PAGE TT70 Tie Tar Heel FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, i942 Wht ar -eel K e,e p I n T o u c h. with Tiny Hutton OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE PUBLICATION UNION BOARD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Pufctisbed semi-weeMy during the summer quarter except during holidays and examination periods Bob Hoke : : : : Editor BOB Powell . Business Manager Editorial Staff: Paul Komisamk, Tiny Hutton, Hobart McKeever, Tom , Hammond. News Editors: Westy Fenhagen, Billy Webb, Walter Klein. News Staff: Charles Easter, Phyllis Yates, John Johnson, Suzamne Feld, Leah Richter, Leonard Meyer, Margaret Morrison, Ann Turner, Randy Jennings, Nell Baas. Photographer: Bob Weis. Cartoonist: Bill Seeman. Business Staff: Sybil Sholar, Elizabeth Lindsay, Jack Watters, Mary Carr, Octavia Mailer. An Example to Follow Summertime may be an out-of-the-ordinary time to bring up such a thing as Carolina's springtime debating tournament, but since summer school harbors quite a few pedagogues, it seems, on second thought, quite fitting: In the institution of debating UNC ranks, figuratively speak ing, in the Middle Ages. As the set-up now stands, each high school is placed in a tri angle and must win both the negative and the affirmative sides of the question : winning being based on the decisions of judges some trained and some not trained. Usually the judges are teachers in the school where the debates take place. No one can expect these teachers who have had no debate training and no in struction on the query to judge fairly. The winners picked by these judges are allowed to go to Chapel Hill's tournament where each team progresses independently of the other. On the second day of the contest all the surviving affirmatives are placed in one hall and all the negatives in another. The state champions are selected by a process of elimination. Then the winning affirma tive meets the winning negative in the final bout for the cup. What do we gain by segregating the negatives from the af firmatives? According to modern debate methods, no speaker is allowed to have any definitely prepared speech except the first affirmative all else is refutation of what went previously. Haven't the powers that arrange those grueling weeks of ora tory heard of the new trends in public speaking; i. e. panel dis cussions and such? If not, we should like to refer them to col leges very progressive in those lines Wake Forest, Georgia Tech, and Northwestern University. Three years ago Wake Forest inaugurated a tournament sys tem that outshines Carolina's so far that some of NC's leading schools don't bother to enter the triangles but spend most of their energies preparing for the very constructive seminar at the feet of law profs and students at Wake Forest where debaters are encouraged to think extemporaneously and talk conversationally. True, the NC Handbook verbally bars all canned material, but how is it to be avoided when in the semi-finals the negatives are so completely oblivious to what their opponents are saying? Debating is argumentation, and students enjoy doing it the na tural way. After all the object of all this is not the training of parrots, but the training of thinking individuals who can em ploy sources and quotations only when they further their own thoughts. Another characteristic which causes a medieval atmosphere about UNC's debating tournament is the judging system. Judges have become fast in the Morphean arms before some debaters ever began to speak. Why shouldn't they be bored? After all most of them haven't studied the query, having been too busy in their own respective fields. When the debates are judged, the winning side is never told why it won or the losing, why it lost. The judges at Wake Forest are law students and professors who take time to point out strengths as well as weaknesses in the speeches. The school which won the state championship in the Wake Forest tournament last spring couldn't have gotten to first base in Carolina's antiquated contest. Why? The speakers (except the first affirmative) had no definitely prepared speeches but inte grated their thoughts to fit the argument of the moment. (Their training in extempory speaking gave them finese and poise which is not to be found among the "old school" of memorization.) Is Carolina smugly going to ignore the fact that some other cup might be more valuable than the Aycock? Is Carolina going to realize that these is an NC Forensic League that is backed by coaches from the best city systems who are out for a definite revamping of high school debating? Is Carolina going to continue behind a cowl of self-complacency permitting only those teams which win in the triangle to enter the state contest when some losers in the larger systems are far superior to winners in smaller systems? We can't afford to seem out of date in the eyes of the high schools of the state. L. N. M. ENROLLMENT (Continued from' first page) shire, New Mexico,' Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont, West Vir ginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming not represented. The total out of state enrollment is 431, a figure -which is less than half of the 943 North Carolinians regis tered in the second summer session. Of the nine foreign students taking courses at the University all are from Spanish America with the exception of one enroll ee from Shanghai, China. The remaining eight make their homes in Puerto Rico, Cuba, Honduras, Vene zuela, Brazil, and Argentina, there be ing two students residing in Puerto Rico. The charted tabulation in accordance with the divisions of the University in dicates that a preponderance of stu dents are registered in the College of Arts and Sciences. 416 were regis; tered in the school of Arts and Sciences, 85 in Commerce, 346 in the General College, 311 in Graduate School, 18 in Law, 91 in Medicine, 31 in Pharmacy, 40 in Social Work, and 40 in Library Science. ROOMS ( Continued from first pc-pe) ated by Administrative heads. Arm strong indicated yesterday that the Administration was "pleased" with the housing situation in Chapel Hill. The survey revealed that no room 'ing house or private home had in creased rents. "People of Chapel Hill should be thanked by every student for the cooperation they continue to give." Results of the survey will be used for classification of available rooms in town and Armstrong's office has been designated as clearing house for rooms. 4 Wsm,L M vm) -Rite J I B f mm 11 if wit, ii Tough luck, old man my mm ljt c , m tit LWar avinss Bonds. Un done by Paul When William L. Batt was here last winter he made the blunt state ment that Germany would not cap ture Moscow. Less than two weeks had elapsed since he had left the shadow of the Kremlin after con ferring with Joseph Stalin, and England's Lord Beaverbrook on American and British aid to the forces of the Red Army. A large, expansive man with an easy-flowing, unaffected method of talking straight at you, Batt said, "When I left Russia, German forces were a hundred miles from the capi tal. I made a five dollar bet then that they would never take Moscow. From all reports they are even closer now. I am still willing to make that wager." It wasn't much of a wager for a Philadelphia mil lionaire, but still, he wanted to know if there were any takers and at the time there were none. Perhaps he was making the stakes deliberately low to ease some arm-chair general into an easy bet. But more out of respect for Mr. Batt than for what his small audience actually believed, he had no takers. It was strange hearing this per fectly dressed, high-powered Ameri can business man talking of Joseph Stalin, describing him as "a simple, straightforward, stalwart man . . . with the simple appearance of a country farmer . . . the real leader of the 180,000,000 Russians." What surprised Mr. Batt most were the demands of Stalin. He de scribed the plight of the Russian Army as desperately in need of guns, tanks, planes and other war materiel. Yet he claimed that Stalin, "... even though grasping for straws like a drowning man was exceedingly mod est in his requests for aid. He knew ACROSS 1 Fit for cultivation 6 Kind of fabric 11 Venture 12 Emulate 14 Naval officer 15 Encourage 16 Anger 17 Kind of vehicle 18 City in Italy 19 And not 20 Care for 21 Skin blemishes 23 Test 27 Thicker 31 Low 32 Pare 33 Elephant-like animals 35 Indian symbols 37 Delay 39 Comb form: far 43 Sheltered Ride 44 Sea weed 47 Hebrew prophet 48 Kind of metal 49 Man's name 50 Relaxed 61 Conclusion 52 etringy ANSWER PREVIOUS ClORpog&LMMJ0 RS a0a i re dD fe"d e rIa, L gg sp SP NpngRprf I A flbfls T It M THORAKf ZJm A Tjv eDtU l i-FymN I IsJl EE B O To0pNO T g gULJ5 T AlRjpIlAHgMJ TANA S E gL3E A V I nua ALkHA5tj6EMlERAl5l 53 Remained 54 Shovels DOWN 1 Conforms 3 Indian spring wheat zmmzztzzwkz h 1 1 n uh 1 1 1 1 1 p mm 1 It M m 'i V. S. Treasury DtvU money's all in nontransferaWe V i.c torv Komisarak what to ask for, and he knew what he could get." Batt was one of the most courage ous prophets on the Russian scene. He did not underestimate its im portance, or minimize its intense seriousness. But when he spoke he spoke freely and honestly without emotion and without rationalizing what he saw into broad unhealthy generalizations. Last week Batt went to the fore for Russia again. Present Situation v Now holding a leadership post on the War Production Board, he was in a nore favorable position to dis cuss the present plight of Stalin's armies. Also, he could draw on his own knowledge and experience of Stalin and the Russian people. When Washington - Merry - Go Rounder Drew Pearson voiced a fear that the Red Armies, beaten back beyond all hope of victory, would make a separate peace with Hitler, WPB William Batt remembered what had been told him while bombs fell near the Kremlin and declared that he was utterly confident that the Russians still would be fighting effectively next Winter and that "the overwhelming credit (in winning the war) must go to the soldiers and people of Russia, and to them alone." He continued: "We Americans can never know exactly what this gallant Russian fight has meant to us and our country, but I ofttimes wonder where we and the British would be today had not the Rus sians fought as they had." William Batt won a five dollar bet on Moscow. As a prophet he is well worth considering. Especially so, since he is a prophet who has mosi of the facts. TO PUZZLE 3 God of War 4 Greek letter 5 Exhibit 6 Changed course swiftly 7 Endure 8 Wicked 9 Biblical garden 10 Machine for spreading hay 13 Hard metal 21 Watchful 22 Indian soldier 24 Secant-like Instrument 25 Plan 2ft Greek letter 28 Trap 29 Visualize 30 Shade tree 33 Adds up 34 Preserved 35 Tends 36 Lower legs 38 Guide lines 40 Give off 41 Ridge of hills 42 Glimpse 44 According to 45 Conduct 46 Went f If w The majority of the campus was set back on its heel last week with the announcement that Holly Smith and Butch Neaves had been married since early July. . . . the reason for the broad grin on Bill Loock's face is the fact that Roberta Dortch is back with us and him this session. . . . Virginia Hartshorn's sad expression is due to the fact that Frosty Long has departed. . . . Alec Parker had more than his hands full Monday afternoon when he had to ofiiciate a ping pong match between Jane W el ton and Bunny Turner,, both of whom he has-been courting of late. Jane won the ping pong match. Alec is still unattached. . . . Boo Boo Carr ' is doing nobly in his efforts to make this a non-partying session. . . . since this colyum first spread the rumor of Randy Jennings' engagement, she claims that she has been stagnating in the Chi O house. We feel a bit honor boundabout the whole thing, so if any of you boys would like to help clear our conscience, drop around and see her. Squire Davis is getting a rep as a gun totin' fool by those who know him. He almost has a rep as a dead gun totin' fool too as a result of an escapade Wenz'dy. afternoon. Bill Smoak came into the Squire's room and quite accidentally almost shot his 'head off. The bullet lodged in the door post a scant six inches from his head. The following morning Squire scared the houseboy almost white when he aimed his automatic at him and fired. Luckily it was loaded with a blank and. did no. more than burn his face. ... The Chi Phi's will be losing the rep that so many of them have worked so hard to get this summer. The heavier drinkers seem to be leav ing school. . . . the Jam Session at the Union tomorrow night promises to bring out the best in campus and cadet musicians who have been idle thus far this summer. The prime scare at present is that some very cute, sweet, un-hep little girl will come up and ask, "Can you boys play 'My Devotion'?" That tune by the way, seems to be sweeping the coun try as well as the campus. Even Tommy Wadden is trying to sing it which must prove something or other. Another of the new hit tunes is the SUNDAY isidelhe HouseThat P cp I - : ! iM'i p ) i ' . Scandal Bum:.. te DONALD CRISP.NANCY COLEMAN GENE IAROT SIMMS DONALD WOODS Directed by IRVING 5cri Plr t) taaora Ufm Mamt Upas Oh Hani to StaflMa laafstract j t Also LATEST NEWS EVENTS Tuesday RUTH JOHN HUSSEY CARROLL "PIERRE OF THE PLAINS" Thursday- HEDY LAMARR SPENCER TRACY in "TORTILLA FLAT" BETTY FIELD in "ARE HUSBANDS "Mad About Him, Sad Without Him, How Can I Be Glad Without Hha Blues." Dinah Shore's recorded ver sion on Victor is tops. . . . speaking of tunes, the paratroops have re cently adopted a theme song, "iVe Got Nerves That Jingle Jange Jingle." as Charlie Nelson asked the other night, "Do you work at the munitions factory or are you just a chain smoker?" . . . Moo Cowhig real ly went on the warpath Wenz'dy night when he tried his best to get into a fight. His intended opponents ranged from Boo Boo Carr to John Sasser and also included Joe Green and Grimsley Hobbs. Churches Religious services will be held Sunday at the following churches: . Episcopal 304 East Franklin Street Rev. A. S. Lawrence, pastor; Holy Communion, 8 o'clock. Morn ing Prayer and sermon, 11 o'clock. Twilight organ recital 8:30. Catholic F. J. Morrissey, chap lain. Services held at Gerrard Hall at 6:15, 10 o'clock, and at 10:45. Jewish Daniel Daum conducting services to be held at Graham Me morial, 11 o'clock. Lutheran Rev. Henry Schroder, Durham, pastor. Services are con ducted in the West parlor of the Methodist Church. The Baptist, Methodist, Presby terian and United churches will have a Union service, at the Baptist church at 11 o'clock. Rev. Aubrey Todd, pastor of the Sanford Congre gational church will be the guest minister. John Thomas, President of the University YMCA will pre side and Mrs. Phillip Schinhan will be in charge of the music. Cabs Exchange Rides for Tires ERIE, Pa. (UP) Two Erie taxi companies have evolved a unique plan whereby they agree to barter cab service for the good tires of customers' cars. The two concerns advertise they will give credit of more than 75 per cent of the cash value of all good tires turned over to them. MONDAY FIONA who yielded to no man! EVELYN who wanted nothing! SUE who wanted but one man! LOCKHART RAPPER took to MnSMmr And Introducing GIG YOUNG tWtadwrwyWai weep CM j Wednesday CLARK LANA GABLE TURNER m HONKY TONK" JOHN GARFIELD Friday-Saturday RAY ' PATRICIA MILLAND MORISON NECESSARY"