Ileitis iinsx. INSIDE On dona damage ... Congrats to Early Defeat Of Japs Uilr: Attn Is Neai Pre-Flight ... Student Assembly Beport ... CWC Review . . . VTfcat Went, What Goes -Page Ttco VOLUME LI Bwtom uJ Cireciotijm: 8641 CHAPEL HILL, N. O, SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1943 Editorial: T-Z1U. Nam: T-SIU. Ml 47 NUMBER 172 14 Die As Army Plaiie Crashes At Newland WASHINGTON, May 15 (UP) Early ousting of Japan ese forces from. Attu, western most part of the Aleutian Is lands seemed assured tonight, and U. S. military leaders al ready were believed mapping the next step in their campaign to drive the enemy completely out of the North Pacific. NEWLAND, May 15 (UP) A mum-motored, army air plane crashed into the side of Gingercake Mountain 14 miles south of here and caught fire late today killing all occupants. Residents " of the area who reached the scene after the crash counted 14 bodies in and about the wreckage of the plane which was scattered over a 500 foot area on the wooded hillside. US Flying Fortresses Smash Northwest of Rome ALLIED HDQS., North Afri ca, May 15 (UP) Air Chief Marshall Sir Arthur Tedder an nounced today that U. S.1 Flying Fortresses smashing 38 miles northwest of Rome, struck one of their deepest blows against the under side of Europe. Italy Mobilizes Forces For Feared Allied Invasion LONDON, May 15 (UP) Premier Mussolini mobilized all the forces of Fascism to with stand an invasion as Italy's mili tary and naval leaders bluntly warned their jittery countrymen that their defenses may not be strong enough to prevent Allied landing. Pope's Peace Call Bolsters Plans Of Allied Leaders WASHINGTON, May 15 (UP) The Vatican's radio dis closure that Pope Pius calls for peace "but not peace at any price," was looked on tonight as strengthening the hand of Presi dent Roosevelt and Prime Min ister Winston Churchill against possible Axis peace offensive. Lewis Plays A Waiting Game As New Strike Deadline Nears NEW YORK, May 15 (UP) With a new strike deadline in the nation's soft coal fields scarcely 48 hours away it ap peared tonight that John L. Lewis wants more, was playing a waiting game and not until the last minute- if at all would he reply to a WLB demand for a re sumption of wage negotiations. Flying Fortresses "Sew" Fire-Bombs On Nazi Targets LONDON, May 15 (UP) Flying fortresses smashing American bombing records for the third straight day, today See NEWS BRIEFS, poff l is "r" dmc i -wt i fv aw- Meloases li&CSg US lira ILMM I ftp? n 1 calls Graduation Ceremony eceives War-Time Cut R Pre-flight Adds Military Note With Open Door Policy To Seniors This year's graduation will combine Carolina tradition with "the condensation and simplicity necessary because of the war." The regular three day commencement has been cut to two and a half, and will start Sunday May 30. Graduation begins with the baccalaureate sermon in Memorial Hall Sunday at 11 a. m., conducted by Dr. Charles Maddry, for eign missions secretary of thef" Figures Jkiofcafe Carolin Will Have 1,300 Meservisis By Kat Hill Preliminary tabulations of the trial registration of V-l, V-7 and Marine reservists and NROTC students, plus approximately 700 Navy students expected to be sent in by the Navy, indicate that some 1300 students probably will be included in the Naval Training Program beginning here July 1, according to a statement from Dean Bradshaw. Results Southern Baptist convention. Dr. Maddry, a member of the class of 1904, was born a few miles outside Chapel Hill. For the Bap tist convention he has travelled all over the world. During the bombing of Pearl Harbor he was in Honolulu. At 8:30 the Men's and Wom en's glee clubs, the Chapel Hill choral club and the pre-flight school choir will join voices in Joseph Haydn's "The Creation," directed by John Toms, starring Brooks Dunbar and Miss Vir ginia Blair. Class and alumni day will be Monday May 31. At 10 a. m. the last class meeting, conducted by Dean Francis Bradshaw will be held. This meeting will be fol lowed at 11:00 by a reception for graduates and their guests under Davie Poplar. The purpose of the reception is to give par ents and guests an opportunity to meet the Carolina faculty. In Swain Hall at 1:00 Dean R. B. House will preside over the Dutch luncheon for seniors, guests and alumni. The Playmakers will take over graduation celebration Monday See GRADUATION, page 4 Colleges May Now Contact Alumni In Armed Services Carnegie Foundation Offers Program To American Universities In order that alumni in the armed services who are stationed in unfamiliar places might meet their .classmates and, fraternity brothers, the Association of American Colleges is sponsoring a program by which various colleges could keep in touch with their alumni in the Army, Navy and Marines. Calling for the co-operation of all colleges and universities con cerned, this program will appoint a college alumnus in cities near trainincr centers and camps to BRADSHAW camps direct the College Registration Service. This representative will set up headquarters in a cen trally located hotel and will keep records of alumni stationed at the service base. Visiting serv icemen will register at this post and in turn will find the names and addresses of other alumni of his university. Plans for this program were discussed in a meeting of alum ni secretaries of several colleges last January. This group launch ed the orosrram. but it soon found out that the plan was too vast to be undertaken by such a small band. In the trial attempt fourteen universities established registration centers throughout the nation before asking all col leges and universities to partici pate. When the College Registration Service was recognized as a wor- See COLLEGES, page 4 Degree Candidates Degree candidates expect ing to receive diplomas on June 1 are asked by Dean House and Faculty Marshal Dr. W. M. Dey to meet Tues day, 7:30 p.m. in Hill Music hall for an "instruction ses sion" how to form the acade mic procession for the gradu ation exercises at Commence ment. The request of the senior class that graduation exer cises be transferred to Kenan Stadium from Memorial hall, voiced unanimously at the senior banquet last Thursday night, makes necessary a change of arrangements which will be discussed at the Tues day night session. A full at tendance is urged to eliminate the necessity of later meetings during exam week. Fifty Boys Crowd Together In Dormitory Basement Steele 'Breakfast Club' Has Dwindled By Sara Yokley Jiouse these student bus boys&fights, studying was all done next The basement of Steele dormi tory since last summer has been the home of the "breakfast club" ; it has housed the majority of boys who work on the 5 to 8 a.m. "sunrise shift" at Lenoir dining hall. In September fifty boys crowd ed together in the basement, beds were lined against the "walls, clothes were stored everywhere, hut the number has now dwindled to a mere six. Birth of Club The club was born last summer when boys came to work in Le nir dining hall for their room and board. Since the dormitories wre full Mr. E. S. Lanier had to where they could all be together, all arise at the same early hour in the morning. The answer to their rooming problem was Steele basement. In September the club really got under way. The boys elected a house manager and made their own dormitory rules. Upstairs in Steele there were few regulations, but down below lights had to be out at 10:00, radios had to be si lent at 11. When the rest of the dormitory was asleep at 5 a.m. the breakfast club arose, and went to Lenoir dining hall. Life was different in the base ment . . . no one sat up in all night poker games, no one ever got into door in Saunders hall. Most of the boys were fresh men who depended entirely on Lenoir dining hall for their bread and butter, yet they presented a cross section of Carolina life. Five of the boys played freshman football, one was a member of the freshman basketball varsity, sev eral went out for track, one was on the honor council, and a few were interested in politics and student government. They came from all over the country North Carolina, New York, Vir ginia, the west and the deep south. But their differences made See STEELE, page 4 Dr. Graham To Dedicate Open Theatre The Forest Theatre will be dedicated at the final showing of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream" tonight at 8 :45 as the 25th annual outdoor pro duction by the Carolina Play makers comes to a close. Proff Koch, who today marks the 25th anniversary of his di recting Forest Theatre produc-. tion3, will introduce President Graham and after a few brief words of dedication of the remod eled theatre the final perform ance of Shakespeare's comedy of fairyland will go on. Proff began his career as di rector of the Playmakers forest theatre productions in the sum mer of 1919 with the presenta tion of "The Taming of the Shrew." Since that first produc tion the theatre has grown con stantly in size and elaborateness and has gained for the Playmak ers nationwide dramatic recog nition. Red Cross Trains 'Grey Ladies' Unit Mrs. C. W. Hartshough, Jr., chairman of the Red Cross Hos pital and Recreation Corps, has under her direction in Chapel Hill the training of a unit of "Grey Ladies" for the naval Pre-flight hospital. The work of the "Grey Ladies" is to visit the men in hospitals, write letters for them, read and supply books, and play games, or otherwise entertain them. The women chosen for this work are picked especially for certain qualifications, and then careful- See LADIES, page 4 Although the compiled results are not complete, they form a basis for curriculum planning for next year. The War College now faces the problem of coordinating the University regular quarterly run curriculum with the Navy trisemester curriculum. Registration results show that students included in the Naval program are asking for a varied and scattered number of courses, . Civilian students will be admitted to the classes set up for the Navy students. The Navy has asked the University faculty to indicate courses which will be open in July for civilian students, and the room in these courses over and above the needs of civilian students. Registration Breakdown Of the total registrations, 65 are Marine reservists, 182 NROTC students, 237 V-l and V-7 reservists. A hundred and thirty more of these groups have either registered since tabulations were made, or are expected to register before the Navy program goes into effect. Since the first announcement that the University had been chosen for the site of a V-12 training program, speculation has been focused on the exact number of men that would Jbe sent here. Early Figures Early figures were low and lead to Bradshaw's statement in March that the University "would not require the use of fra ternity house space for service until November 1." Since then, the number has risen until last month South building heads were able to enter into negotiations with the fraternities for their total living quarters. Included in the V-12 program, which will form the bulk of the 1,300 will be the present V-l contingent, high school students who qualified in. the recent Navy exam, and the NROTC. No definite commitment has as yet been made by the Marine Corps as to the establishment of a training base here. SEC Offers Mozart Opera Figaro" Singers Are All Julliard School Graduates By O. P. Charters f Ail-American, born and bred, The Juilliard Graduate School was the meeting place of the young singers whose new and ex citing production of Mozart's Marriage of Figaro" will be heard here on Friday, May 21 in Memorial Hall under the aus pices of the Student Entertain ment Committee. Their talents had won them scholarships to study at this school which had produced such great Metropoli tan singers as the tenor, Charles Kullman and the mezzo-soprano, Rise Stevens. Although young the oldest member of the troupe is now thirty they were even at that time experienced troupers. Summer Civilians Will Meet Parker All men undergraduates who will be back at the University as civilians, this summer are asked to meet with Dean Park er in the Horace Williams Lounge of Graham Memorial at 7:30 on Tuesday night. The meeting will not last more than thirty minutes. they wanted to do something about opera in America. Ger mans hear their Verdi in Ger man ; Italians hear their Wagner in Italian. Americans are asked to pay more money for opera than any other people and to sit through it like children at a grown-ups' dinner who aren't supposed to ask what the conver sation is all about. These young people were en thusiasts for the Juilliard idea that Americans couldn't be ex pected to like opera unless they could understand the words. But there was another difiiculty ; most See SEC, page 4 ehind It All ! O By the tangential methodstween 600 and 800 spaces for stu- of disclosing "registration fig- dents out in town. That should ures," the administration indi-be ample room for the civilian cates that 1300 reservists will probably be here for the naval j training program. The news, de spite the circumlocutive release, can be taken for the truth. O It is not really news. Ac quisition of fraternity houses alone was adequate to forecast definitely a much larger contin gent than was originally prog nosticated late in March by Dean Bradshaw. O For some time the adminis tration has been working in or der that this the second transi tion the first was the absorp tion of the Pre-Flight School will not be so painful. Because fraternity houses have been leased, the housing problem, for the Navy anyway, will probably be taken care of. There are be- men enrolled. O The eating picture is not nearly so clear or comforting. It will take the full facilities of Swain hall to feed the reservists. Downtown prices continue high and the labor problem becomes increasingly acute. Fraternity dining halls will no longer feed 500 or more mouths. Spencer dining hall can be enlarged, but only so far. ' O The only hope left is the Graham Memorial grill. For some weeks a special committee has been empowered to act for the Board of Directors in leasing the Grill to Pre-Meteorology School. Delay this long indi cates that the committee will not go through with the transaction, that the Grill will be kept to feed civilian students.