Tar Jill Elevee To Open 10-Game Sesisoini With Gitodel i i PSffiSJSi-- (Oi . lSI 111) j O Unfinished Campaign SZ Vj UNi 1 'EATHER: Pretty Moon last night scat ters clouds : Fair Z 525 -INITIAL CONTEST SLATED HERE ON SEPTEMBER 23 Clash Will Be Second Between Two Aggregations By WILLIAM L. BEERMAN The Citadel, military stronghold of South Carolina, will play a Carolina football team for the second time in the history of the sport it was an nounced yesterday by athletic officials, who revealed that the -opening 1939 game for Ray Wolf's eleven would be played September 23 with Citadel as opposition. The addition, bringing the number of games to be played up to 10, necessi tated no change in the original sched ule, as it was placed one week before the Wake Forest contest previously listed as the intial game. In 1915, Carolina opened against The Citadel and won, 14-7. MAY BE PERMANENT An unsually long period of pre-sea-son idleness, lasting until September SO, caused the negotiations which end ed in Citadel's one-year contract to play here. Indications are that the con tract will probably be renewed from season to season, should relations thi3 year prove successful. Wake Forest has been scheduled for September 30, but until the addition of The Citadel, three idle week-ends were in store for the footballers at the beginning of fall. Following the two home games, Carolina meets VPI at Norfolk, re turns to Kenan for a game with NYU, plays Tulane at New Orleans, Penn at Philadelphia, NC State , here, David son at Winston-Salem, Duke at Dur ham all on, successive week-ends. The -UiuVersityoTVJrginia closes; the sea son here with the traditional Thanks giving classic November 30, but the preceding Saturday is an open date. Coached by Tatum Gressette, The Citadel Bulldog eleven played a 10 game schedule last year featured by a mid-season suicide tilt with Tennes see. TOWEL USER Gressette attended the recent South ern conference boxing tournament at Columbia, and substantiated the rumor that he was the gloomiest member of the annual Crying Conference for foot ball coaches. "We haven't got a thing this year," he tried to assure listeners. (Continued on page two) Hobbs, Schinhan To Debate W & M Sam Hobbs and Phil Schinhan were selected on the basis of tryouts last Wednesday night to represent Caro lina when Miss Anne Cross and Betty Moore of the William and Mary girls' squad debates here Sunday night at 8:30 in Graham memorial lounge. Both men have already gathered volumes of material, factual and oth erwise, and are impatient to rant way on the query, Resolved, That the eman cipated woman is a menance. Carolina being a coeducational University and this education being part of woman's emancipation, the question was con sidered pertinent one for debate. Keeping Pace With The VOLUME XLVII - cprxotui. 4, CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, MAECH 3, 1939 ... NUMBER 123 Coed Fencers Will Meet Many Strong Teams On Yankee Tour J omen To Meet No Southern Schools On Seven-Day Barnstorming Trip By JERRY STOFF Not content with letting the men get the best of the Carolina fencing ame, the University's women's fenc- !ng teaD1- will take a barnstorming during the spring vacation, cul- matmg xnth a three day's stand in New V i. .. . lined unt ity. with five dual meets UP, the Tar Heel coeds will hit i? City and Yankeeland on this the E first t0UF Which not only ends the tioii i6ar f intercHegiate competi ahl v'er held at this University but !a , es the first se38011 of of f icial ens fencing at Carolina. ; T nil that'a not a11 the f irsts f0T il Blue the initial appearance of a 8Portatv White women,s te&m in aI,y far away from home. No (Continued on last page) Trio Of Campus Playwrights ,'4 r ', Si V) Miss Gwenn Pharis and Wieder Sievers, standing, and Donald Muller, seat ed, are the three authors whose plays will be presented, in ithe Play maker theater tonight and tomorrow night at 8:30. Admission to the productions is by Playmakers season ticket, or by tickets on sale at 50 cents. Judd Says Boycott On Japan Is Cure For China -S REGISTRATION BEGINS TODAY Permits Will Be -In Memorial Hall Registration of undergraduate stu dents for the spring quarter will begin this morning at 9 o'clock and continue until 5 o'clock in the afternoon. To morrow registration will last from 9 to 1 o'clock, and will begin again Mon day and last through next Saturday with the same hours. Registration for graduate students will begin Monday morning. - Before registering, students must first obtain permits which will be dis tributed in Memorial nail. Alter se curing the permit, students will then see their respective deans and advisers and from there proceed to the tally desk in the Memorial hall balcony. Students in the College of Arts and Sciences must see their divisional ad visers before registering. All those taking teacher training must go to 127 Peabody before begin ning their registration. I. C. Griffin of the Central Records office stated yesterday that all stu dents in residence are expected to reg ister by next Saturday. Men Credit Offered For Wang Course Five hours credit will be given to any student enrolling in Miss Eliza beth Wang's class on the History of Chinese Literature and Philosophy. Although Miss Wang has been con ducting a private class for the past year, this is the first time it has been entered into the University curriculum for credit hours. The course will deal with Chinese literature and also the political and social situation as influenced by philo sophy. No text book will be used, but the required reading will be in outside books, translated from the Chinese into English. The lectures by Miss Wang will be entirely in .English, and followed by an open forum discussion. (Continued on page two) T OAZ.F COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- m S.'v , mm mm. v. j.-.-jTf; .Wf-w.v.wX v. 'rWafllls Doctor Declares U. S. Buys Half Of Japanese Exports By DONALD BISHOP "Stop buying, stop selling, and start giving." Dr. Walter Judd, American doctor who has seen many of the hor rors of the Japanese subjugation of China, offered this prescription to an audience in Graham memorial last night as the cure for China's ills. He placed most emphasis on the economic aspects of America's rela tion to the Sino-Japanese conflict. Do nations to relieve Chinese misery he saw as nothing more than a palliative; upon a boycott of Japan, of both pur chases and sales, rests China's future security, and indirectly, that of the United States also, the speaker be lieved. "We are buying over one-half of Ja pan's exports," Dr. Judd told the audi ence of around 100 faculty members and students. "If American women would quit wearing silk stockings and start wearing cotton ones, $100,000,000 a year now going to Japan would re main in this country." Even more important to Japan are shipments by American commercial (Continued on page two) Brown Will Deliver -Addresses At LSU Dr. E. T. Brown of the Mathematics department left yesterday for Baton Rouge, La., where he will deliver two addresses at Louisiana State univer sity. . The first address on "Observations on the Study and Teaching of Mathe matics" will be given tonight before a meeting of the Louisiana-Mississippi branch of the National Council of the teachers of mathematics. Tomorrow night, Dr. Brown will speak on "Properties of Certain Pair of Matrices" before a session of the Louisiana-Mississippi section of the Mathematical Association of America. Pharmatey Students To Hold Assembly A meeting of every student in the Pharmacy school ( to be held this morning at 10:30 in the school audi torium was called yesterday by Dean J. G. Beard. He stated that it was absolutely imperative that every pharmacy stu dent attend. Li -i - - NEWillACHLNE INSTALLED FOR REGISTRATION Equipment Will Shorten Time And Decrease Errors Registration procedure this quarter will not be changed, but billing and re cording will be made swift and more errorless by the use of a mechanical system installed by the administration. Beginning today from the forms made out by the registering students their bills will be made out not in the cashier's office as before but auto matically on machines by means of cards punched according to a special code. At the same time a form will be made out advising the student when to come and pay his bill. From experience a means has been devised through the use of the machine to keep a permanent record, a form for reporting a student's record by quar ters to his parents, his dean or others concerned, several forms for the trans mission of information to and from the faculty and a system for preparing copy for a student directory all of which can be obtained by the electric accounting machine from essentially the same set of punched cards. RIGHT AWAY The equipment was installed by the International Business Machines cor poration and will be put into use right away. One instance of the time saving qualities of the process is that by means of the machine 15000 class tickets will be in the hands of the instructors with in twelve hours after the forms are turned in to the department; whereas before. twelve stenographers worked four days to accomplish the same amount. GOODMAN AMAZES STRING QUARTET Ensemble To Play At Hill Monday Chamber music met swing music last year when Benny Goodman, king of jitterbugs, made a "serious music audi tion" before the members of the Coo lidge String quartet, who were amazed at the bandmaster's musicianship. The result was an invitation to the quartet to play with him on his weekly radio hour. The following Tuesday night, the radio audience of the Camel Hour had the unusual experience of hearing their idol play the clarinet part of Mozart's I "Clarinet Quartet" with the Coolidge ensemble, - ENSEMBLE TO APPEAR It is that same ensemble that will appear here at 8 :30 Monday night in Hill Music hall under the sponsorship of the Elizabeth Sprague "Coolidge foundation of the Library of Congress in Washington. The quartet was found ed in 1936 and since then has been heard in recital all over the country and in numerous radio broadcasts from the Library of Congress under private auspices. The public is invited to attend the concert for which there is no admission charge. Climatological Data Shows That Weather Yesterday Was Nothing New In These Parts Commerce Men Plan Program The commerce professional frater nity, Delta Sigma Phi, has completed plans for an enlarged four point pro gram for the spring quarter, including speeches by prominent state and na tional business men, industrial tours, addition of young faculty members to promote a closer affiliation between the faculty and the commerce school, and a number of social activities. Milton Hogan is head-master. Clar ence Coburn in the office of chancel lor has charge of the meetings. Har vey Tyndall is the scribe, and Jim Williams is the treasurer of the organization. David Clark To Be Considered By Legislature For Place On University Board Of Trustees Director 2, V. , -.y. Walter Vassar, who will direct the Greensboro College Glee club in a concert in Memorial hall Sunday aft ernoon at 3:30. PLAYMAKERS WILL CONTINUE BELL TONIGHT Program Of Three Plays Begins In Theater At 8:30 Tonight and tomorrow night the Playmakers will again present their bill of three one-act plays in the Play maker theater at 8 :30. The productions were presented last night for the first j time before a large audience. ! Tickets for the plays may be ob tained at Ledbetter Pickard's sta tionery store and at the office of John Parker, the Playmaker business man ager, 314 South building. The tickets are priced at 50 cents or may be ob tained on a Playmaker season ticket. The scenery for the productions was designed by Elmer Hall and the stu dents in his technical courses. Lighting was done by Finley Spear and Fred Walsh acts as stage manager. . Miss Mary Wood is mistress of properties. AUTHORS The three plays, "Twilight Song," "Pasque Flower," and "Kid Sister," were written in the playwriting class (Continued on page two) Hillel Foundation Will Hold Services The Chapel Hill Hillel .foundation will conduct its last services of the winter quarter tonight in the Grail room of Graham memorial. The orthodox service will begin at 7 o'clock and the reform service, at 7:15 p. m. Both will be student-conducted. ; No lecture will be given at this final meeting of the foundation. But The Sonny South May Be Expected To Blossom Before So Very Long With uncanny precision the rainy season, iir Chapel Hill continues through the first week in March, usually climaxing with snow. True to tradition, yesterday's snow arrived on time. Following this period, a warm sun rises and drys the Hill, and the bright-colored glory of the true sunny South blooms for the rest of the year. The winter quarter has long been expected to bring bad weather. Early issues of the Daily Tar Heel, mention the almost constant rain dur ing these months. Other student pub lications, the old Tar Baby of 1912, humor publication now discdntinued, and the Carolina Magazine frequently (Continued on last page) - , ' r ', f f . - J ', r -'V - J Critic Of Graham Believed To Have Speaker's Support David Clark of Charlotte, editor of the State Textile Bulletin and violent critic of Dr. Frank Graham's liberal policies, is among those who will be considered by the General Assembly to fill the 26 offices on the University board of trustees which will be vacant April 1. W. T. Bost, Sr., University alumnus, has written that D. L. Ward, speaker of the House, has said that he may sup port the Charlotte editor for the posi tion. Ward is believed to agree some what with Clark in his attitude toward the University. One of the arguments given in favor of Clark's election is that he will rep resent an opinion opposite to that of most of the members of the board. Bost ' offers the fact that Clark opposed a Democratic candidate several years ago as one of the reasons he is not being supported more strongly. TERMS EXPIRE " On April 1 terms of office for 25 University trustees expire and the leg islature must either re-elect these members or chose others for their posi tions on the board. There is also a vacancy due to the death among the trustees who would have held office until 1941. . ! Appointments to the position of University trustee are made by a joint committee chosen from both houses of the Legislature. Selections made "hy- this coinmittee are acted on by the Gen- - -eral Assembly. GREENSBORO GIRLS WILL SING SUNDAY Vassar To Conduct Performance Here The Greensboro College Glee club under the direction of sWalter Vassar, head of the voice department at the college, will appear at a concert in Graham Memorial lounge at 3:30 Sun day afternoon, March 5. The group is now on a tour over a large part of the eastern United States and will include Chapel Hill on its itinerary. This organization is well known in the South for-its excellence in .singing and has been presented in over 100 concerts in the past three years. They have been most favorably received at each presentation. WALTER VASSAR Walter Vassar, the conductor, has been outstanding in his work at Greensboro college and since joining the faculty there has reorganized the glee club and another group of singers known as the Meistersingers which is composed of a group of Greensboro businessmen. In addition to being a conductor, Vassar is also a soloist and has won wide acclafm for his solo work. The program to be presented by the glee club consists of both sacred and secular music ranging from early latin to modern and interesting arrange ments of spirituals. Admittance to the concert is free and the public is urged to attend. Changes Announced In English Courses , Two English courses, differing from catalogue announcement, will be of fered for the spring quarter, Dr. G. R. Coff man, head of the English, depart ment, announced yesterday. Dr. E. E. Ericson will teach Modern English Language (English 95,) a five-hours course, at 8:30. Contrary to the catalogue note, which stated, the course would not be offered until next year, the language course will be taught spring quarter. Dr. A. C. Howell will teach literary Aspects of the Bible, (English 87) at 9:30. The course will meet five hours a week, contrary to the catalogue statement that the course would meet only three hours a week. Both the ad ditional English courses will carry full credit. - . i : ! it 5T

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