1 '" lip'! i THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1940 klu-. ; n-.; km.- t NUMBER 64 xBiaeM: 8S37; CinuUtiomz t&M Winter CAA; Applications Now Available Mann Announces University Quota Remains at Forty Alligations for avaltlon training in the -winter quarter were made avail able fry W. R. Mann, instructor of the .course and manager of the local air port. v Siirte the quota assigned the Univers ity ibis fall by the Civil Aeronautics a&zunistration will remain the same, .only 40 students will be accepted. Anyone interested in registering for -tbe course who has not applied already sho aid leave his name and address with 3Irs. S. W. J. Welch at the South build ing information desk some time during the week. Mann will soon begin in terviews with the applicants. Jio. Only Students M&sn emphasized yesterday that the nidtnent will not be confined to Uni versity students. Also eligible are xhoe who have completed two or more years of accredited college work ac :eptaKe to the local authorities. Several other requirements will con stitute eligibility. The applicant must e a dtizenof the United States and have reached his nineteenth but not his twenty-sixth birthday by October 1, IMC. He must also obtain written per misaicn from his parent or guardian. H enrolled in college, he must be a fully matriculated degree candidate ard have completed, one full year of satisfactory college work. No one who has never been disqualified from the pilots training program by action of ihe advisory board will be eligible. The candidate must also pass two physical examinations. One will be ad ministered by a Civil Aeronautics med ical examiner for a student pilot cer tificate with a commercial rating. The other examination will be given by a See CAA, page 4. Gvaham Memorial Decorated for Xmas "(iriham Memorial is spreading Christmas cheer all over the campus" iaid director Fish Worley last night of the decorations being put up to remind students that December brings holidays a.s -well as exams. At the present stage of erection, the -decorations consist of a large scientifi-:ally-oecorated Christmas tree in the I 'jr.jre. a small one on the "roof out side, vreaths on the lounge curtains, ar.-d t'jt-ctric wreaths on the front win- Tin most pressing job, of course, is to hang up the tons of mistletoe "h.ich have been on order since last January. "Mistletoe over every door, especially over the door to room 100" is the new motto of Graham Memorial, Beverly expressed by Fish. To add to the (dry)- Christmas chw. frequent programs of Christ mas- carols will be heard in the main 1 fT 7 Vtr, :........: V yy-- v:vv-- v : NO KIDDIN this is a boy standing on his head while snaaowy ngure balloons typify a South American carnival It is one of a niberaf Realist paintings by eccentric Candido Portinari, Brazilian modernist, tich are now on exhibit in Person hall. ' Get Registration Tables Today All students in the School of Com merce and the College of Arts and Sciences must secure their registration schedules today between the hours of 9 and 5 on the second-floor lobby of Memorial hall. These schedules will determine the day on which the holders may register. Those students who report for them first will be able to complete their registration that much sooner. To be eligible to sign up for winter quarter courses, students in the Arts and Sciences must already have not only this schedule but their permit to register and approval of their study program from their major adviser. Commerce students will need only their schedules and permits. All students who. failed to come by on the appointed day for their permits to register must report by for them today on the stage of Memorial hall. No student may register without his permit. GrahamSpeaks Here Today WW Address Philosophy Club President Graham will give two lec tures on the campus today, speaking before Edgar W. Knight's class in American educational history this morning and before the meeting of the Faculty Philosophy of Science club tonight. He will speak on federal aid to edu cation to Professor Knight's class. The lecture will be given in 208 Pea body hall at 9:30 and the public is in vited. At the meeting of the Philosophy club Graham will speak on "The South and National Defense." This meeting,-to be held at 8 o'clock in Gerrard ball, is also open to the public : Graham was a member of President Fraklin D. Roosevelt's Advisory Com mittee on Education which recommend ed that the federal government give financial aid to educational institu tions. YM-YW Ask Help For Xmas Baskets The YM-Y WCA is cooperating with the local welfare office in order to ob tain information concerning needy families for those interested 'in mak ing up Christmas baskets. Several dormitories and fraternities have already made plans for filling baskets. All campus organizations are urged to cooperate in helping the unfor- unates of this section during the com- ng holiday season. Information may be obtained at the or from Elizabeth Campbell, Wo- man s uorm ano. j., cnairman ox mc J committee. n s I 1-X-: News Briefs Britain Wins Italian Base : In Desert Coup U.S. Decides Not To Feed Hungry European Nations - By United Press ...A BRITISH MIDDLE - - EASTERN HEADQUARTERS IN CAIRO, Dec, 11 -Britain's desert . blitzkrieg V has captured the Italian base of .Sidibar rani, most advanced point of Premier Benito Mussolini's invasion of :Egypt, and taken great numbers of prisoners including three generals, it was stated officially tonight. t (The capture of at least 10,000. Ital ian prisoners in the desert fighting was reported in London where - - the capture of Sidibarrani was described of "great strategic and moral impor tance" and a .victory which probably will have serious effects on Italian morale.) The victory after three, days of heavy desert fighting and virtual en circlement of the important town lying along the Mediterranean coast broke the head of the Italian drive 75 miles across Egyptian soil - toward Alexandria and the Suez Canal. ' The situation of Italian divisions around Sidibarrani is "perilous" be cause the British forces have drawn an arm of entrapment around the town for a distance of 45 miles, it was stated. ATHENS, Dec. 12 (Thursday) Italian forces have launched "violent" counter-attacks along the 125-mile Albanian front but have failed to hold the Greek advances surging upon a half-dozen key positions, a high com mand communique" reported early to day. LONDON, Dec. 12 (Thursday) Great Britain today firmly warned the See NEWS BRIEFS, page 2. . '--V -r . i General Person9 s Desk Presented To Art Gallery v Secret drawers once filled with a patriot's private papers are cleverly concealed in the personal desk of Gen eral Thomas Person which was re cently given to Person hall art gallery. General Person, for whom Person hall and 'Person county were named, was a Revolutionary war leader and a charter trustee of the University. The original flap of the desk was hacked by troops sent by British Gov ernor of North Carolina, Lord Tryon, to get evidence against General Per son, a leader in, the Regulator move ment. The injured flap has been re placed, but otherwise the desk is just See GENERAL PERSON, page U. Happy New Year The schedule below gives the order of "examinations for. academic courses : By action of the faculty, the time of no examination may be changed after it has been fixed in the schedule: Saturday, December 14, at 2:00 o'clock All Hygiene 1 sections as follows: Sees. 1, 5, New East 112: Sees. 9, 13, 17, Venable 304; Sees. 2, 6, 10, 14, Bingham 103 ; Sec. 18, Woollen Gymnasium 303; Sees. 3, 7, 11, Woollen Gym nasium 504 ; Sec. 15, , Woollen Gymnasium 301A ; Sec. 19, Woollen Gymnasium 301B ; Sees. 4, 8, New West 101 ; Sees. 12, 16, 20, Venable 305; Sees. 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, Phillips 206. Monday, December 16, at 9:00 o'clock All 9:30 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 9:30 o'clock T-Th-S classes. Monday, December 16, at 2:00 o'clock All 12:00 o'clock T-Th-S classes, all accounting classes, and all English 1 and 11 examinations. Tuesday, December 17, at 9:00 o'clock .All 11:00 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 11:00 o'clock M-W-F classes. Tuesday, December 17, at 2:00 o'clock All 11 :00 T-Th-S classes. Wednesday, December 18, at 9:00 o'clock All 12:00 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 12:00 o'clock M-W-F classes. 1 ' Wednesday, December 18, at 2:00 o'clock AH 8:30 o'clock M-W-F classes. Thursday, December 19, at 9:00 o'clock All afternoon classes. Thursday, December 19, at 2:00 o'clock AH 9:30 o'clock M-W-F classes. Friday, December 20, at 9:00 o'clock All 8:30 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 8:30 o'clock T-Th-S classes. '' r . THE BIG PROBLEM for George Glamack, Carolina's big All-American basketball center, is not whether to buy a Sound & Fury season ticket, but from whom? The quintet of pretty girls causing George to do all that scratching is composed of, from right to left, Mary Caldwell, Marjorie Johnston, Frances Gibson, Dolly Erickson, and Peggy Lou Futrell. Playrnalcers Plan Road Tour Into West, North Next Fall Will Give Green's 'House of i Connelly Professor Frederick H. Koch will realize a dream of 22 years next fall when his Carolina Playmakers cross their southern boundaries and play a two-month roadbill of Paul Green's "The House of Connelly," in cities and colleges in the Middle West and New England. The 1941 tour will mark the fulfill ment of the dream of a State Reper tory company which came to "Proff" Koch twenty-two years ago andiwhich has remained uppermost in his mind during thirty-seven barnstorming tours through Dixie and into the North and West, a3 far as upstate New York and St. Louis. Professor Koch, founder and director of the Play- makers, envisioned the formation of a traveling company which would break through the limitations of the neces sarily short annual tours and offer talented Playmakers an opportunity for further study and achievement in dramatic arts. . Final negotiations for the tour were started this weekend when Crawford A. Peffer, president of the Redpath Lyceum bureau, booking agents, made a special trip from New York to wit ness the performance of "The House of Connelly" at High Point. Mr. PefFer declared afterwards: "I was delighted with the production. Please congratulate all the members of the company for me and tell them their performance was worth coming down all the way from -New York to see." He was in , Chapel Hill for the Regional Theater Festival last spring See PLAYMAKERS, page U. it if YDC Will Meet Tonight At 7:30 Membership Cards To Be Distributed Membership cards in the Young Democrats club will be given out to night at a meeting of the organization at 7:30 in 212 Graham Memorial, Wink Norman, president, announced yester day. - Norman requested all members to bring receipts for their dues if they have already received them. He also said that if members are not present tonight they will have to wait until sometime during next quarter to get their cards. The club will appoint student rep resentatives from each congressional district in North Carolina tonight. These members will serve to bring about closer contact between the cam pus club and YD clubs in the various districts. - Plans will be discussed at the meet ing for a Jackson Day dinner to be sponsored by the club. Campus Programs Broadcast Today "The Desert Shall Rejoice" a play by Betty Smith and Bob Finch, who sold the movie rights to Warner Brothers, will be broadcast from the campus radio studio in Caldwell hall today. The authors received the offer after their play was produced last year over the Mutual hook-up and sold the movie rights. The Carolina Playmakers will produce the play over stations WRAL, WAIR, WSTP, WSOC, WFTC, and WGTM from 2:30 to 3 o'clock this aft ernoon. Immediately after this program the University School of Music will pre sent William Klenz, cellist, playing the "C Major Sonata for Cello alone" by Bach. Stations WDNC, WBIG, and WSJS, will carry this program from 4 to 4:15. - Dr. S. E. Leavitt of the Spanish de partment will lecture on "Columbia." This is the second in a series on "Our American Neighbors" being broad cast from the campus studio. WDNC, WBIG, and WSJS will carry this pro gram from 4:15 to 4:30. 1 APPOINTED RECENTLY the YM-Y WCA, Co-chairmen by Sis Clinard and Ike Grainger are busily making plans for the annual Student-Faculty day celebration on February 5. Definite arrangements have not been released but the co workers say that the program will be "something constructive." - (i "V -M i Gridiron Stars To Be Honored Monday Night Twenty-nine Men Will Be Given Gold Footballs Outstanding performance on the gridiron this fall will earn individual gold footballs for iwenty-nine varsity players when Coach Ray Wolf pre sents them with the tokens of the stri dent body's appreciation Monday night at 7 o'clock in Memorial hall. Immediately following the presen tation, color movies of the famous Duke-Carolina game will be shown, concluding the quarter's series of football movies sponsored by Graham Memorial. The footballs, purchased by con tributions from the student body, are embellished with the University mono gram and the name and position of the player receiving the token. Tar Heel mentor, Bay Wolf, will present the footballs to the players. There will not be a lecture as has been the custom at previous football clinics. The program will be cut as short as possible due to its occurring during exam week. v University Clab Sponsor The University club, campus spirit organization, handled the collection of contributions and the purchase of the footballs. The club will have charge of the program. Speaking for the student body, Ferebee Taylor, University club presi dent, said yesterday, "It is an expres sion on the part of the student body to the football players for the brand of ball they have played throughout the season." Head Coach Wolf, line Coach John ny Vaught, Backfield Coach Chuck Ericson, End Coach Bill Lange, and Trainer Chuck Quinlan will be simi- arly honored with the presentation of the gold footballs. . Steele Dorm Publishes Monthly Newspaper Instituting a new step in dormitory ife, Steele will circulate the first is sue of a newspaper for its residents tomorrow night at the dorm's annual Christmas celebration. The paper, originated by Steele pres ident, Coleman Finkle, will be issued once a month "solely for the occupants of the dormitory. Stanley Leiber, who submitted the title The Steele Pen, won the name contest which was judg ed by Don Bishop, editor of the Daily Tar Heel. ' - ? ' Orville Campbell, member of DTH editorial board and resident of Steele, is serving as temporary editor until a permanent editor is chosen in elec tions to be held after the holidays. The new paper will attempt to give accounts of the dormitory residents, their activities and records. Editorials and a gossip column will also be carried in the journal. An additional interest ing feature will be polls taken in Steele on items of vital campus interest and on national affairs. " Finances for The Steele Pen will be taken from dormitory funds until the paper is self-supporting. Only about one hundred copies of the first issue will be made, to be distributed mainly among the dormitory residents. Field Artillery School The Field Artillery Troop school will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in Davie hall. The subject to be taken up is "The Firing Battery, Occupation and Or ganization of the Position." sxW. .4-; VV I