e Stafflip
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Glamack to Be Here
Loudon Signed
Mag Pablic Hearing
THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH-
VOLUME L
BwiacM: 9887; ClrcalAtion: KS4
CHAPEL HILL, N. 0, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1942
NUMBER 100
(&lamack9g Goodyear Team To Meet Plkaiiitoinni
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41
JjRC Schedules Loudon for Speech Here
Dutch Minister
To Make Address
Wednesday Night
Number Two in IRC's Victory Ser
ies, Dr. Alexander Loudon, Netherlands
Minister to 'the United States and
Washington representative for the
Dutch East Indies, will speak here
Wednesday night.
The Minister, in . his first address
since America's declaration of war, will
come to Chapel Hill to give Carolina
students facts and opinions of Nether
lands's fight in the Dutch East Indies,
and policies of the Dutch-in-Exile gov
ernment.
IRC Banquet
" Dr. Loudon will arrive by train with
Madame Loudon early Wednesday
morning. IRC members will tour the
campus with the Netherlands repre
sentatives throughout the afternoon.
At 6 o'clock IRC will stage a banquet
at the Carolina Inn, and the Minister's
address will begin at 8:30 in Memorial
hall.
Following IRC's regular speaker
program,' students will be allowed to
stand and question the Minister in an
open iorum immediately alter tne
speech. A reception for Dr. Loudon
in Graham Memorial will conclude the
Minister's Chapel Hill stay.
Except for visits by British envoys,
most White House war conferences dur
ing the past week and a half have been
with Dr. Loudon and his associates,
newspaper reports indicate.
Great areas of the Dutch East Indies
may fall to the Japanese between now
and Wednesday's address, and because
of this IRC officials are expecting pos
sibly .the most revealing address ever
to be scheduled by the International
Relations club.
Diplomat
Dr. Loudon is a prime member of
the Who's Who roster. He was born
in 1892 in The Hague, Netherlands.
He studied law at Leyden University
and entered the Netherlands diplomatic
service in 1916.
He served as attache in the Nether
lands Legation at Sofia, Constantinople
and London between 1916 and 1921, and
was appointed secretary of the Lega
tee LOUDON, page U
Selden Announces
Cast for New Play
Cast for "Behold, The Brethren," a
play by Joseph Feldman of a Jewish
immigrant mother and her four sons
has been announced by director Samuel
Selden.
Mrs. Rabinov, Lillian Farnol; Aron,
Arthur Golby; Eli, Frank Groseclose;
Morrie, Robert Gutknecht; Joseph,
Robert Carroll; Cantor, Barry Farnol;
Isaac, Buddie Westover; Maggie, Eliz
abeth Trotman; Train Conductor, Irv
ing Smith; Sollie, Skipper Hoyle; El
sie, Nancy Bailey; Anka, Virginia
Archer; Martha, Elizabeth Blair; Flos
sie, Anice Garmany; Reba, Louise
Stumberg; Boris, Paul D'Elia; Lucille,
Betty. Rosenblum; Reporter, William
.Lionel zimmer.
The play will be directed,by Samuel
Selden.
CANDIDATE of SP for junior class
student council representative, Dot
son Palmer.
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Legislature Re-Opens
Campus Mag Question
Public Hearing on Magazine Consolidation
Scheduled Today by Ways & Means Committee
Re-opening the now wide-spread question of what to do with the two Caro
lina periodicals, the Ways and Means committee of the Student legislature,
chairmaned by Louis Harris, will tonight meet in open -discussion in the Grail
room of Graham Memorial at 10 o'clock.
All committeemen must attend and Hunt Hobbs and Henry Moll, editors of
Tar an' Feathers and the Carolina Magazine respectively, will be present.
Red Cross-WSS
CampaignLags
Drive Nets $150
After Three Days
Carolina's Red Cross-World Student
Service drive for $1,000 met its first
lag yesterday as campaigners painted
the mercury of the YMCA thermometer
to the $150 mark.
The new sum makes a $50 average
for the three days' effort, not un to
original expectations. But the student
organization, under co-directorship of
Hundley Gover and Jean Hahn, ap
parently has in preparation many ideas
for a future big push. Campus organi
zations, fraternities, dorms and the
majority of the student body have not
yet been approached.
Benefits
World Student Service funds have
a commendable record of benefits to
the world's students in its drive history.
$151,000 has been raised by American
students for WSS relief since 1937.
With this money 10,900 students in
China have been aided in 101 colleges.
Food for starving students has been
the largest expenditure. And clothing,
medical aid, lodgings, student's centers
and self-help projects have been pro
vided.
In Europe 1,150 French, Polish, Brit
ish and Canadian prisoners-of-war last
year received books and study ma
terials. Refugee students of Polish,
Spanish, Czech, Ukranian, Austrian,
and other Nationalities have been sup
plied with meals, lodging books or uni
versity fees. In Canada and Australia,
interned anti-Nazis and German pris
oners are studying in "universities in
captivity."
And in the United States 400 refugee
students from Europe have been helped
since 1937.
Draft Registration
To Be Held Monday
All men born on or after Febru
ary 17, 1897, and on or before De
cember 31, 1921, and who have not
already registered, are required to
register for the third selective ser
vice Persons subject ' to registration
may register at the following places:
University of North Carolina-Memorial
hall; Chapel Hill North side
Town hall; Chapel Hill South side
Elementary school.
BUD EVANS, selected by Student
Party officials to run for junior
class secretaryship.
Members of the legislature and inter
ested students are urged to attend
and express opinions on the issue..
Moll States Views " ' '
Queried last night, Henry Moll
stated that he was "in complete ac
cord with the editorial published in
today's issue of the Daily Tar Heel,"
and that the solution presented there
in "seemed the most democratic."
Hunt Hobbs expressed the opinion
last night that a combination maga
zine was unfavorable. Several mem
bers of both staffs, including Ann
Montgomery, Charles Colby, Harley
Moore, and Elsie Lyon,, have concur
red with the DTH editorial in the past.
Other business carried on at last
night's meeting of the legislature was
the unanimous passage of a revision in
the budget of the Student council, al
lowing one hundred dollars more under
the travel expenditures item. The ac
tion was deemed necessary because of
risine transportation and food costs
and because the large Southern Stu
dent Federation conference iff' Louisi
ana, is still to be held this year.
Further action by the legislature
included the appropriation of $115.20
to the Office of Student Civilian De
fense for office and operating ex
penses. The bill, explained by Louis
Haris, was concluded to take care of
the minimum of defense expenditures
for the remainder of the year. A letter
of commendation to the Civilian De
fense committee was also passed.
Registration Day
Misunderstanding
Cleared by Welch
In clearing upf student misunder
standing of the February 16 draft reg
istration, S. W. J. Welch, vocational
guidance director, yesterday announc
ed that it is unnecessary for draft-age
students to go home for registration.
Students will register in Memorial
hall, and if it is desired, the registra
tion card will be sent to the student's
local draft board.
The registration vill be conducted
alphabetically. A table of registration
hours will be .published tomorrow in
the Daily Tar Heel. .'.
It is anticipated that 400 students
will be affected by the registration,
Boogie Ballet to .Meet
Principals and chorus of "Bagdad
Boogie" will hold a jam session at 7
o'clock in Graham Memorial.
NOMINATED by Student Party for
junior class vice-presidential post is
Earl Pardue.
SP Names Don Henson
To Soph Council Post
Don Henson, frosh basketball star
and member of the freshman honor
council was nominated Tuesday night
on the Student Party ticket to fill
the post of the rising sophomore
student council representative. A
native of Snow Hill, Henson rooms
in Mangum. His nomination Tues
day night, completed the SPs slate
of both the rising sophomore and
junior classes.
British Hold
Singapore
Defenders Ignore
Surrender Demand
LONDON, Feb. 11. (UP) Singa
pore defenders ignored a Japanese de
mand for unconditional surrender to
night and held on grimly under an in
cessant rain of bombs and shells, it
was announced in a communique from
the embattled city.
Imperial troops still were fighting
bitterly west and northwest of the
city, the communique said, and the
Japanese demand for surrender, drop
ped in notes from airplanes, went un
answered. WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP)
A US Army contingent has been dis
patched to the Dutch West Indies Is
lands of Aruba and Curacao vital oil
refinery center to aid Dutch armed
forces in defense of these strategic
outposts off the coast of Venezuela,
the State department disclosed to
night. RANGOON, Feb. 11. (UP) Japa
nese troops, launching the full scale
battle for Burma, stormed across the
Salween river, to capture Mataban to
day, but 30 miles farther north, near
Paan, British Imperial forces turned
back their invasion boats with a with
ering barrage of gunfire in an all-day
battle.
MOSCOW. Feb. 11. (UP) Russian
ski troops, gliding nine miles behind
the German lines under cover of
swirling snow storm, have captured
Maklachi, 25 miles from Bryansk, and
thus hurtled another barrier in the
nincer drive on Smolensk, the Red
doomed city asserted tonight.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP)
US Army equipment which Douglas
MacArthur himself shipped to Japan
to. relieve the distress caused by the
disastrous earthquake of 1923 is now
being used against him by Jap troops
poised for a knockout blow in the Phil
ippines, it was disclosed tonight.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP)
The United States and Great Britain
have reached an "understanding for
the joint use of Christmas island, stra
tegically located atoll in the South Pa
cific, competent quarters disclosed to
day. NEW YORK; Feb. 11. (UP)
Sinking of the tanker W. L. Steed with
See NEWS BRIEFS, page U
STUDENT PARTY'S nominee for
president of 1943's junior class,
Mike Carr.
Benefit Game
Scheduled Here
Wednesday
Tilt Sponsored
By DTH Campaign
For Social Rooms
The greatest Carolina basketball
player of all time George Glamack
will lead the Goodyear Wingfoots of
Akron, Ohio in a benefit basketball
game against the White Phantoms in
Woollen gym next Wednesday night, it
was announced yesterday.
Students will be admitted for thirty
five cents and their passbooks, and re
serve seat tickets will sell for seventy-
five cents. All proceeds, above expen
ses, will be turned over to the Daily Tar
Heel social room fund.
DTH Sponsors
Sponsored by the Daily Tar Heel with
the cooperation of the athletic associa
tion the game is expected to draw most
of the student body and many basket
ball fans from this section of the state.
For three years Glamack was the
toast of Southern Conference basket
ball. He was an All-American selection
for two years, and last year scored 580
points in 26 games to establish a new
Southern conference record. Against
Clemson, the Blind Bomber, as he was
nicknamed by Southern sportswriters
due to his faulty eyesight, tallied 45
points, and against Dartmouth in the
NCAA finals at Madison, Wisconsin
last Spring he tossed in 31 points for a
new NCAA record.
Glamack in Pro Ball
This is Glamack's first year in pro
fessional ball, but metropolitan sports
writers have hailed the big fellow as
the player of the year. He is leading
the Wingfoot team, in scoring 185
points in 17 National league games
and is second to Chuck Chuckovits in
the league's individual race.
Members of the Carolina team are
anxious to play against Glamack. In
the Wingfoots, the White Bantams face
perhaps the outstanding basketball
team in the country today, and they
wonder just how they will make out.
Rose guarding Glamack will be quite
different from Rose feeding the ball
to Big George as he did for two years.
The matter of defense has caused
comment just what type of defensive
play will Coach Will Lange set up for
a boy Carolina opponents found well
nigh unstoppable? Maybe Lange knows
the answer. If he does, George might
have a bad night before the homef oiks.
There are other stars on the Good
year team. Kenneth Griffith, who
scored 1941 points in four years at
See GLAMACK, page i
Contrast
Voluntary Service Marks
Red Cross Work in Chile
Union Schedules
Bridge Tourney
Bridge players will congregate to
night at 7:30 in. Graham Memorial's
main lounge for the first tournament
to be given this year. Entrants are
still being accepted at the director's
office.
Howard Duerr, who will conduct the
tournament, emphasizes the fact that
no previous tournament experience is
necessary as instruction as to techni
calities will be given before the. contest
begins.
Coeds will be given permission from
their dormitory and sorority hostesses
for an extension of regular hours' to
enable them to finish' the playing. It
is compulsory that all entrants finish
the tournament, since this is the only
way that an objective comparison can
be made. Prizes will go to the two
highest teams in each direction.
Beale to Lecture
In Gerrard Tonight
Dr. H. K. Beale will speak on "The
Future: World War or World Peace"
tonight at 8 o'clock in Gerrard hall.
The address is the last of the "Re
storing Order" series sponsored by the
philosophy department.
J.
Is
V
.A
George Glamack
Concert Ticket
Sales Pushed
Spivak Presented
Tomorrow Afternoon
Advance sales of tickets for the
Charlie Spivak concert tomorrow after
noon are being pushed in a final spurt
as campaign leaders ironed out final
arrangements for the hour-long music
session.
Spivak and his famous orchestra will
play from the Memorial hall stage from
4 :30 until 5 : 30 in the first round of the
German club-sponsored Midwinters
weekend. Proceeds from sale of the
tickets, priced at 25 cents, will be turn
ed over to the dormitory social room
campaign being sponsored by the Daily
Tar Heel and the Interdormitory coun
cil. Sales Representative
The advance sale of tickets is being
managed by DTH staff reporter Jim
my Wallace and the two-bit ducats may
be purchased before concert time to
morrow from any member of the Daily .
Tar Heel staff, dorm store managers,
and members of the Interfraternity
council.
Playing for three dances and the
concert this weekend, Spivak appears
on the Carolina bandstand for the first
time. The formal dance tomorrow night
is scheduled to last from 9:30 until
1 o'clock. Saturday afternoon - a tea
dance will be held from 4:30 until 6
o'clock and will be followed by the Sa
See CONCERT, page 4
By Bob Levin
One of the most amazing and truly
typical American practices is the an
nual awakening during Red Cross Week
of 130,000,000 people to the vital work
done by its members in Chile, the a
wakening is year round.
Time, one of the most important fac
tors in Red Cross work, is paid for in
the United States in Chile it is volun
teered. -
The Chilean Red Cross, with its head
quarters in Santiago, was founded in
1914 in response to a.desire to aid the
World War sufferers in Europe and
has now grown into a movement of
great appeal to the young women of the
country.
Senoritas Here '
Senoritas Eliana Ross Gibson and
Elena Walker Vial, .South American
winter "summer school" students here
for the six weeks course, are full
fledged Chilean Red Cross nurses.
When asked how the Red Cross se
cured workers, lovely, black-haired '
Elena Vial summed up the Chilean pro
gram in two words when she replied,
"We volunteer."
-Under the direction of doctors, the
volunteer students pursue a three-year
course of study, in which theory is
combined with practice. The last two
years of study are completed in the
hospitals. Each nurse must spend one
afternoon a week in the free clinics
See CHILE, page U