If Editorials Why Two Magazines? Carolina Merry-Go-Round Headlines Defense Registration Today Lippman Speech Thursday Fashion Voting Begins -THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH Editorial: 4S5: News: 4351; NfcfcU VOLUME L CHAPEL HILL, N. C TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1942 Basilicas: $887; Circulation: S8S Wkt Jlatlp U M 111 r I I 4- 1 V 4 ; .L EXECUTIVES OF North Carolina Press Association which meets Thursdav. presenting columnist Walter Lippman as guest speaker. Top: Ed Anderson, president of as sociation: bottom: Miss Beatrice Cobb, secretary-treasurer. Voting Begins In Sartorial i Contest Today Polls Scheduled To Remain Open Tomorrow, Thursday With candidates m the .Lsquire- Daily Tar Heel contest now parading as pseudo-moaeis ior cipmes win from the fashion pages of Esquire, students today assume the roll of clothes critics to select Carolina's Lus ius Beebe. Voting between 10:30 and 5 o'clock at the "Y," students will choose from the 14 candidates selected by the nom inating committee and the two addi tional candidates, LeRoy L. Little and John "Mooney" Davis, whose hats were thrown in the ring by petition of 25 students. I Awards With expensive watch and college "wear, now on display in Foister's Pho to Shop, worth over $175 to be award ed the winner by interested Durham merchants, Bill Schwartz, business manager of the Tar Heel and director of the contest, expects keen competi tion in the voting which will continue until -Thursday af ternoon. Schwartz again stated that "coeds should play a major part in the voting even though they are excluded from the compe tition." TVo nnlv southern university in which Esouire is conducting a contest of this nature, Carolina is one of 15 TT,rPontative colleges chosen through out th nation. In a forthcoming issue, a complete story of this coast-to-coast ,;t will be run, including stories of the universities involved and See ESQUIBE-DTH. page Chaos with Cadavers 1 - : x- v . .v - '...;:; : ; . ft"; '" - s - ; , , ,-'r v y ' ' v ' - s I ' . ( ' W , ,,' ' -.'.lyv -- .'-::::-.. -. .-, " V- s v ' - ' -; , -s v , '-'':-:;'.-:-:-:v:'. :' : :'s:'-:'; : :-'' -';-;': . vt-'-':- K'. ' ' s , , v ' -v-y';:..-.-v-V,v:-:-v.-.-.:c-: : r'-ss:-: -;-Xv? '-:ol-,':si-, :v;-:. --,:::y , , : , : -. ymm::mm. mvmm:- ?:?:' s5i$ Formula ior Med Students' After-Hour Fun; Put Body in Freshman s Ti MilrA Ream With a shriek of horror, the unclad Carolina Freshman burst f rim his room and rushed out into the early dawn still screaming about a dead body lying in his bed. However, his actions were not without due cause. There was a body, cold and clammy, still dripping with preservative fluid, lying in this luck less freshman's bed. For it seems that Carolina medical students of the last century were endowed with an unusu ally gruesome sense of humor. The necessity of human specimens fox experimentation gave birth to one IMeitse Lippmann Noted Columnist Addresses Group Thursday Night By Paul Komisaruk Walter Lippmann leads the men of the fourth estate to Chapel Hill for the 18th annual North Carolina Press In stitute, Thursday and Friday,' while University officials rushed plans yes terday in preparation for the two-day whirlwind session. The noted columnist heads the Insti tute program with a speech Thursday night at 8:30 from Hill hall, inougn Linnmann has failed to indicate what direction his keynote speech would take, his trip to Chapel Hill has been widely heralded throughout the state press causing much speculation and interest. At present, a special writer for the New York Herald Tribune, Lippmann contributes a daily column, usually from the nation's capital that is distrib uted to several hundred newspapers throughout the country by the Herald Tribune syndicate. LiDpmann's Thursday night speecn is the first major address at Chapel Hill this quarter, and is considered in many quarters as the most significant to be made yet this year. The columnist-commentator received his A. B.degree from Harvard in 1910, and has spent the las three decades al most exclusively in some phase oi journalistic work. During the first World War, lipp mann served as assistant to the secre tary of War from June to October, 1917. and shortly afterward acted as chairman of an organization set up to prepare data for Woodrow Wilsons futile peace conference following the German collapse. He also served tor -a time as captain in the US Military In telligence division of the army, attached to the second section of the General Staff headquarters. Author of over 15 books on political development and social theory, his best known works include "Method of Free- ,t " "TVia New Imperative," "The qoqa Society," "A Preface to Morals," and "Men of Destiny." New Phi Officers To Be Installed At Meet Tonight The Phi Assembly will meet tonight at 7:15 in the Phi hall in New East to mark the beginning of the organiza tion's activities for the winter quarter with the installation of its new officers. Horace Ives, who was elected to the Snpakershin last quarter, stated that this first meeting is to be one of the most important of the quarter, due to nlans that have been laid and the important business which must be discussed. Tn addition to the business, a bill has also been scheduled for discussion: Re solved. That there should be an Allied invasion of Western Europe in the im mediate future." This was selected for debate in response to numerous re quests from students that this question mieht be aired on the campus to de termine student opinion on the subject. Speaker Ives said that this quarter will be one of importance to the club, that the new life that has recently been injected will remove all traces of the rumors of lethargy which have been expressed on the campus recently con cerning the Assembly." Bed, Watch Results $of the most unusual stories in the his tory of the University a tale of mid n?o-ht. crave robbing. ""- ... i From the records of Dr. Whiteneaa, one-time head of the anatomy depart ment, it seems that during the course of one of his lectures, he had expressed the need of a specimen in order to give .fronts first hand experience. The following day, as the doctor entered the class, his eyes fell upon an. ungam w obiect hidden beneath the canvas on the operating table. Shrugging his small rouna sauuiuci See CADAVERS, pwe 4 to Highlight Press Preparations For South Americans Freshmen Pass Class Budget By 481-54 Vote Class Grants Donation To NYA Fund The long awaited freshman budget was presented, discussed, and passed yesterday, all m one easy motion, as me first-year men signified their inten tions to start the year on a firm foot ing. By an overwhelming vote of approv al, 481 to 54, the budget, featuring a $75 donation to the NYA, was put into the records without delay. , The NYA donation was taken from the money originally scheduled to be used for class dance later this quarter and it was recommended by the finance committee that the $75 be used to aid a member of the class of 1945 in the NYA. Freshman President Mac Lane, as sisted by the co-chairmen of the finance committee, Lee Adams and i ennor L.or bett, conducted the assembly meeting yesterday and discussed briefly the various items included on the budget before asking the members of the class to vote on it. Total cash on hand from class fees amounted to $550 and with total c'on- racted expenses and allotments add ing up to the same figure, the budget exactly balanced. Following is a complete list of items included on the bill: loan to needy students for Yackety-Yack pictures $85; University Auditing fee-r$10; reshmen introductory pages in Yack- etv-Yack $50: miscellaneous and sup plies $25; emergency fund $5; total contracted expenses $175. Total allotments of $375 included $300 for the freshman dance and $75 to NYA fund. These allotments and contracted expenses totaling $550 ex actly equaled the $550 on hand from class fees. During the open discussion of the new budget before the voting in Me morial hall yesterday, freshmen who had any questions concerning the bill were recognized by the chairmen of the meeting. The question of whether first year men who did not want their picture in the Yackety. Yack would be charged the standard $1.65 rate any way was, raised and' class president Mac Lane asserted that all freshmen would be charged whether or not their photograph was included in the an nual. Ex-BMOC's Join Armed Forces By Westy Fenhagen Carolina BMOC's of a year ago, now thrown out into the cold, hard world to shift for themselves, have shown a marked tendency in recent months to offer their many diversified talents to the armed services. Information from various army, nav al, and air corps ' centers throughout the nation discloses facts about no less than thirteen Carolina men, active on campus this time last year, but now serving their country in different ca pacities. - " Last year's editor of the Daily Tar Heel, Don' Bishop, is making good use of his journalistic experience at Fort Bragg where he is in charge of all pub licity releases. Steve Forrest, senior class treasurer, member of class executive committee, member of Monogram Club, Interdorm Council, and wrestling team respective ly is enrolled at Air Corps Center, Barksdale Field, Louisiana. Leonard Lobred, president last year of Publications Union Board, sports editor of Daily Tar Heel, and writer for Carolina Magazine, belongs to the new V-7, USNR- , 4 liraiLKLPlll Com Ships Scheduled To Dock Today In New York Campus leaders working in complete accord with Inter-American Institute directors intensified preparations for the arrival of the South American "summer scholars" as expectations of an on-time docking were substantiated by last minute New York reports. Breaking the strict, war time censor ship which for over two weeks has kept all information relative to ship sail ings in the dark, word was received yes terday that, barring last minute emer gencies, the Grace liner, Santa Clara, and the" Moore McCormick ship would dock sometime today. With this news came wordrfrom In stitute chairman, Dr. S. E. Leavitt, that all is in readiness for their arrival at Carolina this Saturday. Compliment to UNC "It is really remarkable that as many as eleven students braved the dangers of sea travel to carry out their original plans. The University of North Caro lina will see that they are treated with the same consideration as if there were sixty. It is a great compliment to the University to have any students at this time," said Leavitt. Pledges of full support were given by numerous campus organizations. The prevailing feeling was that this project, carried on as it has been under innumerable difficulties, would great ly: aid in firmly establishing the Uni versity in the eyes of State department officials and even be as far reaching as to help foster better relations between the United States and her southern neighbors. Latest developments include plans ror a special 15-minute broadcast from the University radio station next Tues day over stations WRAL, WBBB, and WAIR. Arrangements for improving the vis itors' English will be under the direc- supervision of W. A. Olsen and Earl Wynn who have only to expand the present system in use now. Final details of the welcoming com mittee will be completed upon word from Lyons in New York City of their docking. The Sudamericanos are Eliana Bib- son, Elena Vial, Ivan de la Carrera, Dr. Jose Baya, Dr. Carlos Hague, Dr. Jose Soldan, Guillermo Desialzi, Ko- dolfo Ledgard, Jorge Bellido, and three more not yet known. UNC Sartorial King To Receive Wardrobe Carolina's impresario of style will be given the following merchandise by Durham merchants in the Esquire- Daily Tar Heel contest:, suit, Pntch- ard-Bright; topcoat, Miller-Bishop; sweater, Pritchard-Bright; slacks, Van Straaten; shoes, Miller-Bishop; 3 ties, Miller-Bishop ; 3 shirts, Van Straaten ; 3 handkerchiefs, Van Straaten; cordu roy fingertip coat, Van Straaten. Student Entertainment pleted Siberian Singers Appear on Campus Thursday With Program of Traditional Russian Music "' i . V - !. . I ... r s '-, , ; v - , i SIBERIAN SINGERS who appear T hursday evening under Student En tertainment committee, auspices. B 0 Imstitu Typographical Error: Dance to Be Formal Oh, woe I Perhaps those fixing out the invitations were thinking about the war. Or the printer could have made the mistake. Anyway the print ed invitations to a dance to be held in Kenan dormitory (No. 3) by res idents of that dormitory on Friday night had a slight mistake. The dance is to be formal and not infor mal as the invitations read. Navy Galls Studio Head , Bowers Held Fellowship Here Caught without any famous last words or parting phrases, Robert Bow ers awaited the arrival of the zero hour which would see him off for North western University's School for Deck Officers. Carolina Playmaker since 1935, Bow ers is the only Playmaker ever to re ceive an award from the Department of Dramatic Art for excellence in act ing. Since 1940 he has been production manager in the campus radio studios. Holder of a Rockefeller Fellowship in playwriting, Bowers was within one quarter of receiving a Master's Degree in Dramatic Art, when called to the service. . Bowers played the part of John Bor den in the first production of Paul Green's famous "Lost Colony" and has appeared in th role for the past five seasons. He has also had roles in Green's "Shroud My Body Down," "Johnny Johnson," and "The Field God." He acted in the Broadway pro duction of "You Can't Take It With You.',' Recently he appeared in the campus productions of "The Male An imal" and "Abe Lincoln in Illinois." Frank Brink, graduate student in the Dramatic Art department who took the leading roles in "The Male Animal" and "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" has re placed Bowers as production manager in the campus radio studio. Debate Council Cancels Meetings Because the Debate council has not vet received indication from University of Pennsylvania of its choice of a debate topic for the contest scheduled here January 29, Carrington Gretter yes- terdav announced that Debate squad and council meetings planned tonight have been canceled. Gretter asserted that complete an nouncement of Pennsylvania's decision will be published as soon as the Debate organizations receive notification. New Headquarters For Local Red Cross The Red Cross room, formerly lo cated in the basement of the zoology building, has been moved to 223 Pitts boro Street, Mrs. Frank Graham an nounced yesterday. te Voluntary Enrollment Scheduled Students Enlist At Registration Desks on Campus By Hayden Carrnth With one week of organizational ac tivity ended, the student office of Civ ilian Defense opens today for student enlistment in a two-day drive for cam pus enrollment. Four desks, located in the YMCA, Graham memorial, Library, and Le noir dining hall, will be manned by students of the civilian defense off ice who will receive all enlistment appli cations. Open for student enrollment are: cvilian protection program, civilian in formation service, work in conjunction with the local Red Cross, nutrition, and general staff and office work. Each desk will be equipped with lit erature explaining the various enlist ment possibilities. "The desk personnel is fully trained and prepared to ans wer all questions on the program," said Hundley Grover, co-head of the enlistment service. "It is vital for the success of the program that the student enlistment rolls include a major portion of the student body," said Louis Harris, co ordinator. "The program offers an opportunity for students to perform necessary services in the nation's de fense effort and gain essential train ing in all phases of defense and morale," he added. The organization of radio, rescue, medicaL and utilities crews is indis pensable for the University's defense success," said Dick - Wharton, member of the executive committee. "All stu dents, whether previously trained or not, may help by volunteering their services. All students should give their aid," he said. House's Book Praised Highly By NY Times First national acclamation of "Miss Sue and the Sheriff," new volume by Robert House, Dean of Administra tion, was published in Sunday's New York Times. The review, entitled "Memoirs of a Carolina Childhood," appeared on Page 2 of the newspaper's ' book section. "It is their vivid individuality which makes these memoirs so delightful," the Times reviewer comments. "Delicate fragrance, sturdy pungen-., cy and the, spicy aroma of . humor breathe here through memories of a North Carolina childhood. The Dean of Administration in the University of North Carolina recalls-events and circumstances- and characters in a boy? life not too long, ago, as they center around his father, the Sheriff, and hia mother, Miss Sue. And there is noth ing stereotyped about any of them. . . One of the book's most amusing chapters has to do with a gracious, gentle and charming being a lady of sterling character, fine intelligence and adventurously imaginative, spirit even though she was nothing but cow." ; By Gene Smith Bringing the immortal music of old Russia, the Siberian Singers, under the direction of Nicholas Vasilieff, will ap pear in Memorial hall next Thursday night at 8:30. ' The first part of their program con sists of church music, which has its roots deep down in forgotten centuries. During their singing of Tschaikowsky's "In Church," Archangelsky's "First Psalm," Ippolitoff-Ivanoff's "Behold, Bless Ye the Lord," and "hallelujah," an old church chant, these men appear in 17th century Moscow cathedral robes. Gaily turning to traditional folk See SIBERIAN, page U ry ung af lay om sve- rris ent &e, ve, jn- ey to ed fl ea it tn i! f 1 ! 2 - m i