Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 12, 1942, edition 1 / Page 4
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Sitterson Proud Of New Army Life J. C. Sitterson, Assistant Professor of History who was recently inducted into the Army, i3 stationed at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas. Writing recently to the Alumni Of fice, former Professor Sitterson has this to say: "We of the Armored Di vision are rather proud of the fact that, like the Air Force, we are one of the principal offensive wings of the Army. Although I have been in the Army only a short time, the time has been long enough for me to know that I am go ing to enjoy greatly my association with a fine bunch of men." PLAYMAKERS (Continued from first page) various experimental plays. As Ray mond, he is a combination of Al Capone and Huckleberry Finn. His pranks cause much grief to the other charac ters but sometimes, quite unintention ally, he stumbles onto the right path. , Miss Trotman, graduate transfer from Salem college in Winston-Salem, made her Playmaker debut in "The Male Animal." As Annabelle Fuller, wife of a nature enthusiast who has moved his sophisticated family to the farm, she endures much and talks much. Dropping scintillating bitsof wit among her disturbed cohorts, An nabelle is a master of sarcasm. The plot of "George Washington Slept Here" revolves around a city family which, by some freakish design, comes to an abandoned farmhouse in an abandoned part of the country. Knowing nothing of leaky roofs, irate neighbors, dry wells, manure or jap anese beetles, the characters encounter all kinds of rural misfortunes. Laugh ter spills off the stage, invades the audience, and "George Washington" becomes a very bright business and a most unholy joy. FOR VICTORY: BUY BONDS Keep your Spring outfit neat and clean. If you do this your clothes will stand up longer, and that's what we need in this time of emergency. COMMUNITY CLEANERS IP PICK THEATRE SUNDAY ' Also LATEST ISSUE OF PARAMOUNT NEWS Seniors to Order Class Invitations Orders for senior class graduation invitations will be taken at the Book Exchange beginning tomorrow from 2 to 5 o'clock every afternoon next week, Ed Hyman, chairman of the sen ior invitation committee announced yesterday. v TRACK (Continued from page three) developing into a real thriller. Bev Tucker of Virginia and Carolina's Frank Hardy took the first six laps of the affair, stride for stride with the Virginian coming in a pace behind Hardy. On the backstretch of the sev enth time around, Tucker challenged the Tar Heel's lead unsuccessfully, but then broke away in front of the stands, beginning the last lap, to kick a speedy final quarter and come home well in the lead. Tucker's time of 10:03.5 es tablished a new meet record and can be considered even more remarkable in the light of the stiff cross-wind that, for the most part, kept times well above average on Fetzer field yesterday. Virginia's two-man gang, comprised of brothers Ken and Norm Rathbun, had a good day, placing in five events to score 14 markers. Ken, senior mem-. ber of the tandem, tied for top honors in the high jump, took a third in the pole vault and a second in the broad jump for eight tallies, while Norm won the javelin throw and accounted j ' a i . .1 ii . i m m 3 J for a third in the discus. Tommy Todd, who gained solace for his defeat in the high hurdles by winning hands-down in the low barriers, also added eight points to the Virginia cause. All told, the Tar Heels, who face their most important test of the season against Duke at Durham next Satur day, looked improved, although the trail to a win over the Methodists is studded with obstacles. Carolina appears to have more strength in the discus than had been generally supposed and the 220-yard event should find Fetzer's team picking up vital points. NEWS BRIEFS (Continued from first page) Sir Stafford Cripps, diplomats stated. GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEAD QUARTERS, Australia, April 11. (UP) Two new victories were tossed up today by United Nations flyers but Air Minister Francis M. Forde warned that even though the Allied positions in the Southwest Pacific were improv ing rapidly they must continue to or ganize if they have to meet "a very early full-scale Japanese attack." WASHINGTON, April 11. (UP) Approximately 25 per cent of the com mercial airplanes will be taken over by the United States Army to augment the transportation of war cargoes dur ing the emergency, the War depart ment announced today. LONDON, April 11. (UP) Brit ish raiders swept across the English Channel in large scale day and night attacks and were reported to have pasted German vital war industries with 1,000-pound bombs ajl week. ?Bl5B3rglS!i& "MARCH OF TIME" r--r (. 'IMS.. THE DAILY Kaltenborn Plans Raleigh Engagement II. v. Kaltenborn, noted cbmmenta tor and news analyst, will speak at Raleigh, April 17, in Memorial Audi torium on war and world events. HENDERSON (Continued from first page) bitter denunciations from labor lead ers, and Henderson, who purportedly lives in a constant fear of devastating inflation stuck to his guns. Wednesday night, the Price-Fixer, indicated in a telegram to CPU head Whitaker, he wants to talk about it. In Washington today, too, Leon Hen derson is on the spot. "Me and Adam Smith are in agreement. Me and the St. Peter of capitalism are buddies,' he once said. During the boom days of the NRA Henderson defined his policies. He be lieves, he said, in free enterprise, in free competition. He believes that "we get ahead through more goods, and better goods at lower prices." And he believes it for 12 months of the year, not when the rush season is on, aides point out. In the present period of emergency, he must use the government as a su preme, over-all regulator of prices, and he must use it towards the ends towards which he has dedicated him self, competition, free enterprise, bet ter goods, etc. He's got the number one paradox in Washington to deal with, and he must deal it wisely. America's Price-Boss is on the spot, and Wednesday night he says he wants to talk about it. "I'm coming down to Chapel Hill to argue with someone," he insists. He means it. FROSH BOX SCORE (Continued from page three) hit Lee. Three base hit Pupa. Home run Morris. Hits off Green 1 in 3 innings; Sparger 5 in 3; Webb 1 in 3; Sutton 5 in 4; Newell 2 in 1 and 1-3; R. Edwards 0 in 1; Booker 0 in 2-3; J. Edwards 4 in 1. Struck out by Green 4; Sparger 1; Webb 2; Sutton 2. Bases on balls off Green 2; Sparger 1, Webb 1, Sutton 1; Newell 3; R. Ed wards 4; Booker 3. Wild pitch Green, J,. Edwards. Stolen base Colones. Winning pitcher Webb. Losing pitch er J. Edwards. Umpires Longest and Rabb. CPU (Continued from first page) have given the CPU-Emergency Com mittee program the unofficial nod through their presidents, but no offi cial approval has yet been made pub lic. Candidates may voluntarily take stands on the Emergency Committee's platform, according to Whitaker. The platform articles cover NYA appro priations, students co-ops, fees, ex traneous class offices, phys ed regu lations, student representation in school administration, student body president's duties, living conditions student-faculty bull sessions, publica tions economy and improvement, cam pus constitution and textbook resale prices. Monday LIONEL ATWILL MONA BARRIE in "THE STRANGE CASE OF DOCTOR Rx" Tuesday JOHN LITEL MARIE MONTEZ in "THE MYSTERY OF MARIE ROGET" Wednesday JOEL McCREA LARAINE DAY in "Foreign Correspondent" Thursday GENE TIERNEY GEORGE SANDERS in "SUNDOWN" Friday JOAN BLONDELL JOHN WAYNE x in "LADY FOR A NIGHT" Saturday FRANCES LANGFORD KENT TAYLOR in "MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER" Coming JACK BENNY in 'TO BE OR NOT TO BE" TAR HEEL 1 CPU Application Blanks Available Application blanks for membership into the CPU will be available in the office of the YMCA until April 17. No previous applications will be ac cepted it was stated. HOUSING (Continued from first page) tions or may go together with one, two, or three others in making a reservation. The group arrangement, although con sidered as a single reservation, is charged the usual rate of $6.00 per student. Fair Policy ' "Fair to everyone," the ruling allows students to make arrangements for rooming in town in advance if their serial number, determined by the draw ing, is too low to enable them to obtain places in the campus dormitories. Crowded conditions and confusion caused by the turning over to the Navy of the entire lower quadrangle in the summer have necessitated the abrupt and complete redistribution of dormi tory rooms. Campus residences open to men students will be Steele, Old East, Old West, BVP, Smith, Carr, Archer house and Whitehead. The redistribution will become ef fective for the Fall quarter of next -t i i year, leaders stressed, summer room ing arrangements will be handled in the regular way. Deviating from the former practice of merely assigning rooms, students will be, assigned spaces in dormitories Choice of roommates may be made by joining with others in making reserva tions. Rooms are being adapted to hold from one to four boys, as size and facilities allow. Freshman Ruling Freshmen have been provided for in the setting aside of- 274 spaces dis tributed throughout all the residences. The spaces will be combined into "Frosh" rooms and exclusively reserved for freshmen each year for "the du ration." In Old East, 48 spaces have been reserved for freshmen, 47 in Old West, 44 in Steele, 41 in Carr, 37 in Smith, and 56 in BVP. Room income will be increased 25 per cent next fall, it was revealed. The rates for each have been set at a figure to cover only bare operating expenses which have been increased by the hous ing of more students than usual in the dorms. Additional toilet facilities, bookcases and clothes frames will be placed in each room. Administrative leaders hasten to state that since the total room charge will be divided among more students per room, it actually will be less for the individual occupant. Approximately 900 boys can be taken care of in the dorms under the new arrangement, Armstrong estimated, as he stated that the same total enrollment as last fall could be taken care of along with the additional 1,875 personnel of the Navy. On the basis of a recently made sur vey of available rooms in town, the housing committee head stated that ov er 2,000 students could be lodged out side of the dormitories. They survey indicates "excellent cooperation and no rent increases" on the part of the townspeople. The business department released the following tabulation of room combina tions in each of the eight residences; Steele, three occupants in every room; Old East and Old West, three rooms of one occupant each, 12 rooms of two occupants, 17 rooms of three occupants each, and 7 rooms of four occupants each; BVP, four occupants in each suite; Smith, 17 rooms with three oc cupants each, 13 rooms with two occu pants, 9 rooms with 3 occupants, 6 suites with 4 occupants each; Archer house, seven rooms with one occupant each, four rooms with two occupants each, six rooms with three occupants each; and Whitehead, six rooms with one occupant each, 49 rooms with 3 oc cupants each, and six rooms with 4 occupants each. FROSH. TENNIS (Continued from page three) dropping the initial game to the Duke man, and captured the match, 6-1, 6-0. A potent forehand flip shot with a ter rific drive and a short chop shot in the forecourt were the chief weapons used by the No. 1 Carolinian in his win. Grant Small, playing erratic tennis with intermittent displays of skill, lost a three-set match to Bill Friel of the Blue Imps. Friel annexed the opening set, 6-2, suffered a letdown in the sec ond set when Small turned in a 6-0 win, and took the third, 6-4, for the match. Frank Warren dealt out a 7-5, 6-2, win over Duke's Bob Bodle, and Wayne Rittenhouse of the visitors earned a 6-0, 7-5, 6-4 victory over Larry Cahall in the final singles engagement. Duke captured the second doubles tilt with Friel and Bodle teaming to take a shutout win over Al Stern and Art Bluethenthal, 6-0, 6-0. SHYTLE (Continued from first page) and is a two-year member of the In terdormitory council. Having lived with"1 Gambill in Ever ett dorm for three years, Shy tie stated that "bis cooperation in dormitory work, his work as secretary of the University dance committee and as sistant exchequer of the Grail makes Gambill well qualified for the position of secretary-treasurer of the student body." SPONSORS ( Continued from first page) Mary Bohannon of Asheville with J G. Carden; Miss Mary Lloyd Glidewell of Reidsville with Tom Smith; Miss June Mourne of Tarboro with Wiley Long; Miss Mildred Lee of Goldsboro with Sonny Boney; Miss Sally Orr of Monroe with Hill Wolfe; Miss Peeny Bernhardt of Lexington with Bobby Stockton; Miss AHie Bell of Pittsboro with Dewey Dorsett; Miss Patsy Mil ler of Augusta, Ga. with Bud Evans; Miss Mollie Ellis of Henderson with Hugh Cox. MINCE MATTERS (Continued from page three) and several other former trackmen were interested spectators at yester day's Carolina-Virginia cinder meet . . . Fred was especially interested in the two-mile run his specialty as a trackman. . . . His brother Frank did a swell job until the final lap when Virginia's Tucker ran away from him. . . . Dick Jamerson, PA man, labeled Chuck Howe, unofficial entry in the two-mile run, "the dance entrant" when Chuck came in 12 minutes after the race started. Varsity Box Score CAROLINA .. ab r Hayworth, ss 4 0 Gersten, If, 2b ...... 5 1 Johnson, lb 4 2 Reynolds, cf .. 4 0 Hussey, rf 4 0 Honan, 3b 3 0 Morris, 2b 3 0 McCaskill, If ..... 1 0 Barksdale, c 4 0 Whiteheart, p 3 0 Benton, p 1 0 h o a 15 6 110 2 10 0 1 1 0 2 10 0 0 2 0 16 0 0 0 15 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 24 15 h .o a 111 0 0 0 10 2 0 4 1 13 1 0 7 0 0 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 17 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 3 HANES ab r 0 Sizemore, ss 2 1 B. Carter, ss 0 0 H. Waggoner, 2b 3 0 Stone, 2b 4 0 Phelps, cf 2 0 G. Carter, c 4 0 Stevenson, rf 4 0 Poe, If 2 0 Boles, If 0 1 Owens, lb 3 1 Crouch, p 2 0 Swain, p 0 0 xNelson 1 1 xxW. Waggoner 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 4 5 27 7 3 x batted for Crouch in 7th. xx batted for Sizemore in 7th. Score by innings: Carolina 200 010 000 3 Hanes 100 000 30x 4 Runs batted in Johnson 2, G. Gar ter, Hussey, Nelson, H. Waggoner 2. Home run Johnson. Two base hits Hayworth, Hussley 2v Stolen base Phelps. Double plays Morris to Hay worth to Johnson; Honan, Hayworth, Gersten to Johnson. Bases on balls off Crouch 3; off Whiteheart 5; off Benton 1. Struck out by Crouch 4 ; by Whiteheart 4; by Swain 2. Hits off Crouch 6 in 7; off Whiteheart 5 in 7; off Benton 0 in 1; off Swain 2 in 2. Left on bases Carolina 9; Hanes 6. Wild pitch Whiteheart. Winning pitcher Crouch. Losing pitcher White heart. Umpires Walker and Richard. Time 1:35. EB0 nte Was OPENS WEDNESDAY APRIL 15th BE SURE TO SEE IT CURTAIN 8:30 PLAYMAKERS THEATER Tickets Available Now At Ledbetter-Pickard'and Swain Hall SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1942 if happens here . . . SUNDAY 3:00 WRAL, WAIR, WBBB. Tm American People versus Martin Diea" will be the topic for discussion at the University Round Table. 7:30 Karl Marx club meets on sec ond floor of Graham Memorial. 8 :10 Men's Glee club meets on stas of Memorial hall. MONDAY 10 :30 Dr. Frank Graham will spak at Memorial hall. 2:30 WDNC, WBIG. News of tfe week at Carolina. 2:45 Same stations. Dr. Keener C. Frazier speaks on "The Role ef tfee United States in the New World Or der After the War." 3:00 UNC-Catawba tennis watch es. 4:00 UNC-South Carolina baseball game at Emerson field. 7:15 UNC Symphony orchestra re hearse at Hill hall. 9:00 Free stump given candidates in Memorial hall. CONFERENCE (Continued from first page) lanta, in 1896, a position he has filled ever since. Dr. Marx has written many religious articles and school textbooks. He has spoken at universities and col leges all over the South. Conference Purpose The purpose of the conference, aa- nounced by Frank Williams and Cor nelia Clark, co-chairmen, is to give tho students and faculty an opportunity to think and talk about the function of religion today and the relationship between the individual's religion and his daily life. The main part of the conference is the forums to be held in the men's and i i 11 m j i women s dorms ana an iraterniues. The forums, to be led by persons ex pert in the religious field, will give the students a chance to discuss their re ligious problems with competent per- sons. The women's dorms are inviting two men's dorms each to join in the forum. The men's dorm house committees will conduct their fellow dorm members to the proper women's dorm. All fra ternities will carry on as planned, with each fraternity inviting a guest leader, not yet announced. The program of the first two dayai this morning, 11 o'clock, local ministers will give sermons using text "Every day Religion;" tonight, 8:30, Union service, Dr. Marx speaking on "A Re ligion that Works." Tomorrow morn ing, 10:30, University convocation, e President Graham on "Everyman's Re ligion;" tomorrow night, 7:30, meet ing in Memorial hall, Rev. Cowan, speaker on "The Wine of Astonish ment;" 9 o'clock, forums in six women '3 dorms, for women only. FROSH BASEBALL (Continued on page two) smashed a long home run to left field in the sixth for the longest Wow of the game. The work of the three Tar Baby pitchers was also notable. The trio gave up but seven hits, and with the exception, of the lack of coordination in the infield in the fourth inning, none of the men were ever in serious trouble. Green retired four men via the strike out route in his short sojourn on the hill. BUY COAL NOW SUMMER CASH PRICES FITCH LUMBER CO. PHONE 7291 JL
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 12, 1942, edition 1
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