PAGE FOUIS THE DAILY TAR HEE SUNDAY, MAY 25, i941 AUcpU To Gim Gallerij Talk On French Paintings Today Georges Levy Makes Exhibit Possible A gallery talk on the collection of mnprn French naintiner. valued at a million dollars, which is now show. ing in. Person hall will be given by John V. Allcott. head of the art de partment, at 5 o'clock today. The clues to the understanding of modern .French , 'painting as seen in the exhibition will be discussed by All cott. The older works, and particular ly the more eccentric paintings of to day, will be featured in his talk. Georges Levy Made possible by Georges Levy, former Paris 'barnter and now a spe cial student, 'the exhibit includes a painting by Eugene Delacroix, "In terior of 'a 'Moroccan Courtyard, valued 'at k$&J,00O; one of Honore Da'umier's masterpieces, "The Street"; and a $28,000 picture, "Rehearsal Before the Ballet," by Edgar Degas. -"Even the least valuable paintings in the show" are worth four or five thou sand dollars," 'Allcott said. Included in the collection are. mas terpieces brought from France when it fell, paintings lent by New York galleries, and some of Levy's private collection. Artists in the display, which shows the development of French painting during the- 19th and 20th centurie3,'are Ingres, Corot, Jac ques, Courbet,.Boudin, Pissarro, Ma net, Cezanne, Monet, Sisley, Remoir, Gaughin Van Gogh, Guillaumin, Toulouse-Lautrec, Bonnard,' Matisse, Mas sOn, Vlaminck, :Dufy, Derain, Picasso, Leger, Braque, Laurencin, Chagall, Student Exhibit Now showfhg in the studio gallery is the fifth 'annual University of North Carolina art studio's exhibition, which includes the work of 16 stu dents. Those exhibiting are Neal Thomas, Tom Biebigheiser, Alan Grimes, Ernie Illman, Hight Moore, James Pace, Eunice Patten, Garland Peterson, Joe 'Rankin, Charlotte Shields, Edgar. Thome, Ed Rollins, Mary Alice Pollard, Betty Bell, Bob Kocii, and Barnaby Conrad. Both exhibits will continue through June 10. Gallery hours" are from 10 a.m. until 10 n.m on week-days, and noon until 6 p.m. on Sundays. 3- rum m Utfiiwimw i iiMii i.ii fAW.'tmm ' nmii i w , '," V ' i"' ' PAULETTE GODDARD who ap pears in "Pot o' Gold," which plays at both theatres today. . WOMEN (Continued from first page) name to the committee at the meet ing tomorrdw, or before the appoint ment Tuesday. A coed may also sug gest someone else who she thinks would be good in the new system. Appointments Tuesday v v The new constitution sets up a WGA with an honor council, inter dormitory council, house councils in each dorm and a senate. Three Bodies The honor council would be purely a judicial body, while the Senate would handle legislative functions. The in terdorm council and house councils would handle all matters concerning dormitory 'life. 'Mimeographed copies of the consti tution have . been distributed to all coeds, and an y woman student who wil be unable to. attend the meeting tomorrow' may leave an absentee bal lot with Miss Caldwell before the meeting. CUTS (Continued from first page) s 36 absent. . . . A tabulation on the first day of the spring quarter show ed 1579 absences. This represented 809 students' out of 2965 pupils in groups reporting. . . . After deduct ing those excused and those not reg istered, the tally revealed that 23 were not present. . . . Relaxation of strict rules for attendance in Eng lish classes took place and, cuts jump ed in a few weeks to surpass the i to tal for the time when the old system was in" effect. . . . The greatest' num ber of cuts occur in classes where stu dents are givenlhe most freedom. So next quarter a new cycle of at tendance laws will begin. Faculty members will check, report, penalize cutters. Probation and fines will be back in style. 'Students will be drop ped, failed. The'paybff for the "slap at previous , liberality." r NEWS BRIEFS (Continued from first page) strong German detachment was able to reach the Greenland area and strike such a 'blow there caused re-examina tion of the North Atlantic situation. LONDON, May 24-(UP) Bri tain's defenders of Crete tonight faced a critical week-end test after inflict ing "most heavy casualties" on Nazi air invaders and destroying -with the aid of air assistance from Egypt great numbers of German aerial troop trans-' ports. BERLIN, May 24 (UP) The Nazi high command significantly broke a four-day silence today to claim that German air troops have won control of Western Crete after the Luftwaffe smashed attempts by the Royal Navy to intervene and drove the Royal ?Air Force from the skies above the Greek islands. " WASHINGTON, May 24 (UP) Congressional circles heard tonight that selective service officials are pre paring plans to defer men over 26 from military service. CAIRO, May 24 (UP) British sources said tonight that the situation at Candia and Retimo is "on the whole" satisfactory, but admitted that 'Ger-" "man forces at the MaBni airdrome at Crete present, "a rather serious prob lem." ' : Peace Mobilization There will be a meeting of the American Peace Mobilization this eve ning at 7:30 in Graham Memorial, room 211. LOBBED FACULTY (Continued from page three) cutting a five- or six-hour course four times. i The fall quarter will see 'students in many botany, chemistry, economics, English, geography, German, mathe matics, physics, political science, so ciology, French, physical education, and history classes coming up to the general regulations as well as special departmental rules. Excuses :. The laws demand presentation of ex cuses within one week after return to class; dropping with a failing grade for cut violation when on probation; and denial of credit for courses when the student has been absent excused or unexcused more than 25 percent of the class meetings. The investigation committee, headed by Dr.'Totten, included George Coff- man, Hugh 'Lefler, S. A. Stoudemire, R. S. Winslow, J. E. Woodhouse, Phillips Russell, J. P. Harland, 'E. A; Cameron, G. H. Daggett, and - Cecil Johnson. - ; McCORMACK ' - (Continued from first page) ernment, McCormack said, "The In stitute of government is more than a local institution. It is more than a state influence. It is one of the out standing civic services of its kind in the country." Prior to 'McCormack's address, Governor J. M. 'Broughton presented certificates to police officers conclud ing a seven-day training program un der the auspices of -the - Institute. The Governor praised the work of Al bert Coates, Institute director; and commended the work that the Institute has been accomplishing in recent j years. ' . A ew clioSce Eised cars i ;!et at fili'e brovM "Motor Cn. Ford, Goodyear, Esso Since 1914 (Continued' from page two) but by subscriptions, 'and that the number of subscriptions depends on the -editor's ingenuity; or -that the paper is directed by a graduate, pro-fesionally-trained and doing a profes sional, job. The PU board doesn't believe that the TAR' HEEL is entirely an ama - f ' ir - 1 ' Ah ceur enterprise, Dut tnat it is ox a semi -professional, semi - educational nature. : We of the paper and of the PU board believe that it is the strong est unifying force on the campus. We agree that in publishing an edi tion daily, the staff is performing a valuable service to the campus. . If the TAR HEEL staff is to be considered professional, however, every man should be salaried, from the . managing : editor down to the freshman who gathers the daily in firmary reports. The top men might drop classes and become self-supporting; the reporters and hangers-on might find it profitable to delay grad uation for six or seven years in or der to partake of Carolina liberalism and the beauty of Chapel Hill. To go td the other extreme, the PU board might eliminate' all salaries and thereby "persecute" publications workers.- The PU board wishes neither of these situations. It believes that top men on all publication's shpuld be paid. Unfortunately, it has been impossible to 1 work out a system that computes .the necessary factors time, work, re sponsibility, and, most important; a student's earning power while in col lege. This, last Js the main considera tion. How much can a student in col lege, whose main purpose is to get an education,' earn in outside work? At tHe lowest end of the scale are N YA workers, paid by the federal gov ernment no more than $15 a month. In the middle are self-help students, paid by the University from 30 to 50 cents an hour and limited, usually by their own judgment, to a maximum of four hours a day. At the other ex treme are graduate lab instructors, drawing a maximum of $450 for work that is semi-professional, semi-educa tionallike the TAR HEEL. The PU' board has chosen $500 as asfigure it believes a fair maximum for a stu dent at Carolina. V A top salary of $500 should satisfy even the most severe critics. Even those who assert that an editor takes his daily problems to ' bed with him cannot deny that college professors receive nothing in.' consideration of their; chalky fingernails, flat feet and backaches. Taking $500 as a top fig ure, the PU board has scaled its sal aries. down, as best it can, in propor tion to the importance and value of each position. Here one's scale of values must begin to measure wheth er ornot'the number One man on the TAR 1 HEEL should receive more than a ;opy boy on a professional journal; one instance is of a recent managing editor and journalism ' major, who made $18 weekly on the DTH but refused to return to his home town to work for $15, and chose instead the life of a "world-traveler." Claims that TAR HEEL editors and other staff members forego school work and social activities may be reg futed adequately. On one hand, no one expects extra-curricular majors to sacrifice their scholastic duties; this is undesirable. It is untrue that social activities decrease: the editors of the TAR HEEL receive passes to all ; the dances, the Carolina theater, Sound and Fury, the Playmaker pro ductions, afternoon concerts at Me morial hall, and any other Carolina institution that obtains publicity. These passes are presumably for the staff, and some are distributed. ' It is needless to mention that some fame and much notoriety, is , attached -to most publications workers. "The PU ' board ' feels ' no obligation to pay an employee for four years of work. 1 To 'reward an 'editor for four years of experience would involve pay ment evey year, for "who is 'to rewad a defeated candidate for editor who has worked three years arid drawn' no pay? Successful' candidates for' the highest positions are paid, for 'work they en joy or should not 'attempt, 'for their editorial and managerial duties. Ac cording1 to the conception ' that 'the TAR HEEL' is semi-educational and semi-professional, the PU board be lieves an editor should be -paid only for work' in his official capacity. Althbugh no salaries have or will everf be paid from the PU' board sur plus, everyorie--outside the ' Com merce school, too should - learn for what purpose the $13,289 reserve is maintained. -Students have long crit icized the5 surplus, but are unable au thoritatively to set a figure any more wise. The PU board surplus and, Hillel Inducts New Officers Tonight Rabbi Avery Grossfield of Raleigh will be the principal speaker at the annual banquet and induction cere mony of the Hillel foundation tonight at 6:30 in Graham Memorial, second floor. Officers of the foundation to be in ducted for the ensuing year ' are : David Arner, president; Maurice Kantor, vice president;' Shirley Rais ler, secretary. - - j - Rabbi Samuel Sandmel wili award Hillel service keys. GRAVELY ( Continued from first page) try has no place in the National De fense program or in .the life of the United States." ' ; Dean of Administration R. B. House welcomed the visitors to the University and Chapel Hill, and Al bert Coates introduced Senator Grav ely. The University Glee club quartet rendered several - selections. .-. Explaining how traffic is directed in British blackouts, how evacuation is caried out during the air- raids and bombings, and methods of enforcing blackouts, Hugh H. Clegg; v assistant director of the Federal Bureau of In vestigation and director of -the. Na tional Police academy, addressed the law-enforcing 'officers at their ;final session this morning on war time problems of London police. Clegg was a "member of a commis sion sent to England last November, by FBI Director -Edgar Hoover to study police problems. He .illustrated his talk by a motion picture, "War and Order," taken in London and showing a group of police in performance of war time duties. Ed Scheidt, agent in charge of the FBI in North and, South Carolina, conducted a clinic on crime detection. in fact, ailreserves--are for emerg ency only. -The publications surplus exists to guard against a year -'when enrollment and advertising either or both fall below expectations and the annual audit report shows a loss. UITRAL1URALS (Continued from page three) Discus Asch, Lewis; Brantley, Old West; Helsabeck,"Ru5n; Meroney, Med School; Pessar, Town; Piver, Med School; Pope, Aycock; Radman, Town; Scheinman, EVP. Shot Put Brantley, Old We3t; Hel sabeck, Ruffin; Liebenguth, Lewis; Mayo, Grimes; Pessar, Town; Rad man, Town; Sadoff, -Lewis; Turner Manly ; P. Wilson, Grimes. Broad Jump Allen, Med School; Creech,'Everett; Croom, Grimes; For rest, Mangunu.Hayworth, Lewis; Hel sabeck, Ruffin; ; Lester, BVP; Lieben guth, Lewis; Piver, Med School; Pope, Aycock; Sadoff, Lewis; Shytie, Ever ett; Thomas, K; Wall, Mangum; Webb, Lewis; White, Aycock. Fraternity Entries 60-yard dash 1st heat: Williamson, Beta; Parsely, jPhi Gam ; Neeves, Kappa Sig; Hambright, Kappa Sig; Winstead, Phi .Delt; Hackney, Zeta Psi; Oliver Delta psi; Pollock, Chi Psi; Bass, Zeta Psi. 2nd heat: Sprunt, - SAE; Thorpe, Zeta Psi; Sumner,- -Kappa Sig; Alexander, Kappa Sig; - Fuchs, TEP; Nichol son, Phi Gam; Lane, Phi qam; Fergu son, Chi Psi ; Lees," Pi Lambda Phi. 3rd heat: Carlton, DKE; Sands, TEP; Edwards, Sigma Chi; Donovan, Chi Phi; Simmons, Phi Gam; Mehaffey, Phi Gam; Lalanne, "Kappa Sig; Fair- cloth, Kappa Sig ; 100yird dash-lst heat: Parsley, Phi Gam; Linker, DKE; Self, Zeta Psi ; Katz, TEP; Stanback, Sigma Nu; Webb, DKE ; Greenburgh, Pi Lambda Phi; Gardner, Sigma Chi; Wharton, Phi pelt; 'Hambright, Kappa Sig. 2nd heat: . Pollock, Chi Psi; Alexander, Kappa' Sig; Williamson, Beta; Fuchs, TEP ; Sprunt,, SAE; Smith, SAE ; Gib bons, DKE; 6arlton,' DKE; P. Davis, Zeta Psi. 3rd heat: Redfern, Zeta Psi; Childs," St. Anthony; . Sands, TEP; Wilson, SAE; Lees, Pi Lambda Phi; Ferguson, Chi Psi; Rodman, DKE; "Robinson, SAE; Hackney, Zeta Psi; Sumner, Kappa Sig. . , Discus Austin, Kappa Sig Collett, Beta; Dalton, Beta; Donovan, Chi Phi; Treasure Hunt Winners ' "Winners of the Senior CW treasure hunt may get their ctZ within the next few days by coa' "uiiey said yes. by my office,' terday. Feuchtenberger, Phi Delt; Hans, SAE; Lane, Phi Gam; LeBlar.c, KaS Sig; Nowell, Chi Psi; RichardsT SAE; Seymour, Chi Psi; Skinner, z2 Psi; Trail, Beta; Webb, DKE. Shot Put Currin, Phi Delta; Faj cloth, Kappa Sig; Glamack, Beta" Michaels, TEP; Mordecai, Zeta psj! Nowell, Chi Psi; Paty, Phi Gam; WebV DKE; Wood, SAE; Wright, AT0. Broad Jump Broadfoot, SAE; Ca. hoon, Sigma Nu; Donovan, Chi py. Ferguson,-Chi Psi; Fuchs, TEP; Gib! bons, DKE; Hambright, Kappa Sig Hobbs, Phi Gam; Lane, Phi Gam; Lj.' Blanc, Kappa Sig; Nicholson, Phi Gam-Nowell,- Chi Psi; Paty, Phi Gam;' Severin, Phi Gam; Skinner, Zeta Psj' Webb, DKE; Williamson, Beta; "fffl! son, SAE. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. All advertise ments must be paid for in advanct and the ad must be turned in at tie Tar Heel Business Office by fom o'clock the day before publication. ROOMS Finals and Commencement Rooms available at Miss Sharkey's, Westwood. Phone 4946. LOST On Friday, '41 class ring, bear, ing initials V. T. H., between Bing. ham and H dorm. Return to Jin Harford, 118 H Dorm. Reward. PERSON AL CARDS for m GRADUATION $1.25 per 100 : o Cherokee Printing Co. PHONE F-2236 Jimmy end Pauleila to mcko your hea skip a boafl Songs to sot your foes lcppingl Girls to set your pulse racing! mm. (BCD! m a 'i'ifii'SIwvl MID 1 W Vs vP513 I f I v;.' . ' . Also ' . ' ' DISNEY CARTOON LATEST NEWS EVENTS SUNDAY c WHAT IS YOUR NUMBER IN THE DRAFT? High or low, you cannot afford to miss the vital ex perience offered by "The Great Gommandment" MONDAY w anm- urn imnmm iinr asm imssntmcm i t 1 mt ?t!m mm- wi with JOHN BEAL MAURICE MOSCOVICH ALBERT DEKKER MARJORIE COOLEY WARREN McCULLUM UOYO CORRIGAN Tuesday CLAUDETTE COLBERT "Drums Along the Mohawk Wednesday- ROBERT DONAT m "The Ghost Goes West" Thursday W, C. FIELDS - : in y "The Bank Dick" Friday ALICE -FA YE "Lillian Russell' SATURDAY: BELA LUGOSI CLARENCE MUSE in "INVISIBLE GHOST"