has Briefs Club Owner Blamed For ire British Drive" North in Africa BOSTON, April 10(UP) Barnet Welanski owner of the Cocoanut Grove, was convicted of manslaughter tonight in con nection with the night-club fire which caused 491 lives and two co-defendants were acquitted. Those exonerated were Welan ski's brother, James, and Jacob Goldfime, after an all-man su perior court jury reported his verdict to Judge Joseph L. Hur ley shortly before 8 p. m. after nearly seven hours' deliberation. ALLIED HDQ., NORTH AFRICA, April 10 (UP) The British Eighth Army pressed northward tonight after taking back Sfax, while Rommel is ex pected to make a stand at Souft'e. American ground forces are ad vancing toward Kairouan and Souffe, while a record-breaking force of Flying Fortresses bomb ed the ten-thousand-ton Italian cruisers Gorizia and Girante at Lamadalena, Sardenia. Lewis Announces Miners To Insist on Pay Increases NEW YORK, April 10 (UP) John L. Lewis announced that the United Mine Workers-would insist on a pay increase despite President Roosevelt's wage price order called upon all workers and farmers tonight to support the miners in fighting what he termed the administration policy of "making the rich more afflu ent and the poor more dispair ing." Airways Head Names New Airports MIAMI, Fla., April i0 (UP) Scores of airports hidden in the jungle of the Carribean Islands and encircled in South America are nearing completion, forming an aerial chain linking the United States with the bulge of Brazil, the jumping-pff place for planes bound for Africa, the Middle .East and the Far East. The disclosure was made today by L. P. O'Connor of Miami, gen eral manager of the airf orce con struction division of Pan-American. Reports Say Italy Fears Forthcoming Invasion LONDON, April 10 (UP) Reports from Europe said to night that Adolph Hitler had re viewed Premier Benito Musso lini's pleas for more guns and planes to defend invasion jitters See NEWS BRIEFS, page i oston Ed Lanier and Self-Help Office Now Looking For Students To Do Jobs Around University Local Campaign Aided Activity By H. C. Cranford If you had spent 13 years working toward the' same goal and then had suddenly found yourself doing an about face, might you not be a little super stitious? ' Take the case of Edwin Sid ney Lanier. Since 193Q Mr. La nier has been in charge of the Office of Student Aid here at the University. ;i His job here has been to find self-help jobs for needy but worthy students : attending the University, and it was really a tough job. During the average year approximately 70 percent of the students were earning some part of their college ex penses through self-help work, and there were always far more applications than jobs. When NYA funds were dras- VOLUME LI BosfneM and C Insulation t 8641 Albes atikiib Analyzes .-fiidia Toiti .Pykstra IHR Speaker Will Follow Rise of US Wisconsin President Gives Weil Lectures Dr. Clarence Dykstra, Univer sity of Wisconsin president and nationally - known government executive, will trace the origins of Democracy in the first of his series of Weil, lectures tomorrow night at 8 :30. Institute The day's Institute of Human Relations speaker has chosen as the first topic, "Dynamic Tradi tion in America." In his Memo rial hall address he will follow America's free government from its beginning in the days of the colonies through Jacksonian de mocracy, influence of the West, Republican domination and fin ally the days of the New Deal. This survey of the beginnings of the country is the "back ground" section of the overall Dykstra topic, "Dynamic Democ racy." Culmination of the three speeches will be the accurate fix ing of the place of freedom in the world j of .., the future and the changes , that events and neces sity will make in it for use in the time of post-war. . Addition In addition to his teaching and studies in political science, the present Wisconsin head has had a outstanding career in practical government. Called in during the era of reform in the 30's to clean up Cincinnati, he managed to "expand and improve the city's services; to keep the city's tax rate among the lowest in the na tion." When the United States enter ed on its first peace-time draft, Roosevelt called on Dykstra to direct its operation. A year after his appointment, 1941, he re signed the draft post to chairman the newly-created National De See DYKSTRA, page 2 - tically reduced last spring, the students themselves put on a campus campaign that netted approximately. $5,000 to assist boys needing help. Now that was the situation last spring. Today it's an entire ly different story. And after go ing one way for 13 years Self Helper Lanier suddenly finds himself going exactly in the op posite direction. New Worry Today instead of being wor ried with finding jobs for self help students, he and Chairman Harry F. Comer of the Self Help Bureau are faced with the task of finding boys to fill the jobs that are available. And they admit they're taking a much worse licking than when their business was to find jobs for the applicants. When he was elected Self- CHAPEL HILL, N. peaks Monday Hi '-' r? DYKSTRA Lee Pictures Duty of Plane In Modern War " Speaker Points Out American Air Power Calling air power a "striking force in its own right" in war and the transportation in the fu ture peace, Civil Aeronautics board member Josh Lee last night gave his IHR audience a complete survey of the recent de velopment of the aeroplane. The former Senator from Okla homa pointed out that the deci sive factor in the easy Nazi vic tories in the first years of the war was the complete dominance of the sky by the Luftwaffe. "When the Nazi blitzkrieg was rolling towards Paris, the French Minister of War said, '5,000 air planes would insure that the Ger mans do not pass.' Here again the plea was for planes." To answer this call, said Lee, the United States is now turning out 6,000 planes each month and all over the world the United Na tions are stepping up the power of their aerial blows against the Axis. On the vital front of supply airpower is also helping to win See LEE, page 4 Strange Turnabout Evident in Demand Help Secretary in 1930, and for the next six or seven years, "we had on file anywhere from six to 10 times as many applications for jobs, scholarships, and loans as we could provide," Secretary Lanier explains. "At present we probably have from three to six times as many available units of help as there are applicants." And the worst, he thinks, is yet to come. He cited the fact that he spent the whole of last August and a goodly part of September trying to muster 150 students to serve as waiters in the dining hall at the Navy Pre f light school. Secretary Lanier has been commended by officials of the Pre-f light school on the good work of student waiters. The of ficials were somewhat skeptical See LANIER, page 4 " " " ' - ' , - " , - - ' 4 ' , ' , .S'.l flrmiiii''f """""""'iml. m C, SUNDAY, APKIL 11, 1943 Noted Expert To Discuss - . .. i Freedom Idea Speaker Has Contact With India Leaders A proposal for the "liquida tion of all colonial empires" will form part of Thomas Yahkub's answer to the "India Question" when he speaks tonight in Me morial hall. Yahkub, today's Institute of Human Relations expert, is a native-born Indian and "out standing authority in America on the affairs of the Asiatic subcontinent." In his discussion, scheduled for 8:30 p. m., he will deal with the present break down in negotiations for India's freedom, a breakdown that has already lead to civil disobedi ence and the Ghandi hunger strike. Conviction - A firm conviction that perma nent peace must await a com plete settlement of the problem is shown in Yahkub's recent statement that it is "a moral is sue which if left unsolved will become the rallying point of the revolution of the East against the West." Schooling at Middlebury and Harvard, universities in the 1910's completed Yahkub's edu cation, after he had graduated from , Malabar and Madras Christain colleges in India. He then reutrned to India where over a span of 20 years he held top-ranking jobs in the govern ment there, including service with the government of Madr See YAHKUB, page U Carolina Student Gains Recognition In Teacher Magazine By Daphne Athas In the war crisis, Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet of the ro mantic era, makes his way to the forefront again in the current struggle between the liberal arts and practical sciences through the pen of a University of North Carolina student, John Clive, who has gained national recognition by the publication of his article r "Shelley's Ode to the West Wind: A Digression," in the March issue of the "News Let ter," monthly magazine of the College English Association. Fate "The fate of the teaching of literature in college as one of the humanities will soon be decided. Some believe that the complete suspension of this function would be only too much like surrender ing a significant part of the cul tural and intellectual freedom that this country must defend against the Nazis." Clive goes on to say : "I am go ing to be in the army before the summer isn't this a waste of time? Shouldn't I be learning about the mechanism of a ma chine gun instead of interpreting the "Ode to the West Wind?" The paper is a work vindicat See STUDENT, page 4 ght ght Editorial: F-Z1U. Newa: A rehitect Notifies Adle r of Acceptance 7 1 f By Kat Hill : ' The slate of the Carolina Workshop Festival was completed last night with the acceptance of Josef Albers, famous architect, to speak on the workshop panel. Albers will appear on the panel, The Place of the Artist in the Post-War World, with James Boyd, Howard Thomas and Struthers Burke. The architect's acceptance was acknowledged in a wire to Work Corps To Outline New Plans Inaugration of the Volunteer War Work Corps will be held at 7 :00 p.m. in the Horace Williams Lounge of Graham Memorial Tuesday night, when students in terested in planting and cultivat ing Victory gardens in Chapel Hill will assemble to hear the plan outlined. Announcement First public announcement of the project was made yesterday by Earl Par due and Frances Al lison, leaders of the organizing and operating of the corps. Instigated by the interest shown by students and faculty members, the plan is designed to alleviate the critical shortage of garden assistance in town. Ef forts of townspeople to grow their own food have been blocked in many cases by the absence of workers. ' Stressing that the meeting will last less than thirty . minutes, Parker said . "attendance at the meeting will cause no obligation whatsoever, since this is a com pletely voluntary affair." Allison and Pardue Allison and Pardue have made See CORPS, page 2 University Party Names Ed Tisdale To Chairmanship Ed Tisdale,rising senior (from umter, South Carolina, was chosen last week to succeed Floyd Cohoon and Jack Markham as chairman of next year's Univer sity Party steering committee. Kitty Flannagan was elected secretary with John Stedman treasurer. Member of class executive committees in both his freshman and sophomore years, Tisdale has since served on the University See UP, page 2 Shirley Smith 's Orches tra To Play at Pharmacy Dances Banquet and Show Will Open Weekend A banquet and student show will open the Pharmacy School's biggest weekend of the year, fea turing the music of Shirley Smith's "band sensation of the south" at the annual dance set this Friday and Saturday nights. The banaquet will start at 7 o'clock Friday evening in the Carolina Inn. Shirley Smith's band plays in Chapel Hill this weekend for the first time although the group has been featured at leading south ern college dances and many well-known clubs. . - Bids for the dances will be given out on Friday afternoon from one until two. Tickets for LATE FLASH: Navy's Netnien beat UNC yes terday, taking four singles, cna doubles match, to win, 5-to-4. F-314S. F-S147 NUMBER 142 Chairman Richard Adler after a total of seven telegrams had passed between Adler and Al- bers. Head of the art department at Black Mountain College, North Carolina, where he has been in strumental in the introduction of the Bauerhaus methods of teach ing, Albers has been exhorted as one of the foremost architect's in the world. His works have been widely exhibited and acclaimed in Europe and in America. One of his paintings was on 'exhibit in Person Hall last year during the exhibit of the works of North Carolina artists. , One of the members of the original Bauerhaus in Weiner Germany, Albers is equally adept in the fields of painting, photog raphy an pytography. He was born in West Phalia, Germany, in 1888, and attended the Royal Art School in Berlin, the Arts and Crafts School in Essen, and the Art Academy in Munich where he taught fundamental de sign from 1923 to 1933 when he and other members of the Bauer haus were ostersized (from Ger many by the Hitler regime. Roy Armstrong Goes To Navy Admissions Director Receives Commission Roy Armstrong, the Uni versity's Director of Admissions, has been commissioned a lieuten ant, junior grade, in the United States Navy and leaves Tuesday for New York City. For thirteen years a familiar figure on the campus, he is sched uled to report Wednesday to the Navy's Columbia school for training in class D-V (S) of the Reserve. Receiving his commission Fri day morning, Armstrong was ordered to go to Raleigh imme diately to taxe his physical ex amination. "I'm glad to report that I passed," he said. He has made thousands of freshmen feel at home on this campus. tun SMITH the banquet may be obtained from the coeds of the Pharmacy School during the week.