Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 19, 1939, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL BULLETINS Alpha Phi Omega Election of of ficers. All members please be pres ent this evening at 7:45, room 214, Graham memorial. Frosh Dance Committee Meet to night at 8 o'clock in Graham memo rial lounge. Hygiene 3, Section 30 Will meet at Woollen gymnasium, room 304, to night from 7 to 8 o'clock. The Woman's- Athletic Association Council Meets today at 2:45 in the Woman's association room in Graham memorial. Girls' Glee Club Meets this after noon at 5 o'clock. Band Practice Tonight at 7 o'clock. Faculty Philosophy of Science Club- Will meet tomorrow at 8 o'clock in stead of this evening in the lounge of the Graduate club. Bull's Head Tea this afternoon at 4:15. Jonathan Daniels will speak. In Memoriam ' To a former composer of this -column, tribute is paid today. Yester day he was confined amidst skull and bones at the University health serv ice. Other unfortunates include D. A. Irwin, G. G. Glamack, J. T. Daugher ty, J. A. Welborn, H. C. Rowland, A. Bershak, A. Hughes, F. C. Millican, W. R. Johnson, W. A. Fonville, W. H. Xeeper, G. C. Rogers, H. T. Terry. B. F. Burtt, S. Boyd, M. Gunter, M. L. Long, M. L, Gillespie, M. Britt, D. W. Seifert, D. E. Sanders, R. G. Tolmach, V. S. Winborne, L. W. Perry, J. L. Talton, E. F. Peacock, G. W. Meyer, D. L. Pressly, G. Grotz, and W. L. Benton. Apologies are now in order for leaving out the name of W. Jeffery Cole from yesterday's hon or role. Quinlan Calls For Heavyweights (Continued from page three) siqSiaAuSij isaq aifl jo auo oii pa seen around so far this season and will cause Zink plenty of trouble. Hamlin's use of the waist hold break was amazing and effective. Clarence Idol successfully protected his posi tion as 145 pounder for the frosh by pinning Ballard, while Jim McLindenJ frosh first man in the 121 pound class, held a slight advantage , over Crotts. Bill Walker-and Jim Joyner were at it again for the varsity 155 pound position in a tough battle, with the former having a slight advantage. More, trial fights will be held, this afternoon with stress being on condi tioning, 'v . - Philosophers To Meet Professor Von Beckerath will read his paper on " 'Liberal' Economic Planning versus Authoritarian Eco nomic Planning" at the meeting of the Faculty Philosophy of Science club, to be held tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the lounge of the Graduate club. The meeting was postponed from this evening. All faculty members are invited to attend. Miss Ruby Thompson To Wed R. S. Jeffreys Miss Ruby Lee Thompson, a Duke university graduate, who is connect ed with Cobb and Homewood, village contractors, was married to Romu lous S. Jeffreys at the St. Phillips Episcopal church in Durham recently. After a wedding trip to Baltimore, the couple will be at home at 1004 Markham avenue in Durham. Ficli Theatre NOW PLAYING EXCITEMENT! mLTBtwjwexa w prrwits csUrrin& CARROLL' FONDA- uaeniatHiimisAT. On Kwtf jurists i ui 1 Also COMEDY NOVELTY Keep In Trim Bey HAIR TAR HEEL 1 m SUMMER PROGRAM TO BE EXPANDED Courses To Benefit School Teachers The 1939 summer session of the University will open June 8 with an enriched and expanded program in education especially planned to meet the professional and cultural needs of public school teachers and adminis trators. The recently-organized Divi sion of Teacher Training has united all the forces of the University in a comprehensive program calculated to select and prepare outstanding teach ers. Other features of this year's sum mer school will include courses in practical and industrial arts for grade and secondary teachers; an extensive program in music education, including a course in public school music for the elementary school, the high school glee club, band and orchestra work; and greatly enriched opportunities for graduate study in the various depart ments. MAKE-UP The summer session is composed of the College division, the Division of Teacher Training, the Graduate school, and the Schools of Law, Li brary Science, and Pharmacy. Approximately 35 visiting faculty members have already been secured, representing schools from all over the nation. The first summer session begins June 8 and continues to July 18; the second session runs from July 19 to August 26. - The complete summer session cata logue will be ready for distribution near the first of February. Town Girls To Give Barnwarming Party The town girls will present their first social event of the year when they sponsor a barnwarming in Gra ham memorial tomorrow night. Guests will appear in farm clothes, and a prize will be given to the girl and boy wearing the most original cos tumes. Music for the occasion will be fur nished by Freddie Johnson and his orchestra. Lewis Williams will call the figures for the square dance. Boxers Prepare For State Match . (Continued from page three) son sparred a round with heavyweight Ed Hubbard yesterday and began to seriously learn the fight racket; he has possibilities which the coach claims he will try to develop. In other varsity sparring matches Andy Gennett worked against Ed Dickerson, a lad some 20 pounds the heavier. Both won their bouts at Cita del and are counted among the best Ronman has on the squad. Fred Hardy, 155-pOunder, took his workout with Dan Beattie as opposition. Beat tie is ineligible, but has continued the sport for the exercise. Hardy has im-. proved steadily since his addition to the squad not quite two weeks ago. BANTAMS SPAR The bantamweight competitors, Billy Winstead and Sam McFalls, went at it once more in their daily battle to see which will fight that position Saturday night. McFalls dropped a close decision to Peeler of The Citadel, and yesterday was at a slight disadvantage when Winstead stepped in and let go with rapid rights and lefts to his head. The two are somewhat different in their style of fighting -T- Winstead fc depending on speed and deception to make up for his lightness and small build. McFalls moving slower and jabbing constantly. Coach Mike is uncertain which he will use in the State meet. Assistant coach Wally Dunham mentioned that although his men could not be listed as experienced, all were in excellent physical shape and improving rapidly with each day's in struction. A tentative line-up for the impending contest will be released to morrow. Sixteen of the first year men are out for the sport, and all but the lightest and the heaviest weights have more than one candidate. r Ronman issued the following writ ten statement to the. press: "Just as soon-as the boys begin to think" for themselves and get a .little more ex perience, I believe we will have a nice team. One fault that was prevalent in those last bouts was the fact that the team as a whole did not take ad vantage of its openings. They must learn to think .for themselves boxing will go a long way in anything they do." With A First-Rate CUT BARBER SHOP GOD OF XX02XZ0KXAL 1 Roman god of waters. 7 He bears a trident for a 13 Aroma. 14 Rounded molding. 16Todeclain. 17 Air. 18DevL 19 Amidst. 20 Woman's girdle. AXUUrCT to T C A TfllA L Rll A I m HE OP R J P J G 5 AS LC 22 Fiber knots. 23 Copious. 24 Southeast 25 Having no hat. 23 Worshiped. 31 Like. 32 To court. 33 Indian. 35 To enervate. 38 Noise. 40 Thing. 41 Solemn. 43 Northeast 44 Measures of type. 45 Kiln. 47 ScuL 43 Drain pipe die. 51 Bush. 54 Actual. 58 Dross. 57 Amphitheater center. 58 Money changing. 59 Made of grain. 60 The most 4 54 13 14 15 17 16 11 25 I? 30 i3 3 35 37 40 3T 43 44 50 51 57 Relations Club Plans To Take Part In Spring Meeting At the monthly business meeting ef the International Relations club last night plans were made for the club's participation in the William and Mary International Relations con ference and a club page in the Yack-ety-Yack. . Some 10 students will attend the conference at William and Mary in April and these students will have an opportunity to see how the Carnegie endowment conducts this type of con ference. It is hoped that the confer ence will be held here in 1940. NEXT ROUND TABLE The next round table to be conduct ed by the club will be. held in Gra ham memorial next Thursday night at 8:30.. It will feature an all-girl panel composed of Melville Corbett, Anne Martin, Margaret Evans, and Nancy Nesbit. Miss Phyllis Campbell will preside. The Sunday broadcast over WPTP will be a round table on "What Is Ahead for Spain?" and the speakers will be Dr. E. J. Woodhouse of the Political Science department, Dr. N. B. Adams of the Spanish department, Dr. Lee M. Brooks of the Sociology department, and Dr. George E. Mow ry of the History department. The club voted to assess each mem ber 50 cents for Yackety-Yack pic tures, which will be ) collected at the Round Table discussion next week. BOARDS President Henry Nigrelli appoint ed publicity, library, and radio boards. The publicity board is composed of Walter Kleeman, Doris Goerch, and Everett Lindsay. President Nigrelli informed the club that the Carnegie endowment had been sending books to the club since 1931 and it was suggested that these books be collected and tnat a departmental library be established to work with the University library. The library board is composed of Miss Mary McMillan, Miss Alma Gant. John Hampton, and Edward Farrish. - The board appointed to put on the Durham broadcasts included Dexter Freeman, Stuart Isaacs, Everett Lindsay, and Lee Wiggins. The Ra leigh radio board is composed of Charles Lerche, John Kendrick, Phyl lis Campbell. John Busby, Walter Kleeman. John Rankin, and Miss Mary Lewis. Plans were also discussed for a na tion-wide broadcast which the club hopes will be put on in the spring. No Town Hall The discussion meeting usually held j in uranam memorial eacn xnursaay 1 night after the Town Hall radio pro : gram will not take place tonight. ILLLLJ In Ik I ' SaFYF pa" 1 WATERS Ifrt 11353 11 Bad. 12 A vrts& zsxK 15 fcS diA principle. 23 Acquiesces. 21 He is the sea of csdi Oca. 23 Paid publicity. 27 South Africa. 23 Possesses. 33 Eggs cf ff-rri 33 Over. 34 Poesx. S3 Tailors CXl 37 Slave. 39 Barometer line. 42 Nostrils. 44 Brink. 48 Street car. N 47 Temptation.. 43 Bitter herb. 50 Rowing tool 52 Hour. 53 Not (prefix l.v 55 Self. AlaiMUvlA SIC I N H IlD T. T t MC A 5 PCN known planet bears his VERTICAL 1 Negative. 2 Evolved. 3 Johnny cake. 4 Three. 5 To bow. 6 Any incident 7 Hill side. 8 To peruse. 9 Baby carriage. 56 South 10 To drive in. Carolina. 6 9 IF 10 II IT 9 Z5 27 1 134 36 M5 46 N7 53 54 55 56 Laycock Heads Board To Publish The "Bud" At their last meeting, members of Phillips Russell's creative writing class, English 54, elected an editorial board to control publication of the an nual class magazine, "Bud." The board is headed by George Lay cock, and is "composed of four associ ate editors: Misses Peggy Sabine and Gladys Best Tripp, Raymond Lowery, and Morris Rosenberg. Rosenberg will also act as business manager for the publication. "Bud" is usually printed in maga zine form, consisting of various bits of literature contributed by the class members. SAE Holds TEP To Low Score, 2 (Continued from page three) ketball game, and put itself as one of the teams to watch in the race for the dormitory crown. Corrubia with 16 points, Gordan with 13, and Fuller with 10 were outstanding in BVP's victory. McGoogan was tops forMan- gum with 6. Law School No. 1 moved into a tie for first place in the dormitory league by defeating Old East. The victory was tne second consecutive for the winners, while the loss was the second for Old East. Dalton of the winners was high" scorer with 8. Easter led the losers with 5. Coach Skidmore 111; Bo Shepard Substitutes (Continued from page three) in the half, Bill McCachren, with two foul shots, had a chance to send the Tar Heels into the lead but missed both tries. Pierce rang up a field gorj for Virginia Tech and the business of hanging on for dear life was almost up ior uarouna. unwortn put in a bucket shot born of last minute des peration, but two long shots failed for the Tar Heels before the end of the game. The Gobblers took a long first half lead and went ahead 15-8 before Caro lina put, on a scoring rally to pull the count to 16-15 at the half. Severin, McCachren, and Pessar all drilled home field goals before Pierce made a foul for Virgnia Tech. Pessar pivo ted another two-pointer for the fina marker of the period. The Tar Heels leave for a two day trip to Maryland and Navy at 8:30 this morning . . . The Terps are met tomorrow . . . The Middies Saturday afternoon . . . Tom Ingram of the Gob blers turned his ankle early in the second half and had to leave the game". . . By scoring 13 points, Dil worth went ahead of Jimmy Howard as the leading point gatherer on the team. ' AY N ST silT iiEa T I 6 M AT LSHT I 5 MR U e Tc LOSE lin i aus "je a i s H AM t TIC O S T ZBT Wins Game Over St Anthony (Continued from page three) the victorious team taking two matches by identical scores Graham defeated Lewis. The Graham team took the first game by 15-9, and the finale by a same count. Chi Psi found little trouble in gain ing a match over Sigma Nu by two consecutive victories. The first game ended with Chi Psi on the long end of a 15-3 count, and the second ended with the same team on the long end of a 15-7 count. Print To Fit (Continued from page three) and windows and prepare for the Martian invasion of home and hearth. Murray Greason has put together four seniors, one junior, and a sopho more into a smooth instrument of death and destruction. Jim Waller, Boyd Owen, Turk Owen, and Jim Carter have been playing together for three seasons. Bill Sweel, the sweet guy, is the junior while Vinnie Con very, a long shooting fellah, is the only sophomore. The team is well knit, everybody knows where everybody else will be at a given hour under a given circumstance if the ball passed with reasonable accuracy. Mixing everything one finds nretty good basketball team is a at Wake Forest this year, senting vote heard? Is a 0 dis- Davidson, according to a statement by President Walter Lingle, has de cided to go pure in a big way. The president said enough big-time foot ball for Davidson; from now on the Wildcats play only teams in their class. The Davidsons have always been strong against small college teams, and it is probably just as well they're breaking away. Get Duke, State, and Carolina off the Wildcat schedule and they'll turn in one of . the better small college records every year. Coach Herman Hickman . has intro duced a numbers arrangement that is a big help to late-comers to his State wrestling matches . . . Tights of his lightest matman has a big No. 1 on the leg; next lightest No. 2, etc., right on up through the . heaviest with No. 8 . . . Bouts are held in that order so jate-comers can always tell how far the program has gone . . . Ham Strayhorn of the athletic asso ciation has a brother, George, on the State freshman team ? . . Bill Kern, named coach of the year a little while back, turned down bids from both Holy Cross and Boston college ac cording to rumor .. . Kern must like it at Carnegie ... Major Bob Ney land got a seven-year contract at Tennessee because Florida was bid ding too strongly for the major . . . Hockey is booming in Southern Cali fornia ... Crowds have increased to the point where basketball has been forced out of one arena to make room for the skaters . . . L. C. Boles has been football coach at Wooster col lege in Ohio for 33 years ... He might have a permanent job some day . . . Marshall Goldberg's brother Bill was a second-string back on the Pitt football squad last fall. Winston Defeats Reserve Fencers (Continued from page three) Heel swordsmen competed at all, turned out to be a free-for-all before the night was even half over. The meet see-sawed along through out the evening, until, at the last match, the count was deadlocked at 7-all. Then, Bogle, of the visitors, pulled through a 5-3 victory for his club's win. USED AUTO PARTS AUTO GLASS INSTALLED Wrecked & Old Cars Bought Any Make, ModeL Condition Durham Iron & Metal Co. 1004-06 Roxboro St. Phone F-3283 DURHAM, N. a Grail Saturday Night 9:0012:00 TIN CAN Music By Music by the Admission $1.00 On The Air By Walter Kleemax Advance note: Jimmie Lur.eefo-.j has signed with CBS new chHd, A-n. erkan Record ... first disciu "Cheatin On Me," with "Tain't Wu You Do but the Way that You Do h . . . and more ork schedules for ti winter at night on CBS . . . Saay Kaye & S. & S. rhythm, Mon., n:3 Tuesday., 12:00, Thurs. 12:30 ... pez Sun. and Thurs, at 11 . . . Georg Hall can be found 12:00 Monday 12:30 Fridays . . . T. Fiorito 11:29 Sundays on tap for today: 7:30 Joe Penner joins the R. 0. T. C, wears a white duck dress uniform, no doubt, WBT. 8:00 Jane -Warren, the Kind's Men, Rudy Vallee, guests, WLW; Claire Trevor leaves the rackets for a moment to guest for Kate Smith, WHAS. 8:30 Jose Iturbi conducts the Eo Chester symphony, WPTF. 9:00 Robert, Young, Frank Mor gan, Tony Martin, Fanny Brice, WPTF; Major Bowes salutes Batte Creek, WDNC. 9:30 America's Town Meeting of the Air, KDKA. 10:00 Tune-Up Time, with Andre Kostelanetz, Kay Thompson, Walter O'Keefe, with Joan Blondell, Dick Powell, emerging from domesticity, WBT; Bing Crosby, Bob Burns, Johnny Scott Trotter, Ken Carpenter on the bells, WLW. 11:00 Clarinet Jive, A. Shaw, WJZ. There are two things we think you ought to know: 1. That we have stop ped printing Daily Rimes, though we have written plenty which are slightly unfit for consumption. If you have any, let us know. 2. Hal Kemp is play ing at Davidson for Mid-Winters. Leonard Invited To Awards Night (Continued from page three) C. G., Kline, C. R., Kraynick, J. J, Lalanne, J. L., Mallory, J. B., Maronic, S. J., Palmer, Horace, Peiffer, Carl, Radman, G. R., Sadoff, S. H., Severin, P. V., Slagle, C. A., Smith, R. B, Stirnweiss, George, Watson, G. D.t Winborne, J. W., Woodson, J. L., Gra ham, A. H. Jr., (manager), Maynard, Albert (manager), Patrick, N. L, (Fresh, manager). VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY Crockett, T. W., Fink, C. E., Glover, J. C, Hall, J. W., Hendrix, W. H., J ames, L. C, Lewis, W. H., Morrison, D. J., Troutman, D. E., Wakeley, F. H., Wagner, W. C. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Baker, C. R., Benton, H. P. Jr., Bonner, A. C, Connelly, J. L., Craft, A. C, Daughtry, R. L., Dunkle, H. N., Edwards, R. P., Elliott, J. D., Fair cloth, W. H., Funke, W. H., Gugert, F. A., Jones, J. F., Learning, J. F., Martukanitz, J. J., Meyers, C. R., Moynihan, E. A., Nowell, A. G, 0' Hare, F. V., Patterson, A. C, Phillips, C. Gl, Pope, H. J., Richardson, S. S.f Randolph, W. S., Shook, J. K., Spran sey, G. B., Stahler, J. R., Stallings, F. D., Stoinoff, R. R., Suntheimer, C. J., Torrey, R. D., White, R. A. FRESHMAN CROSS-COUNTRY Armstrong, J. R., Branch, Henry, Carraway, E. R., Diamond, Stanley, Eddy, J. A., Earle, J. S., Ricks, D. B., Vawter, J. E., Wise, A. L. A From Now on They're Guilty Of Every Crime I Com mit Because 'THEY MADE CRIMINAL" Starring Ann Sheridan John Garfield Claude Rains And The "DEAD END KIDS" CAROLINA JAN. THEATRE 27th 17 .EDamce Duke Ambassadors mi u
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1939, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75