PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAB HfiEE WEDNESDAY, APRtt e BULLETINS jMiletie Offices ffloyei To If In Gymnasiuin Freshman Handbook Staff will meet in the Grail room of Graham Memo rial at 3 o'clock thi3 afternoon. ,Yackety-Yack Staff Members will meet at 2 o'clock thi3 afternoon in the office to make the official staff nomination for next year's editor. All members are urged to be present. Dean W. F. Rudd Will speak tonight at 7:45 in Howell hall. Everyone in vited. ASU Members Will meet from 7 to 8 o'clock tonight in the Grail room. Education Students Who expect to teach next year will meet Professor Phillips in Peabody 123 at 10:30 this morning. . University Debaters Will meet Pitts burgh' tonight ait 7:30 in the Graham Memorial lounge. Joint Session Of the Carolina League - for International Cooperation arid the - Foreign Policy League will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the GraU room of Graham Memorial. Students Selected to take Red Cross training course for swimming pool life guards will meet at the Infirmary at 2 o'clock this afternoon for physi cal examinations and at the new. gym tonight at 7:30 to start class work. Student Party Will hold a mass meeting at 8 o'clock tonight in the Phi hall of New East. International, Foreign Leagues Meet Tonight . CLIC, FPL Will Hold a Joint Meeting At 8 O'clock In Grail Room Debaters Will Meet Pittsburgh Squad On Campus Tonight j NLRB Query To Be i Discussed At 7:30 : ; In Graham Memorial The Carolina League for Interna tional Cooperation will hold its first meeting of the quarter in the Grail room of Graham Memorial tonight at 8 o'clock in a joint session with the Foreign Policy league. This meeting is the first of its kind in the attempt by Ralph Bragdon and Henry Nigrelli to bring the two or ganizations into a closer relationship. The cardinal objective of this meeting is to make plans for and discuss the forthcoming Peace conference which is to be held in May. Both groups are planning to collaborate with the Southern Conference on Internationa! Relations in this event. Distinction , Both organizations deal with the study of vital international problems and conflicts the distinction between the two lies in that the CLIC has the particular aim of internationalism; the FPL maintains a neutral outlook. Because since there are many mem bers of the FPL who believe in the principles of the former, it is hoped that the configuration will entail more effective program by both groups. With both groups gaining consider able strength this year, the ultimate objective of their, current program is to establish the May conference per manently by holding it annually with the Human Relations institute. University Debaters Jack Fairley and Bill Cochrane will face Pitts-! burgh's forensic squad tonight at 7:30 in Graham Memorial lounge on the query, Resolved, That the National Labor Relations board be empowered to enforce compulsory arbitration in all labor , disputes. Fairley and Cochrane will oppose the bill while Pitt's speakers will pre sent the affirmative. 1 II Y0IIR ft ZM MODELS GOT Jg.mM- TMT I 73b3$HB Second Annual Scholastic Press Institute To Convene Miss Mengel Will Present Folkplays Program To Be Given At Carrboro Friday Miss Ruth Mengel, who completed work for a degree here last quarter, will present "Carolina Folkplays" at the Carrboro schoolhouse Friday night at 7:30. After completing her work here Miss Mengel began to prepare a bill of Carolina folkplays for the Com munity school at Carrboro, where she has discovered some rather promising material. The plays to be presented are: "In Dixon's Kitchen," by Wilbur Stout, and "Funeral Flowers for the Bride," by Mary Hamer. Also on the pro gram will be Miss Ida Mann's chil dren chorus and Tom Evan's orches tra. Admission prices will be 10 cents and 15 cents. Rood, Stephens Stage Duel Also SPORTLIGHT CARTOON NOW PLAYING THURSDAY HAL ROACH presents QGZEDOuli, " Alan Mowbray B4lHBarfcPstsy Kelly-Ann Dvorak y Tom Brown eonita uraimua . Marjorie Rambeau . Also News Pictures Of Miss Estelle Lawson Page AtPinehurst , (Continued from page three) broke through on a close net fight to annex the set 11-9. Carl Rood was far from beaten thouerh and shot right back with a fiery aggressive game of ball to quickly make it one-all in sets, win ning 6-3 before Stephens could quite recover from his opponents snappy re taliation. The Finale On came the final six. Stephens, whose turn it evidently was to click, worked his way to a 4-2 advantage but Rood" soon took the lead 5-4. Ste phens tied the works at 5-5. Car! Rood at match point sacrificed al on a lob which Stephens bungled up giving Carolina the match-set at 7-5 Johnny Foreman provided the fast est game of the afternoon, shellack ing Norm Dalrymple in straight sets one and one. The powerful drives and serves of Foreman's unusually fast game were far too much for lit- ;le Dalrymple ' to handle. Charley Rider, smashing a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Kingsley, came close to taking all the credit from Foreman. Carolina Losses -The running score, as the results came in, credited Frank Farrell with he first Carolina loss when he dropped his third set at 8-6. Aston Beadles, in a nip and tuck contest, pulled himself out of a match- point rut in his second set and then had the tables turned on him when he was stopped some eight or ten times at his own match-point, finally losing all, 6-2, 6-8, and 9-7. Unexpectedly simple wins came in for the driving Tar Heels in the doubles. The Farrell-Carl Rood vs. H. Stephens-M. Stephens match was called off because of darkness with the Carolinians one set to the good and the second one tied at 5-all. Mac Guire and Richards paired together and came out with the only Yale doubles point, defeating Beadles and John Henderson in straight sets. Summary: Singles: , David Stick To Direct Meeting April 29, 30 Friday and Saturday, April 29 and 30, delegates from high school news papers all over the state will convene in Chapel Hill for the second annual meeting of the North Carolina Scho lastic Press institute, to be sponsored again this year by the Daily Tab Heel. David Stick, University fresh man, will replace Stuart Rabb, last year's director, as head of the insti tute.; " Conceived first by Rabb in the fall of 1936, the institute soon turned from a dream to reality when some 45 delegates, representing 14 North Carolina high schools, came to Chapel Hill for a two-day session. . Bigger and Better Plans for this year's meeting are bigger and better. The institute will be begun with a general get-together Friday afternoon and will be conclud ed with either a banquet or a dance Saturday night, . A tentative schedule of events for the coming meeting will run some thing like this: Friday afternoon the institute will be formally opened when delegates will assemble at headquar ters on the second floor of Graham Memorial. At that time the purpose of the institute will be explained, the plans for the following day will be discussed the delegates will be intro duced to representatives from other schools, and rooms will be assigned. Table Discussions Friday night some sort of social function, probably an informal dance, will be held. Saturday will be de voted almost entirely to round table discussions, which will be . led by prominent newspapermen who are especially adept in the kind of jour nalism they will discuss. Each of the speakers will give a brief talk and then lead an informal discussion on his subject. The group is scheduled to make a tour of the campus Saturday noon, and that night the institute will be concluded with another social function. Purpose Tuesday night Stick explained the purpose of the institute to the Uni versity club, following which the group agreed to help in securing rooms for the high school boys and girls. Pete Ivey has turned over the meeting rooms on the second floor of Graham Memorial for headquarters, and tomorrow afternoon the Graham Memorial board of directors will be asKea to cooperate still lurther in making the institute a success. R. M. Grumman, director of the University Extension division, has made arrangements for his depart ment to supply the stamps and en velopes necessary for correspondence with the various schools. Artist Antics l t - " a f Robertson Gives Details, Prices Of Class Rings Robert Linker Designs Jewelry For Juniors And Seniors If this isn't love, it's a good enough imitation to pass anywhere. John Boles and Luli Deste, glamorous Viennese star, are the lovers, and it takes place in Columbia's new ro mantic comedy, "She Married An Artist," showing today at the Carolina Theater. Bill Robertson, student-representa tive in the sale of class rings, yester day stated the important details, prices, and instructions for ordering the jewelry. Designed by Robert Linker, the rings will be engraved with the own er's full name, while fraternity let ters may be set in the stone. Prices, Weights Synthetic, stones will be furnished at no extra charge. The prices for the different weight rings are as fol lows:1 Girl's six pennyweight ring, $14.00; eight pennyweight, $15.00; ten. pennyweight, $16.60; 12 penny weight, $17.75; 14 pennyweight, $21.00; 16 pennyweight, $23.20. These rings are of the same shape and size on the surface, while the dif ference in weight is in the under structure. Delivery Period By placing orders with Bill Robert son, at 306 Mangum, one may obtain the rings after a five-week delivery period. Both juniors and seniors may buy rings at the present time, while or ders may be placed a year after leav ing college through the payment of an extra service charge. United States' Only Law Scrivener Visits Campus Education Students Seeking Employment To Convene Today Will Meet Professor Phillips At 10:30 In 123 Peabody At 10:30 this morning all education students who expect to be employed in active teaching next year will meet Professor Guy B. Phillips, adviser to undergraduate majors in education, in Peabody 123. A complete list of available pros pects in the teaching field will be given in this conference. Interests, Activities Professor Phillips has stated that profitable positions will be more easily attained through full knowledge of the applicant's 'interests and activi ties. Calls are beginning to come into the placement bureau, with a great variety of positions offered. Nominations To Be Made Tomorrow Robert E. Lee Presents Document To University Law Library j (Continued from first page) I Ufnfcinns TTninn bnniv? -will nlsn Roy Armstrong, pre-college guid- tested. be ance director, has donated stencils and mimeographing paper to be used for bulletins. The YMCA will supply the machine and the labor for this work. Innumerable other departments and individuals in the University have either already given support, or have pledged themselves to help, but as Stick explained yesterday, it is impossible at present to give a com plete list of these helpers. There is a possibility that independ ent candidates may spring up in to morrow's nomination assemblies. Last year one of the unopposed candidates met sans-party opposition in the gathering. Arrangements last year called for nominations for general campus of fices to be held in Memorial hall dur ing chapel period, and for class of fices in various rooms at 2 o'clock. Mural Bowling Moves Ahead Virginia Simms To Accompany Kyser ' 'Cn-ntirttioil fvrvm. -ftjr&f. Tin no ) " ' ' rvs I sr,; 7 , i i - ... T- I I UVniUlHCU f U lib UMUM bllHWW in Chifacrn Txrith K vspr T Al Inwinc nl ' tea v" " J ' o I "I .1 ion. J n-u n riumphant tour through the south- -f-' ' -' ern states and has been appearing on I" ' v he Lucky Strike program with Kyser"Ti. each Wednesday nieht from New wu "s York I DKE No. 1 had a hard struggle Being the only feminine vocalist yesterday afternoon before it finally witn KWr hpsnpaks the esteem in uownea jvappa oigma ino. j., oox xo which she is held by this purveyor 316. James of the winners was the of dance rhythm who was recently high scorer oi tne matcn witn ldi av-nr hnnnr of havrner one of points. iNexi nign in scoring the ten best bands in the country from a poll conducted by a national radio publication. By Gladys Best Tripp Robert E. Lee, 73 years old, the only law scrivener or law writer in the United States, and the last of his tribe, is in Chapel Hill. He has been transcribing a document which he presented as a gift to the University law library yesterday. It is the story of a clash between a king's counsel and an astute witness in London. London was the birthplace of Mr. Lee. He received his training in the art of writing about 1,000 yards from Snagsby's office of Dickens' Bleak House. Before the era of typewriters these scriveners, of which only a few are left in England, were necessary and important people. Land Examiner Mr. Lee came to this country over 20 years ago, and worked in the clerk's office at the courthouse in Hillsboro. Two months later he went to Charleston, S. C, as an examiner of land titles. Speaking of England and America, he said: "This is the best of the two countries for a poor man to live in." Legal Classic He is also preparing a legal classic or Governor Hoey and Chief Justice Stacy. The officers of the state and counties, as well as members of the State Supreme Court, are signing their names below this document. Three months is necessary for the completion of one of these legal clas sics. He has documents and letters in the Supreme Court, North Carolina, boutn Carolina, Alabama, and Geor gia. The excerpt "from the sayings of he best eminent men of Bench and ar," wmcn He gave to the law ibrary is interesting both in content and form. In it a former Chief Jus tice of the United States Court visits the Recorder's court in London. Both the counsel, who asks the questions, and . the witness were of the "skin and bone" class. Their witty remarks to each other about commonplace details of the witnp visiting a friend's house between 9-11, 6-3, 7-5; Foreman beat Dalrym ple, 6-1, 6-1; Strain (NC) beat Tfenchliff. 6-2. 3-6. 6-3: Bill Rood (NC) beat Richards, 5-7, 6-2, 6-2; Rider (NC) beat Kingsley, 6-2, 6-2; Campbell (Y) beat Farrell, 6-1, 1-6, 8-6; John Henderson (NC) beat M. Stephens, 6-1, 6-3; MacGuire (Y) Beadles, 6-2, 6-8, 9-7. Doubles: Rider-Strain (NC) beat Kingsley- Campbell, 6-3, 6-1; Foreman-Carl Rood (NC) beat H. Stephens-M.Ste-nhpns. 6-4. 6-3; MacGuire-Richards (Y) beat Beadles-Henderson, 6-4, 6-3. was Fletcher of the losers with 125 tallies. Other individual scores were Smith, DKE, 120; Wallace, Kappa Sigma 101; Patterson, DKE, 100; and Long, Kappa Sigma, 90. In the other match of the after noon SAE No. 1, led by Fulenwider, defeated Chi Psi No. 4, 374 to 310 Fulenwider was the high scorer of the match with 140 points. He was followed in scoring by one of his teammates, Wallace with 128 points Next in line in the scoring was Cooke of the losers with 121 points. He was followed by one of his teammates Seymour with 110. Other individual scoring was Wallace, SAE, 106; and Hesse, Chi Psi, 79. This afternoon the quarter-finals will be played off. POOLEXPECIB TO BE OPENED BYAPRE15 Fetzer Believes jriit viiiKeceive Name Of Woolien By William L. Bezemax Offices of the Athletic assocV which for over three years have h2 located in Graham Memorial moved yesterday into the new larger quarters of the gymnasi According to Robert A. Fetzer ? rector of athletics, the new offvt will fulfill a long-felt need lj otttu. -a more complete and rocir housing of the organization. Western End Placed on the first floor, the ofS take up the entire front portion c! the western end of the building a2d are as yet in an unfinished conditio Divided into two spacious rooms t the present, the large expanse of foo space will shortly be partitioned h order to provide for a business aad ticket office in the front, a recepti room, and four individual offices a the rear. r The many windows, together vhi the red and black checked floor rf asphalt-tile, the separate storing tk ets, and the large built-in vault, pre. sent a vast improvement over the cramped space that was available a uraham Memorial. Expected Date Coach Bob, looking over his a domains yesterday, stated that la thought the gym and its facilitia would be opened to students by the 15th of this month. The swimming pool is ready for use, and all thai remains to be done is the assembly and training of a corps of life guard! Asked about the rumored proposal to name the structure in honor of Controller C. T. Woollen, Fetzer said: "That is left up to the meeting of the Board of Trustees, of course, but I believe without a doubt that it Til be named for Mr. Woollen." Controller On Hand Incidentally, Controller Woollen was on hand during the afternoon to show some eight cars of visiting women from Winston-Salem through the plant. The football offices, still located in Graham Memorial, will shortly be moved to the second floor of the gyi, and will occupy one of the 10 rooms, probably on the western side. The physical education staff will locate on the eastern end of the same floor. Athletic Staff The Athletic association, headed by Coach Bob, lists the following men in its organization: G. E. Shepard, O. K. Cornwell, R. B. Wolf, W. F. Lange, C. P. Erickson, J. H. Vauglt, W. D. Skidmore, M. D. Ranson, J. F. Kenfield, Bunn Hearn, Johnny Mor riss, Herman Schnell, Floyd Sievert, M. Z. Ronman, P. H. Quinlan, id J. J. Keller. Employed in a student and gradu ate-student coachiner capacity are George Barclay, R. H. Strayhorn, Ed Coffin, W. G. Dunham, Lester lie Carn, and Fred Fletcher. Carolina Headquarters The YOUNG MEN'S SHOP and 2 o'clock are brought to an am" ing climax with a discussion of din ner. Th Tcitnpcc rlncpc it. hv S&TlZl "uiu ui u iuuk line iiic nllTlOTV -fcllmr-c tttq 1irlr as if U'P We" kept on starvation allowances." 126-128 E. Main DURHAM Winston-Salem, N. C. Liberty Warehouse Tou2R- APRIL 7 Presenting KAYRYSER Benefit Disabled Bus Drivers Sponsored By Greyhound Social Club Advance Sale $1.75 Per Couple Tickets On Sale At Y. M. c. A. Here 1 X. 'real honey (Wk ( makes it I tAMttjl V smoke BEnEnyWs Made to convince 1 r ic crU nines tnat they will get more pleasure out of this honey-cured briar for $ World's biggest seller. Carl Rood (NC) beat H. Stephens Officials: Stockton and Seawell. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.