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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1942 PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL Gaucho Soldiers In US Armies? -Phi The question of a united Pan-American army will be discussed at the weekly meeting of the Philanthropic assembly tomorrow night. Resolved: that the South American republics should contribute their mil itary forces to be sued in coordination with those of the United Nations that is the formal way of putting it. One of the visiting South American students has been invited to attend to present first-hand information and to introduce Phi members to some of the actual problems that exist in the land below the border. Speaker Ives stated that prompt and complete attendance is absolutely nec essary to maintain membership and that all Phi assemblymen must be pres ent. The last meeting of the assembly was unable to proceed because of poor attendance. "This must not happen again' Ives declared. COEDS SWIM (Continued from page three) The national junior 200-meter free style matched Carolina's Percy Malli son against Phil McAdoo of the Am bassador swimming club of Washing ton, D. C, in the closest race of the meet. Both men's times were the same 2:25, a new pool record but McAdoo touched bank less than a split second before Mallison and was awarded the race and the title of national junior champion. To win McAdoo had to come from behind after the first 100 meters of the race. Bill Brooks, Duke, took an early lead and was first at the 50-meter mark in 31 seconds. Barclay, McAdoo and Mal lison were close behind, and at the 100-meter mark Barclay had forged into the lead with a time of 1 :07. Mal lison' was second, McAdoo third and Brooks fourth at that point. However, at the 150 mark McAdoo was first, Mallison second, Barclay third and Brooks fourth. McAdoo hit the 150 mark in the time of 1:46. He and Mal lison. left Barclay two yards behind in the last 25 meters which they cover ed in a grinding sprint. Carolina's third pool record of the meet came in the final event of the afternoon the 200-meter freestyle re lay. The team of Co-captains George Coxhead and Jim Barclay, Whit Lees and Denny Hammond defeated the Duke team at Schuman, Read, Shep- ard, and Marshall by five-tenths of a second, setting a new pool record of 1:52.5. Hammond, swimming anchor, was timed unofficially in 26.2, eight tenths of a second faster than the pool record of 27 seconds. Coeds Look Good The Carolina coed team, making its first appearance, showed up well, but was far outclassed by the more ex perienced Goldsboro girls. The coeds have only been practicing for less than one quarter, but it is hoped that the start made by the present girls will be continued in the future. Mrs. Peggy Mcintosh is coaching the team. Marty Rouse and Mary Jane Lloyd scored three of the team's six points in the 50-meter freestyle with third and fourth places. Captain Ellen Wim berly and Mary Martha Cobb added the final three markers with third and fourth places in the 50-meter breast-stroke. Jean Hogan, Chapel Hill girl, had a second in the 50-meter freestyle and a fourth in the 50-meter backstroke for her four points. I Allcott to Speak On Architecture John V. Allcott, head of the Art department, will give a .gallery talk on Modern Architecture this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Since the show closes on February 18, this will probably be the last discussion of modern architec ture. NEWS BRIEFS (Continued from first page) the Philippines Ten American light tanks smashed with blazing canon into a group of eight Japanese tanks-in the little village of Valiuag, knocked out six of the enemy's vehicles and con vinced American officers that United States mechanized forces were superior to the enemy. SIDNEY Australia tonight moved a stream of troops to aid the Dutch in Java and break against a four-pronged Japanese attack on Port Moresby, New Guinea, designed to win the command of Torres Strait and block the route to Port Darwin and the Dutch Indies. RUNNING, China American and British air reinforcements including 100 Raoual Air Force planes for thej men of the middle east have arrived to bolster the Burma front, it was learned today. (CcrdDSSwoDircill IP mizzle ACXOSS 1 StberUa riier i Lrric poem Beading U.W 11 Winged U Receptacle for ashes 14 Escutcheon 1 Young salmoa It Son of Odin IT Shoot of plait It Mods S Singing groups 22 Res Use 23 Card game 24 Part of sonnet 27 Shaped like a lm 31 Morsel left at meal 32 Kind of deer 33 Cleans ship's bottom 37 Game Csa 40 So (Scot.) 41 Weep 42 Brags 4 Swear to 49 Ocnnan rirer W Carpenter's tool 82 Large plant 3 Thin board 64 Rabid M Old M Russian nrrs agency Bj LABS MOBBIS ANSWER TO PEE VIOLS rVZZLM SiEiL AlPlAfRJTl IDIEJ V-PPIclRjS! 3jEUU T Wo n UlfiiieiViH mm 7 Bitter vetch M Periods of time DOWN 1 Parts of raco t Spirit 3 Siberian sleeping platform 4 Take into eustodj t Beginning 6 Arid 7 Enlist 5 Physician 9 Ship canal 10 Narrow opening 11 Insights 19 To the right 21 Demure 24 Weep conmlsivelr 25 Make a mistake 28 Saint abbr. 28 Provide vith weapon 29 Also 30 Evening teont.) 34 Resources 35 Small rug 36 East Indian seed 37 Burns with steam 38 Ekill 39 Cartilages in dog's mouth 43 Finest 43 HighLr seasoned Spanish dish 44 Loose Arabian garments 48 Therefore 47 Observed 48 Spreads for drying 51 Strife HOUSE (Continued from first page) it makes excellent reading, with a nos talgic ring." Strangely enough, the most enthus lastic review came from a man who reviewed the book under protest. Mr. B. I. Wiley, who reviews histories for the Memphis Commercial Appeal, was urged to look over the little volume when he was in Chapel Hill. Ranked High Mr. Wiley was very favorably im pressed with the book. "Miss Sue," he says, "as depicted by House, de serves to take a place in contemporary literature along with Clarence Day's 'Father,' and Rebecca Williams' 'Van ishing Virginia'." One critic said, however, that he would have liked to have seen more about Miss Sue and less about the au thor. Dean House, who agreed that the critic was right, laughed as he told this little incident. "My chief delight in the book," he said, "was that I had good. people to talk about. That was what I tried to do although there was a temptation to be autobiographical instead of giving a picture from my point of view." As to the brevity of the book, Dean House concluded, "You can't any more expand a book than a hen can expand an egg after it has been laid." ACKLAND CASE (Continued from first page) I 12. I 4 15 lb 7" 18 19 0 jtl a 13 ; Hi - . - Tg l 777 55" at - m 25 wn 2B 1CJ 30 H3 m ZH5 MS H7 H8 49 " "50"5I SI I " 3 57 W I OMt tf Vtitei f estura Syndicate Xae. AAU SUMMARIES (Continued Jrom page three) fourth (Vcnable, Lee, Emmet, Marsh all). Time 1:52.5. New pool and CAAU record. Old records 1:55.4. SCHOLASTIC EVENTS Massanutten 19, Goldsboro high school 9, Staunton Military Academy Durham high school 5, Eastern high school, Washington, DC, 3, Gor don junior high school, Washington, DC, 2. Diving Lunger (M); Bridgers (EHS) ; Johnson (G); Cole (M). Score --82.4. . 100-meter freestyle Elliot (M); Ward (G); Pinkston (M); Siefert (S) and Walston (D) tied for fourth. Time --1:06. 100-meter breaststroke Saturday (D); Ward (G); Watson (M); Pinks ton (M). Time 1:24. 100-meter backstroke Stuart (S); Shollenberger (M); Cunney (G Jr., HS); Ward (G). Time 1:24.8. WOMEN'S EVENTS Goldsboro Swimming association 23, Carolina coeds 6, Chapel Hill high 4. - 50-meter freestyle Privette (G); Hogan (CH): Rouse (C); Lloyd (C). Time 36.2. -50-meter breaststroke Pate (G) ; Mallard (G); Wimberly (C), Cobb (C). Timer-39. 50-meter backstroke Barbee (G); Privette (G); Gurganus (G); Hogan (CH). Time 39. million ... dollar ... endowment, . which makes Ackland's memorial "look like chicken feed." Carolina's counsels will take the stand that although Duke re fused the money, Ackland's general charitable intention was not nullified. This is Carolina's answer to the rela tives' claim. Responding., to ...Rollins... college's claim to the money, counsels will state that it cannot believe Rollins is not a private institution whose funds are used for private profit. We will defi nitely deny that Ackland had full in tention of building the memorial at Rollins. Ackland had traveled to Win ter Park and had even allegedly ex amined blueprints for the art school, but he also did the same thing at Duke. Principal point to be put by Caro lina will be its standing in Ackland's first will. Since Duke has refused the money Gardner and Morrison will state that Carolina rightfully deserves the money now. Backing them up is a legal code observed at the District of Columbia court that intentions of su perseded wills are observed. Inferiority of Rollins' cultural stand ing in the country will be intimated when attorneys aver that Carolina is equal to Duke in educational footing. VICTORY DRIVE (Continued from first page) have made valuable gifts of fiction, mysteries, and western stories that the soldiers in camps appreciate most. Biggest collection spot where bar rels have been placed has been the Carolina theater, but this is believed due to the screen advertisement of the drive which is now being used. Be fore this slide had been put into ef fect, nary a book had been left in the theater barrel. Groups Respond Individual groups have also donated widely to the drive. One fraternity do nated over 150 books, Miss Roberson reported. , All books are acceptable regardless of their content. Those not readily us able by the service men such as chil dren's books or extremely feminine lit- Ham Radio Men Meet This Afternoon The amateur radio club will meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock in 250 Phil lips hall. All members are urged to be present, Jimmy Russell, club presi dent, said. Mississippi Students Meet This Afternoon All University students from Miss issippi will meet m the (irail room of Graham Memorial at 2:15 today. erature are being saved and will prob ably be sent to industrial centers or to rural communities. The campaign will continue indefi nitely as long as books continue to be received or until the national goal of ten million volumes is realized. DTH News Staff Meets Tomorrow at 1:30 A meeting of all members of the Daily Tar Heel news staff will be held tomorrow at 1:30 in the Graham Me morial offices. "All must attend; this meeting is of the utmost importance. Remember the Biter said the man aging editor. Lettermen Pictures Scheduled for Y-Y The Monogram club picture for the Yackety Yack will be taken Tuesday morning at 10:30 on the steps of Man ning hall. All members were asked to be present with their monogram sweaters on. ROGERSON (Continued from first page) frnm Charlotte, where he had made an outstanding record in public accounting. . His first post at the University was auditor, and he as promoted to as sistant controller and business mana ger in 1934, when the program of consolidation went into effect. Responding to the growing needs, Rogerson has since reorganized and expanded the entire structure of the business organization of the Univer sity at Chapel Hill. He also conceived and directed two novel cooperative housing plans that have attracted na tional attention low cost homes for white employees of , the University ser vice plants and a similar project for the Negro employees. A native of Laurinburg, he and Mrs. Rogerson have one son, Brewster, who graduated from Carolina last year and who is now doing graduate work in philosophy in Princeton University, and one daughter. Kitty, a senior in the Chapel Hill High School. REGISTRATION (Continued from first page) expected that the matter may be con cluded with a minimum of delay and inconvenience. Five Desks Five separate desks, in the first and second floor lobbies, on the main floor, and on the stage, will aid in eliminating bottlenecks. All men who reached the age of 20 on or before December 31, 1941 will have to register under the present law. The following schedule will be strict ly bserved throughout the registra tion : Last names beginning with the ini tial A and B at 9 o'clock; C, D, and E at 10 o'clock; F, G, and H at 11 o'clock; I, J, and K at 12 noon; L, M, and N at 1 o'clock; O, P, and Q at 2 o'clock, S and T at 3 o'clock; U, V, and W at 4 o'clock; Y and Z at 5 o'clock, i Carolina Alumni Cover Singapore Battlefronts - Two University of North Carolina alumni, both of them foreign corre spondents of the AP, teamed together this week to keep Americans informed of developments at Singapore. They threw a long journalistic pass froni Singapore to London in carrying the news. Newspapers of February 12 carried as the last American newspaper cor respondent's last dispatch from be leaguered Singapore the story by C. Yates. McDaniel, filed at 10:30 AM, on February 11. McDaniel won his master's degree at Chapel Hill in 1929. Newspapers of February 13 con tained AP correspondence filed by E. C. Daniel, Jr., Zebulon native, from London, picking up where his fellow University alumnus McDaniel had left off. Daniel, who won his AB at Chapel Hill in 1933, quoted a dispatch of Mc Daniel's filed at 3:45 PM, on February 11 from a ship lying offshore at Singa pore under unending bombing attack. Daniel was editor of the Carolina Magazine here in his senior year. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. All advertise ments must be paid for in advance and the ad must be turned in at the Tar Heel Business Office by 4 o'clock the day before publication. LOST Movado wrist watch. rV,. ium-copper case. Perhaps around Woollen gym. Reward. Return to 303 Lewis. Save 31? f Once-a-year sale I Famous DAGGETT & RAMSDELL Perfect COLD CREAM and CLEANSING CREAM Large VzAb. far, reg. $1.00 69e. LIMITED TIME ONLY O SUTTON'S DRUG STORE WOMAN OF rut YEAR' IS I lit PICTURE OF THE YEAR! SUND AY MONDAY ESHELMAN (Continued from page three) Dolphin team, he was one of the lead ing scorers and was a member of the 150-meter medley team which won the national junior 150-meter medley championship. Other members of the team were Denny Hammond, now a star backstroker on the varsity, and Ed Shumate, who is no longer in school. Wisconsin men in military and naval service have the privilege of taking University of Wisconsin extension courses at their state's expense under a 1941 law. Red Cross-WSS Need3 Money I WTX X Katy finds It takes r ffy- -H; igjf J . more. than kisses j fMJS $L' ' to hold a husband! I ;J ?iC C: Never such funny 1 rSC. jPV, I situations since r Nlfer mi y II StoY w ?vv'-v s feg3k I : Hepburn -hcart- 0l S burn now! n with nuo II I 1 II . . . . S FAY BAINTER REGINALD OWEN Coming Her Greatest Role! CLAUDETTE COLBERT in "REMEMBER THE DAY" with JOHN SHEPPERD LATEST PARAMOUNT NEWS "WOMEN IN DEFENSE" See the great part women are taking in defense! Tuesday-Wednesday JOHN SHEPPERD LORETTA YOUNG m 'THE MEN IN HER LIFE" Thursday-Friday BUD ABBOTT LOU COSTELLO m "RIDE 'EM COWBOY" Preview Friday Regular Showing Saturday nny. J & 6AYEREIS?HEI JKj VKtOL 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1942, edition 1
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