imatisdl For Pirtieiipgitioii In May Ceerlt "The aorisc &srr writ : and writ Moves oa: tvor 3 ytror piety r wit Sh2 law ft bck to cacci Klf a lia. Nor all ytKir teara wmh out a word of it," Omar Kiirr- EDITORIALS: Hf Last Line Of Type -77 ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- Z 525 NUMBER 152 VOLUME XLVm CHAPEL HILL, N. C- SUNDAY, APRIL 21, 1940 IUoriaI:4356i Newi: 4351 Nijkt: 6904 BuilneM: 9SS7( CrcaUtlon: 9886 6 Goedls Af Moral Cite si in? cwr iiDeel A National Hook-Ups To Air CPU Affair News Briefs By United Press WARM SPRINGS, Ga., April 20 President Roosevelt calls upon his party to nominate a liberal candidate for the presidency and charges that Republican candidates are offering only a return to 1923 conditions which precipitated the worst social and eco nomic collapse in history. STOCKHOLM British, French and Norwegian troops are reported mass ing at three points on the west coast of Norway for a powerful counter- of fensive against the German army north and south of Trondheim. LITTLE FALLS, Y. Rescue workers, aided by searchlights and watched by thousands of spectators; continue to extricate more torn bodies from the twisted, steeh wreckage of th rrark exnress. the Lakeshore lim ited; 27 bodies hare been removed and a death toll of at least 30 was indicated; nearly 100 were injured. BERLIN German armed forces mark Hitler's 51st birthday anniver sary with report of smashing air and sea blows against the Allied powers, but admit that British expeditionary forces have landed south of the Nor wegian west coast port of Trondheim. LONDON Great Britain's power ful naval and air forces report that they have fought off an intensive fight ing Nazi aerial attack in Norwegian waters and that an Allied expedition ary force has occupied "certain points of vantage" in the Scandinavian counter-offensive against Germany; air ministry reports that German planes flew over the Thames estuary vicinity before midnight without inflicting damage. WASHINGTON Democrats open fire on District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey thereby adding somewhat to the evidence, supportedly of his back ers, that he is the leading man for the Republican presidential nomination. April showers which turned, into driving downpours send streams out of their banks in the Ohio, Alleghany Monongahela and Connecticut river valleys; the American Red Cross and WPA order immediate emergency aid to the inundated area. Openings Available For Dorm Advisers Students interested in securing the remaining dormitory adviserships must apply at the dean of students of ice in South building before May 10. The pay is $75 a year. Applicants must be either rising juniors or seniors or graduate students. Duties will consist of acting as councilor and guide to the freshmen. in the respective dor mitories. Invitations On Sale Through Wednesday Late orders for commencement in vitations will be taken until Wednes day in the lobby of the Book exchange every morning from 10 to 11 o'clock and every afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock. Mac Nisbet and Buddy Nordan, co chairmen of the senior invitations committee, announced yesterday. After Wednesday the price of the invitations will increase. Sound And Fury Note There will be a very important re hearsal of the first and second scenes of the Sound and Fury show, "One More Spring," tomorrow night in Memorial halL The first scene will be rehearsed at 7 o'clock and the second scene at 9 o'clock. Please be prompt and bring scripts. meoiiMiecss Campus Organization Celebrates Birthday Tuesday Evening State and national hook-upsx will carry the fourth anniversary celebra tion of the Carolina Political union Tuesday evening, Harry Gatton, chair- an of the union, announced last night. Burton K. Wheeler, senior sen ator from Montana now making his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, will be the featured speak er of the evening's program. Julian Price, president of Jefferson Standard Life Insurance company, will give a dinner for Wheeler, several visiting Congressmen, and members of the CPU in the Carolina Inn at 6:30 before the far western senator makes his address in Memdrial hall. During the course of the banquet, the Univer sity, broadcasting studio will have a rovincr announcer who will informally interview the guests. This program 1 will be carried over a state-wide WBIG network. WHEELER'S ADDRESS Senator Wheeler's address, which is expected to deal with either labor leg islation or the international situation, will begin at 9:30 sharp, at which time all the doors of Memorial hall will be locked. The program in Memorial hall will getunderway at 9 o'clock with the introduction of the visiting Congress men and other guests from the nation's capital and throughout the state. At (Continued on page h, column 5) 30 OIL PAINTINGS ON EXHIBITION IN PERSON HALL Russell T. Smith Will Lecture This Afternoon Thirty oil paintings by seven im portant contemporary artists com ose one of the outstanding exhibi tions of the season at Person hall art eallery. Th exhibit onens today at 2 o'clock, and continues through May 12. The artists represented are Jon Corbino, Nicolai Ciflovsky, Bernard Karfiol, Katherine Schmidt, Lamar Dodd, Maurice Grosser, and Frank Lon don. The naintines by Corbino are be- jing shown through the courtesy of the Macbeth gallery of New lorK city, and paintings by Cikovsky, Karfiol, and Schmidt, through the courtesy of the Downtown gallery of New York City. The other canvases (Continued on page A, column S) Dorsey And Father Played One-Nighters Tommy Learned His Music On Brass Before He J oined Popular Band In 1924 Tommy Dorsey and his 'famous or chestra, who will play for a public concert opening a series of five events, including two tea dances and two evening formal s next week-end m the annual dance series, the May Frolics, are comparatively young. . It was in Shenandoah, Penn., that rwAV made his debut as a musician. His father, an accomplished instru- mentalist, gave Tommy an intensive jm,uw"i ' w w , fMininar throutrh instruments of the brass section before the trombone was selected. Dorsey and father played one-nighters together, travelling through the coal regions of Pennsyl vania. . Becoming interested in popular mu sic Tommy joined Jean Goldkette's band in Detroit in 1924. That en (Continued on fatf 4. column J) Don Bishop And Charles J " , c ' - ? - & y?yy : - - ; , 'c - ", i ' , ' 1 . - ' -'',$. " - - - - ' 'A n ' v-"- ! I ' - -' "-t 1 ik --T f f 1 i ills , ' ' 5 I ) h 7 Pictured above are Don Bishop, recently elected editor-in-chief of the Tab Heel, and Charlie Barrett, lately appointed managing editor, both of whom wai take over their new duties tonight at the annual installation banquet. Making their farewell speeches will be editor Martin Harmon and managing editor Morris Rosenberg. Borders Defends ASU Program Against Dies Committee Probe Questions Right Of Committee To Investigate William Borders, executive commit teeman of the' ASU yesterday issued a statement defending the policies of the ASU against the coming of investiga tion of communism in the University by the Dies committee. His statement is as follows: "The coming of the Dies Committee circus to town is turning many eyes on the ASU, on the assumption that it will be the main victim of the in quisitional scrutiny. I should like to bring to the attention of the campus that it is not only those who have stuck their necks out for progress, for peace, and in the defense of civil liberties who are endangered by the activities of this committee. "First I should like to state briefly the ASU program as the best reply to all charges of subversive conspiracy. "We want peace. We want to keep this country out of war by a voiding any and all actions which endanger our neutrality. This position, adopted at the last convention, has become in creasingly popular among the public in inverse proportion to the growing menace to our neutrality. "The ASU believes in democracy. It believes that the principles of democ racy should extend into all phases of our life on the campus, in the class rooms, in political forums. This in cludes the right of students to learn from all available sources, their right to organize as they see fit, to hear any (Continued on page 2, column 1) In Coal Regions Free Student Guide Service Established For Spring Visitors With hundreds of vistors and sight seers arriving at Chapel Hill every week-end, especially now that the dog wood and other beautiful flowers are in full bloom, a free student-guide service has been established at Caro lina, it was announced yesterday by Administrative Dean R. B. House. Each Sunday afternoon headquar- ters of the guide,service will be open at the Old Well in the center of the campus, and visitors may request the services of students to conduct them on tours or drives through the cam pus and village. The Coker Arboretum, which has more than 500 species of native and exotic plants, Bowman Gray memorial swimming pool, Woollen Gymnasium, (Continued on page t, column S) "Rran0 Barrett t DWAYNE IRWIN NAMED PRESIDENT BY PHARMACISTS Fuller Takes Race For NCPA President, 'Other Kap Psis Win Dwayne Irwin, of Sparta, in defeat ing John Pjckard, of Durham, 69 to 53, was elected to the presidency of the student body of the Pharmacy school in Thursday's election. Irwin is a member of the Kappa Psi, prof es-1 sional Pharmacy fraternity, other members of which swept the majority of the offices in the Pharmacy race. Edwin Fuller, of Louisburg, defeat ed Jack Creech, of Salemburg, by a margin of one vote, 40 to 39, to take the office of president of the student branch of the North Carolina Pharma ceutical association. OTHER RESULTS Other results in the election of offi cers for the school year are : vice-president, Carter Watkins over W. W. All (Continued on page h, column J) Former Child Prodigy To Give Violin Concert Here Wednesday Night . Only 19 years old, Riggiero Ricci, violinist, who will appear on a student entertainment program Wednesday evening at 8:30 in Memorial hall, has been playing on the concert stage since the age o 10. Considered a child prodigy in 1929, he gradually faded from the national musical spot light until recently he made a success ful comeback. During the last few years, he has toured Europe and most of the nation, receiving laudatory notices from a major part of the critics. Pitts San born in the New York World-Telegram carried, "With the first strokes of his bow. he convinced exacting hearers that for all his youth, he is a violinist of assurance and authority. He dis closed a tone of purity whose purity never wavered, a left-hand technique of flawless ease and security, and the sort of musical feeling that is only inborn." PAST PRAISE In a Chicago appearance, Glenn Dil- Ur-A r.nnn in the Herald Examiner wrote. "One must call him a genius for he is a full-fledged virtuoso, able to toss off the tremendous difficulties of such a stunt piece as the Paganini D Major .Concerto as though they were the merest incidents of a happy musical adventure." 9 So Check Shows Possible Miscount In Campus, Class Head Races 15 GIRLS TO BE CHOSEN TUESDAY IN COED VOTING Burroughs, Hudson, Corbett, Winton In Race For Queen By VIVIAN GILLESPIE Twenty-six girls were nominated yesterday for the May court, from which 15 will be chosen in an all-coed election to be next Tuesday. The queen and her two attendants wil be chosen from among Bobbie Burroughs, Melville Corbett, Louise Hudson, and Bobbie Winton. The fourth girl in this group will be a member of the court. Peggy Leonard, Betty Kennison, Jeanne Herrmann, B. J. Johnson, Bar bara Liscomb, Helen Ann Jacobs, Janice Cobb, Pat Dickinson, Susan Fountain, and Ruth Curtis Robeson were nominated from the senior class. Five of these ten girls will take part in the court. JUNIORS, GRADUATES Six girls will be chosen from among the following juniors and graduate students. Ethel Laidlaw, Jane Put nam, Alice Murdoch, Frances Dyck man, Marjorie Johnston, Elinore Ma yer, Sara Frances Crosby, Frances Bucklew, . Eleanor- Jenkins, Jane Gassaway, Mary Susan Robertson, and Rose Winther. ! ! The girls were picked on a basis of height and grace, as well as beau ty. Senior girls predominate because the" May court is considered a senior honor. The girl receiving the high est number of votes among the group nominated for queen will be the queen of the May court. The two girls re ceiving the next highest votes will be her attendants, and the fourth girl will make up one of the six seniors in the court. ' The nominating committee was made up of members of Alpha Kap pa Gamma, a representative of AD Pi sorority, and a representative from each women's dormitory. This method of selection was decided on at the re cent Women's Association meeting. Bishop Calls Staff Meeting Tomorrow . Present members of the DAILY Tar Heel staff who intend to work on the paper next year will hold an important meeting tomorrow after noon at 1:30 when the new staff will . be announced, Don Bishop, incoming editor of the Daily Tar Heel, said last night. IRC Sponsors Quiz On International Affairs Woodhouse, Godfrey Face Kleeman, Lerche Tomorrow frJfemV A student-faculty quiz program will be conducted by the International Relations club tomorrow night at 7:30 in the main lounge of Graham Memorial. Dr. E. J. Woodhouse of the political science department and Dr. J. L. Godfrey of the history and social science department will oppose Walter Kleeman and Charles . Lerche of '1 the International Relations club. Questions on international affairs of a factual nature will be. asked by the, audience. Questions will be sub mitted to the speakers through the chairman, Manfred Levey, president of the club. Each contestant will be -asked ten questions, and will he scored on these. ; A prize will be awarded the expert with the " high est score. Davis Expresses Regret, Promises Finals Tomorrow By LOUIS HARRIS As the results of last Thursday's elections still remained shadowed with doubt, Jimmy Davis, outgoing president of the, student body, last night said that 12 candidates had re quested run-off s in next Thursday's election and nine others had requested recounts by student council members. Miscounts in races for secretary treasurer of the student body and for the presidency of the rising sopho more class seemed probable, since in The Daily Tar Heel wishes to emphasize that run-off s mentioned in this issue may not be complete and will not be official until printed in next Tuesday's paper. the former, the total vote was 160 off the count for the student body president's vote, while the latter was a full 100 off in one precinct alone. Davis said last night that all re counts and "checks would be done by student councsil members, and added, "We are sorry for the confusion which has reigned since Thursday's elec tion, but we will have definite, final results when the votes are checked to morrow." Members of the honor coun cils, student council, and various other parties counted votes in last week's balloting. Run-offs were requested last night (Continued on page U, column 2) McKIE TO GIVE PUBLIC READING OF BROADWAY HIT Program To Begin At 8:30 Tonight In Campus Theater "Life With Father," the dramatiza tion of Clarence Day's delightful story of family life at the turn of the cen tury, will be read by Dr. George Mc Kie, of the English department, this evening at 8:30 in the Playmakers theater. The reading, which will be open to the public without charge, is the sixth in this season's series of Sunday eve ning play readings offered by the Carolina Playmakers. Opening with Professor Frederick H. Koch's mono logue performance of "Hamlet," the program has included appearances of Paul Green, Samuel Selden, Earl Wynn and Elmer Hall. ON BROADWAT - "Life With Father," which has been running on Broadway since last No (Continued on page column 5) Student - Faculty Dr. Hornell lart To Deliver Final University Sermon Taking for his topic, "Life Ought to Be Thrilling," Dr. Hornell Hart, professor of sociology at Duke uni versity, will deliver the final Univer sity sermon of the year here next Sun day night, April 28 at 8 o'clock in Hill hall. Born in St. Paul's, Minnesota, Dr. Hart graduated from Oberlin college, Oberlin, Ohio, and did graduate work at both the University of Wisconsin and the University of Iowa. He has taught at the University of Iowa, Bryn Mawr,v Hartford Theological seminary, and has been teaching at Duke since 1938. In 1930 and 1931, he was an investigator for President Hoover's commission on social train ing.. ,-. .. , ; A lecturer on social and religious (Continued on page 4, column 1)