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Jmcds Briefs - E Strike erliri Haird In: Heavy Eaid Yank Airmen Hit Japs In Burma LONDON, March 2 (UP) RAP planes swung- back over bomb ravaged Europe again to day continuing the unprecedent ed non-stop allied offensive with out pause, after pounding Ber lin with one thousand tons of high explosives and tens of thou sands of incendiaries in a raid twice as heavy as the Germans ever delivered against London. CHUNKING, March 2 UP) American fliers working from bases in China and India have , made many battering raids on ! J apanese positions and supply lines in Burma and Yunan prov ince and successfully bombed the famous Goktgeik viaduct on the Mandalay-Lashio rail link it was i reported today. Tunisian Nazis Withdraw After Severe Battering NORTH TUNISIAN FRONT, March 2 (UP) Stopped in four infantry attacks and batter ed by British artillery through out the day Axis forces appeared to be withdrawing tonight from "Hunt's gap" 15 miles north of Beja where for four days they have been attempting to break through and to outflank Medjez-el-bad. Five Jap Ships Sunk By American Submarines WASHINGTON, , March 2 (UP) American submarines have, sunk five more Japanese supply ships and damaged two others in their intensified battle of attrition against the enemy's far-flung supply lines, the Navy reported todays-, - - - Russians Gain On North, South Fronts Against Nazis LONDON, Weds., March 3! (UP) Russia announced fresh gains on four main southern bat tlef ronts today while in the north Marshall Seymon Timoshenko pressed a slowly retreating 16th German army southward to Star ayrussa and the main Leningrad Vitebask railroad. Madame Chiang Pleads For Hate-Free World NEW YORK, March 2 (UP) Madame Chiang Kai-shek in a plea for a reconstruction world free of bitterness said tonight that the United Nations must try in the post war period to "forgive those who injured us and to re See NEWS BRIEFS, page U Debut of Copeland's 'Rodeo' To Highlight Ballet Friday The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, which comes to Memorial hall at 8:30 Friday night, has a larger repertoire than any other ballet company in the long his tory of ballet. The three ballets to be pre sented to the University audience on Friday are Car naval, Rodeo, and The Magic Swan. Carnaval, a pantomimic ballet, starring Alexandra Danilova, is adapted from Robert Schumann's well-known piano compositions. Fokine, its choreographer, took the characters of Schumann's imagining, and, to an orchestra tion of this fantasy so beloved by pianists, mingled character of the immortal Commedia dell' Arte Harlequin, Columbine, Estrella, Pierrot, Pantelon, Papillon, and Eusebius, who flit across the stage in a series of amorous epi sodes, which take place during a masked ball. VOLUME LI B jainesa and Circulation : S641 Jones Names District Men For Roll Call Contributions Red Cross Drive s Covers All Students Campus representatives for the Roll Call of the Red Cross, which will continue until tomor row night, have been chosen by the chairmen of the respective town, girls' dormitory, sorority, fraternity, and men's dormitory districts. The representatives met Mon day night with the general staff. Curry Jones, director, presided, and Dean Roland B. Parker, fac ulty adviser to the. campus Roll Call, outlined the objectives of the Red Cross and submitted the organization plans for the col lecting of contributions. . The general staff will meet this afternoon at 5 o'clock in Dean Parker's office in South. Following is the list of repre sentatives who are authorized to accept contributions for the Red Cross on campus : . Town Chairman Billy Britt, and Lawrence Britt, Mrs. Tankers ley; Jimmy Davis, 120 Mallette street; Barry Colby, J. R. Weaver ; Leslie Myers, 141 East Franklin street; Don Willard, 206 Cameron avenue ; Mike Beam, Wettach. building ; Shu ford Snider, 150 E. Rosemary street; Richard Bradshaw, F. F. Bradshaw home; Richard Hol lander, Ransom House ; Mar- garet Pickard, A. .A. Pickard; Nancy .Smithy .-North -street ; Vivian Phipps, L. J: Phipps. j Girls' Dorms Chairman Celeste Hamrick, and Mclver representatives : Sara Newton, Peg Moseley, Shir ley Sanderlin, Lucy Lee Ken nedy ; Alderman representatives : Winifred Rosenbaum, Shelah O'Connell, Doris Clark, Jean Lochridge ; Kenan representa tives: Edith Colvard, Sarah Jus tice, Elizabeth Ann Covington; Spencer : Bertha Rogers, Mary Dick, Margaret Towell, Adele Weiss ;and Archer House repre sentative : Clare Haight. Men's Dorms Chairman Bill Petree, and Old East representatives : Charles F. Benbow, Bill Whiteheart, Charles Vance ; B. V. P. representatives : Bob Spencer, N. L. Garner, Ber nard Moser, Lester Rosskam; See RED CROSS, page 4 Created by Agnes de Mille, a leading authority on dance Americana, Rodeo is one of four new ballets to be seen for the first time this sason. It presents a rich, warm, and gay picture of native American life, utilizing many dif ferent forms of characteristic American dances. It is based on the traditional Saturday after noon" rodeo and Saturday night dance, which is an important part of American ranch life in the great Southwest. The theme of the ballet is basic : the preoccupa tion of the American pioneer wo man throughout our country's history to get the right man ! The Magic Swan, produced in 1941, is an arrangement of the third act of the full length Petipa ballet, "Swan Lake." The music is by Peter Tchaikowsky, and the choreography was created by Alexandra Fedorova after Mar ius Petipa. CHAPEL HILL, N; TURK NEWSOME has been appointed head of the new stu dent air-raid precautions group formed to function in coopera tion with the OCD. OCD Arranges New System Newsome Heads Air Raid Group A new system of student-enforced air raid precautions is ra pidly taking shape on the campus with Turk Newsome as chairman, Bert Bennett, president of the student body, announced yester day. With assistant wardens chosen in almost all dormitories, fratern ity and sorority houses, and co ops, the plans lacks only a few men and women to, complete the roster, which will include depu ties on all floors. The organization should be completed before the week is out, Newsome said, and when it is a meeting will be called of organi- 5X i ft.-. s a ' f ' s s zation heads. These leaders. wPlorHe t;?7ard the conauered. Ex- meet with Newsome - and other campus officials to integrate their plans. Time and place of the meeting will be announced. At a meeting yesterday Bert Bennett, Newsome, L. B. Roger son, Dean R. H. Wettach, R. J. M. See OCD, page 4 Women Reserves Hold Interviews In Student Union Individual interviews toward entrance to the WAVES, WAACS, SPARS, and Marine re serves will be held for women of Chapel Hill today in Graham Me morial from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m., Dr. W. D. Perry of the war col lege bureau yesterday an nounced. Applicants for WAVES and SPARS will confer with Ensign Mary Frances Ivey of the Raleigh Office of Naval Procurement; Lieutenant Florabeth H. Ferri will be speaker for the WAACS ; and Captain Charlotte Gower, member of the woman's marine auxiliary, will be consultant for that branch of the service. Perry Announces War Job Positions Dr. W. D. Perry, director of the Bureau of Military and Voca tional Information has an nounced that his office has open ings listed for jobs for men over 38 years of age which are in di rect connection with the war ef fort. One job for immediate place ment offers an opportunity for a person to carry out training pro grams on instructing supervisors on how to plan and handle the work of their employees. Applications for this position can be made by calling at Dr. Perry's office. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, RC Forum Discusses PostWar Japan Faculty Speakers Disagree On Action Lining up two and two on the question of an international policing of Japan after the war, four faculty experts aired the dif ficulties of post-war Japan in the second of the International Rela tions club campus forums last night. i ' v Appearing on the rostrum were: Dr. K. C. Frazer, Dr. Li. O. Kattsoff, Dr. D. H. Buchanan ; and Dean R. B. House. Dean Ro land Parker served as mediator, and Miss Anne West presided. ; Going on the assumption of a total allied defeat of Japan, the speakers agreed on the necessity of recognizing the economic needs of the Nipponese. Speak ing from the standpoint of the diplomat and one with experience in international affairs, Dr. K. C. Frazer outlined a three-point i settlement of the Japanese situa tion: disarmament of the coun try under the supervision of an international commission to sit "year in and year out in Tokyo" ; placement of the Archipelagos in the hands of the US and the is land of Formosa in hands of the United Nations ; and an interna tional commission to mediate the economic differences between China and Japan, which would amount to control of the economic resources of both countries. Dr. D. H. Buchanan, of the economics department, express ed opposition to a vindicative at- j plaining that in its economic ex- pansion, Japan followed the ex- ample of the British to find mar kets, he questioned the possibility of placing a damper on the coun try's economic expansion and on the other hand expecting it to be- come prosperous, rne only solu tion I see," he quipped, "is to drain the Pacific ocean, making more dry land." Looking through the eyes of the philosopher, Dr. L. O. Katts off pronounced the explanation of Japanese aggression due en tirely to economic factors "in sufficient." He said the conduct of the Japanese is largely con nected .with the ancient Shinto and Bashido creeds glorifying war, and stressed that interna tional friction could cease only See IRC, page 4 'Down To The JJ.ii.i.ull,i.liilil.u.,ui.i)W.iiii.i.,..,,iiiiLM.ili.1,Mi.lii I . ... J I. IH.IU.U. .11 ii I., mi. mm. , ii u in, i,. nun., i iilii, ..,.,. KAI HEIBERG JURGENSEN of Copenhagen, Denmark, holder of a Rockefeller Fellowship in the University department of dra matic art, author of the latest Playmaker presentation, "Down to t the Sea," which opens tonight, is seen here consulting the direc tor of his play, Robert Burrows, technical director of the Play 1943 Editorial: F-S141. News: Spring egistration Dale, Set For This Week Advisers Meet With General College Students, Upperclassmen See Deans Plans have been completed for registration of students for the spring quarter, I. C. Griffin, assistant registrar, announced yes terday and students will register during a period extending from today through March 8. General College studentswill register by making appointments with their advisers for registration conferences. Appointment sche- ITh 1 "fir 1 Milk Report Health Groups Reach Agreement The Durham City and County Board of Health yesterday issued a statement on the milk situation in the Durham area, and con cluded their findings by decreeing that all milk should be labeled "pasteurized milk" and by re solving that the grade "A" label should be discontinued. , The Chapel Hill Board did not indi cate its future course. The text of the statement fol lows: " The Durham City and County ; Board of Health, at the request of the mayor of the Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen met in joint session today for the purpose of discussing the conditions in the two communities regarding the production and furnishing of milk. The Durham City and County Board of Health have fori several weeds' givcu a uiuiuugii and thoughtful consideration to this matter and have found the following conditions to exist: Prior to the establishment of Camp Butner about one year ago the milk supply from the imme diate territory surrounding Dur ham was sufficient for our needs, so that everybody could have a supply of grade "A" milk. How ever, the camp has brought an estimated increase in population of 50,000 soldiers and civilians, and the Pre-flight school at Chapel Hill an estimated addition of 3,000, making a total esti- j tee on the point system, and the mated increased population to be ! introduction of a new bill re fed from the Durham milk supply quiring all women's organiza- of practically 53,000. This is an increase of more than 50 dur ing the year, with practically no See MILK, page 4 Sea' Opens Tonight At 8:30 A most amazing . suggestion : - De stroy the things you're fighting for . ... South Building's Miss Lackey rebukes Gerald Johnson. On Page Two F - S11S. F-H7 NUMBER 115 arier dules are now posted on the doors of all advisers and students should see them and make ap pointments immediately as those students who have definite ap pointments will receive prefer ence by advisers in registering. After a student has registered he will take his registration slips to the tally line to be set up in Me morial hall. Students in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate school will have preliminary con ferences with their advisers and will then meet with Dean A. W. Hobbs or Dean W. W. Pierson for final registration. Commerce majors have only to see dean of the Commerce school, D. D. Carroll to register. War College freshmen will re port to Dr. Sam Emory in 113 New East .to make plans for a regular registration conference. Griffin has asked that all stu dents register during the period set aside for that purpose, and also announced that no students would be registered after March 8 until the spring quarter had be- gun, Replacement Bill To Be Considered By Coed Senate The coed senate will consider a bill providing for the replace ment of officers who leave school due to early graduation in a meet ing to be held this afternoon at 5 o'clock in the Horace Williams lounge of Graham Mmorial. Other business on slate will be ! a report from the point commit- tion's to make a complete report of work done during the year '42 '43 in case the student govern See REPLACEMENT, page 4 Danish Folk-Play Continues Series "Down to the Sea," a new play of the Danish sea-faring people written by Kai Heiberg-Jurgen-sen, will open tonight at 8 :30 for a run of four days in the Play makers Theatre. The production of Jurgensen's play will be the fourteenth in a series of traditional, annual first productions of original plays written by students in the depart ment of dramatic art. Other original productions have included last year's hit, "Be hold, the Brethren!" by former graduate assistant, now bomber radio operator, Joseph Feldman ; "Smoky Mountain Road," by Fred Koch, Jr. ; "The Marauder," by Noel Houston, and many others. Jurgensen is the great-great-grandson of Johan Ludvig Hei berg, Manager of the Theatre Royal in Copenhagen, Denmark, during the early nineteenth cen- See PLAY MAKERS, page 4 mswE
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 3, 1943, edition 1
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