsairs Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Nu .. Hillel House SAE IZBT D League W 11 7 5 5 - 1 W 11 9 8 .. 4 - 3 . 1 W . 9 . 9 . 7 5 4 0 L 1 - 5 6 7 10 L 1 2 3 8 12 10, c SALOME. WHERE SHE DANCED v Yvonne De Carlo in Walter Wanger's Technicolor production, "Salome, Where She 'Danced," playing Friday and Saturday at the Carolina Theatre. , W .10 ... 9 6 10 L 2 4 5 7 7 Philadelphia; Assistant Director, ; In- UENKE R ter-Agency council ior xoutn, rnua delphia; Case Worker, Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic ; instructor De partment of Sociology, -University of Pennsylvania ; : Conference ; Leader, draining Institutes, . Federal Proba tion Service; Director, Social Work (Continued from Jirst page) could take my own publicity shots. My biggest thrill as a kid was the time ; Eddie Cantor borrowed a nickel from me. to make a telephone call," he . savs. "but now I eet the biVccst ' - j o o ! T i Traininsr. University of Georgia: Re- K1CK out OI seemS Klds wh0 want to gional . Representative, Social Protec- models actresses, etc., get their tion Diviaion,- Federal Security nm break- Agency; Associate Director, Social After looking afc the numerous por- Protection Division, Federal Security traits of lovely' blonde, .blue-eyed Agency. , MilKcent Hosch, Carolina alumna . Dr. Fink is author of "The Firfd of since June of last year, which are Social Work," regarded by many as hanging on the walls of the photog the most popular elementary' text n raphy department, this reporter de social work, published by Henry Holt ciaea tnat ner success as a minor and Company, and also a volume on character in Howard Richardson's the "Causes of Crime," published by Broadway play, "Dark of the Moon," the University of Pennsylvania Press, probably gave "Photo Joe" Denker He. is a member .of the American As-1 his biggest thrill of all. sociation of Social; Workers, National Conference of Social Work, American PfJ Sociological Society, Georgia Confer ence of Social Work (past vice-presi- ' (Continued from first page) debt) , Southern Sociological Society j abandonment early during the pres (past, vice-president), American As- ent war, the Phi owned a great deal sociation of Social Workers (member J of valuable property, chief among Weather Beaten Monument Pays Tribu te To President of Executive Committee). WORKSHOP which was its large portrait collec tion. The University is now serving as custodian for the Phi. Was Once Student Government Organized while George Washing ton was president of the United . (Continued from first page) vanced art students. These stu dents will be working on the murals States, the. Phi and Di were for over during this program. la century Carolina's student govern-. Closing the program will be read- ment. One president of the Di was ings of creative writing compositions. J James K. Polk, who later served as Gisli Asthorrson will read his "The f governor of Tennessee, Speaker of People of Cliff Valley," Virginia Edel I the House of Representatives, and will read Betty Johnston's "Me Eyes j President of the United States. About Were Blind," Ann Ingall will read her I half of the governors Of North Caro- 'Floetta's Triumph "and; Virginia j lina have been members of either the Edel will read Henriette Hampton's j Phi or the Di Although membership in the Phi was formerly restricted t& students from the eastern part of the state, the present re-organizers iiave as yet come to no agreement as to how mem bership for the new Phi. will be chosen. In the past the Phi has served many varied functions on the cam piis; present advocates of re-organization have proposed that it be used as a medium for organized student "What Is An Educated Woman?" Miss Johnston and Miss Hampton's compositions were published in "Bud," the yearly mimeographed magazine of the creative writing class. Refreshments will be served after these readings. Organized four years ago by students, the Carolina Work shop is a group organized for the pur pose of promoting closer co-operation between students in the arts depart ment and encouraging student parti- By Ann White Ingle . Do you know to whom the marble obelisk that stands more than twenty feet high on center, campus is dedi cated? Do you know that two men arid a woman are buried beside it ? Getting down to rock bottom, do you know that there IS a monument on center campus, behind thp Confeder ate marker and across the walk from Davie Poplar ? Last week students passing the monument were halted and asked these questions. They invariably tried to sneak a look at the inscriptions before answering, but found the writ ing too small to see from the walk One girl stuttered, "Isn't it to a presi dent or something:, and she- was nearer right than any of the other forty-odd students quizzed. One per son did Know all tne tacts. He was a boy from Duke who had come over to take some snapshots of our campus and one of our coeds. Blackened by Weather Someday take a few minutes off on your busy way to the movies and look closely at the monument. You will find.it blackened from 88 years ot Uhapei Hill . rams and snows, cracked in spots from the heartache of being so completely ignored, and de prived of a decent place for its base because of grass , trampled flat by campus cutters. You will probably miss its great dignity, so gaunt and lonely does it look now. On the north side is this inscrip-; tion: "In grateful acknowledgment of their obligation to The First Presi dent of this University, Joseph Cald well, D.D., the President of the Unit ed States, the Governor of North Carolina and other alumni have raised this monument, A.D. 1847." James K. Polk is the president meant. He and another Carolina alumnus, North Carolina's Governor Charles Manly, were two important members of the Alumni Association who con tributed to the memorial fund. The date 1847 was the date the monument was authorized. It was not erected until 1857. Monument Inscription Reading the words on the marker's west side you see: "Born at Laming ton, N. J.f April 21, 1773. Professor of mathematics at this University 1796. Died at Chapel Hill, Jan. 27, 1835." Dr. Caldwell came here from Princeton in the fall of 1796 when the University was first beginning. ,A few months after his arrival he was named presiding president of the board of trustees, and in 1804 he was elected by the same board as the first president of the University. He per formed the exacting duties of. this po sition until his death, with the excep tion of four years between 1813 and 1817 when he resigned to work on a treatise in geometry. An inscription on the south face reads: "He "was an early conspicuous and devoted advocate to the Cause of Common Schools and Internal Im; provements in North Carolina." One of , the . internal ; improvements Dr. Caldwell instigated was the building of a railroad from the western, part of the state , to the eastern coast. Under the pen name of "Carlton" he wrote letters advocating this step, and as a result the rail line stretching from western North Carolina to Beau fort was built. . The last inscription, carved on the side facing east, says: "Near him re pose the remains of his beloved wife Helen Caldwell and her son William Hooper, D.D., LL.D., Professor, Uni versity of North Carolina, 1817-1837. Born 1782; Died 1876." Dr. Caldwell married Helen Hogg Hooper, a widow with two sons, two years after she had moved from Hillsboro to Chapel I well's first wife, Susan Rowan Cald- Hill to be with her older son while I well, along with their baby daugh Vance Med School No. 3 Delta Sigma Pi Kappa Sigma 5 Phi Gamma Delta . 5 ' Two Brews 5 7 Beta 2 10 CPU (Continued from page two) crime ? According to the newest concept of the War Criminals Com mission, a war crime consists of any "participation in the policies which resulted in planned . under nourishment, slave labor, concen tration camps, and organized pros titution." Under this criterion Ger mans may be tried and punished for crimes against other Germans, as well as against Poles, Russians, etc. A war criminal, then, would be any person who was guilty of these acts. President Truman two weeks ago submitted to the San Francisco Conference a four-point program designed to answer many of these questions. First, international crim inals such as Goering and Himmler should be dealt with by an inter national court, representing all the victorious Allies. Second, such or ganizations as the Gestapo and the SS should be judged as groups. Under such blanket justice, indi viduals could be tried only on the question of their ; membership in these organizations. Third, persons whose crimes have been commit ted against the people of occupied countries should be tried in and by those nations (this was provided for in the Moscow declaration of Nov. 1, 1943.) And fourth, the person nel of concentration camps should be tried" by the occupying power which controls the district in which the camps are located. Whether these policies will be adopted no one can say. These policies are, however, of a technical 'nature. Far more debatable is the issue itseii: snouia mere De any punishment whatsoever? It will be difficult to judge "war criminals" in accordance with the MISS MARY STRINGFIELD Mary Stringfield, music major, will play classical and semi-classical music when she gives the second and final senior piano recital this year in Mill Hall Friday night at eight o'clock. FEATHERS (Continued from page two) enough. If the Student Government officers cannot cooperate with one another, then the electorate should get busy. The project, which has been ef fectively jinxed in order to ward off projection, is the ' Marvelous Campus-wide Student Government Constitution. It is thought to be the logical solution to all student government problems. Maybe we do need a constitution. At the rate it's now going, we will always need one. The heads of. our governmental organizations are not to blame. Why should they get busy and finish all the research, drafting, etc., that has to be done before a constitution can be presented to' the student body for its consideration. The stu dent body can let it slide for another year. It doesn't matter whether the I Council can dissolve any campus organization or not. It has that right. The funny thing is that the : Legislature has the same right. The student body is waiting for an unprojected project to be pro jected, which is to iron out all con flicting powersj etc., of our govern ing bodies. It will be projected some day, because both political parties . have promised us. he attended the University. Cald- Crossword Puzzle AN S WEB TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE ninotin, s tut,, r .of?, a if I opinion. Others stress the importance ' 7 7 I f . l 1 i 1 1 11. Radio. MmWn Tlar, -JniiniJiHam. 01 siuaenrg ana pernaps acuity I 1 m t i.1 oers discussing promems , togemer under parliamentary procedure and planning action for the betterment of GLORIOUS vOSSSDT FOB i ycii WLLVr. mm i t NATALIE SCHAFER NOW PLAYING Carolina Theatre the University and government every where. Molded After Legislature Up until its recent dissolution, the Phi was modeled after the lower house of the state legislature which meets in Raleieh. Bills of varied nature ranging from campus to international topics were introduced for discussion and everyone was invited to partici pate. The Phi held a- very prominent place in campus life and became dis organized only because of the sudden induction of its members into the armed forces. Students interested in becoming members of the new Phi are invited to attend any of the three meetings scheduled this week. The three organizations already in terested in the Phi hope to agree on some date when a mass meeting can be held of all those who want to at tend sq that; about fifty to one hun ACKOSS 1 Criminal burning 5 Ladles' man 9 Part of animal's stomach 10 Autborof "Wutherlnt Heights" u Hawser 3 Angle :4 Light (abbr.) IS Gave permission 18 Hold grudge JO Pronoun 11 Girl's name 13 Atmosphere IsArab leaders 25 Sage 28 Pimple 27 Mosaie law 29 Plays court to SO Hardened 33 Literary scrapa 34 Puts on SS -Hawaiian lara SB Not working 38 Stupidity 40 French article 41 Wireless) 43 Tardy 44 Hate 48 ShlelSl 4T Blind 48 Fervor 3EIAS(tL, i3AR.RE ERN ESI.FA5T0 AR"TAJLORSti RG I R ARS I RLI 5M.O 8 jD I H E SS iDR A P E r G A S H D j E. D I F AS T MjTTBOSTON TEAS Z I OR I E Ri.S U 5 IlH O S T J L E I P t SLEET S "DAMSEL 5 YjLP Hj npUlRRS t lx t (4 1 I j p 17 J9 F"lfcl 1 to J7 AA33 " W . AS ; -m WW Ptatr. kr (Mta fMlw SrnMnlt. lac DOWN 1 Went up 2 Tears 3 Formal talk 4 Grandchild (Scot.) 5 Small nail 6 Age 7 Poker bet First note la Guldo'a seal 9 Trolley cars 10 Drab 11 Impish 13 Stop work 15 Biblical city 17 Christmas carol 19 Nymph 33 Shallow water 34 Artist's workshop 35 Grappled 28 Speculate ' 28 Directory ot church services 39 Mournful cry 31 Lowest point 32 Titled women 35 In motion 37 Sea eagle 38 Public hero 39 Othello's betrayer 42 High card 45 Like 48 Land measure ter, had died several years previously. It is the elder of, Mrs. Caldwell's sons who is buried with President and Mrs. Caldwell beside the monument. Emblems on Monument A tablet near the top of the monu ment bears emblems of Dr. Cald well's services to the state and to religion a railroad wheel, the en gineer's transit and the Holy Bible. Caldwell, Doctor of Divinity as well as professor of mathematics , and president of the University, preached for many years at the village school house. The school house stood on the same site as the present-day Presby terian church. .precepts of law and justice. (Under the preceding definition of war crimes, some estimated four to six million Germans will be subject to trial.) Justice Robert Jackson, U. S. prosecuting attorney on the Al lied Commission, has stated that he believes war criminals can be tried and punished under the existing statutes of international law. Such a basis for prosecution, however, would not coincide with President Truman's suggested program. One school of opinion holds that it will be difficult to try and punish the offenders in question without resorting to a violation of a long standing Anglo-American concept of law: no ex post facto. The prin ciple of no ex post facto (no con demnation of persons in suspension' of existing law, nor the creation of law and the condemnation of per sons who "broke" the law before it was made) is embodied in the U. S. Constitution. To act in violation of this old principle is, in the opinions of many, to work toward the destruction of the respect for law and justice. And that, in the end, will undermine the only foundation on which a recon stituted Germany can become a law-abiding nation in the future. FOR VICTORY BUY BONDS BULL'S HEAD BOOKSHOP Ground Floor Library Best New Fiction and Non-Fiction Browse - Rent - - Buy SIGMA CHI DERBY Kenan Stadium Jane 2nd 2:00 P. M. Prizes for Contestants Donated by Danziger's Carolina Sport Shop Andrews-Henninger Ledbetter-Pickard Carolina Theatre Dell's Jewel Box Berman's Porthole Carolina Pharmacy EVERYONE INVITED dred persons can be elected to be the first members of the new Phi.

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