THE DAILY TAB HEEL FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1946 PAGE FOUR CamPus Shorts o Physical Exams All students who have not yet had their physical exam must take it before March 16. Hours are from 2 until 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, and from 9 until 12 o'clock on Saturday. Playmaker Tryouts Tryouts for the next bill of Ex perimental Plays will be held in the Playmakers Theatre this af ternoon at 4 p.m. All who are interested are invited to try out for parts in these original one act plays. Hay-Ride and Supper Party The Phi Gams will entertain the Chi Omegas tonight with a hay-ride and a supper party at Shorty's Cabin. Constitution Meeting The campus constitution com mittee will meet today in the Grail room of Graham Memor ial at 3 o'clock according to Douglas Hunt, chairman. Monogram Club Movies The Monogram Club will con tinue showing movies this Fri day night at 7:30 in the club house. This week the picture will be of the William and Mary football game. Everyone is in vited to be there. NEWS BRIEFS . - i -- . -: (Continued from first page) oring for further economic re- prisals against France. The stu dents blocked off the city's main thoroughfare, forcing pedes trians to remove their hats and give the Fascist salute. , Cardinal Glennon Suffers Relapse Dublin, March 7. John Car dinal Glennon's condition has taken a turn for the worse. His secretary announces that the 82-year-old St. Louis prelate has developed a slight congestion of the lungs, and has been ordered to bed in Dublin. The Cardinal arrived in Eire earlier this week, after his elevation to Cardinal in Rome. Russians Arrest Iranian Officers Tehran, March 7. A number of Iranian army officers have been placed under temporary ar rest by the Russians in eastern Iran. A dispatch from Tehran says the soldiers were arrested when they tried to occupy the three provinces which the ' Soviets said they had begun evacuating last week. LEGISLATURE (Continued from first page) lude and acted on the following bills: Tabled the bill to keep frater nities from rushing a student until he has been on the campus three months. A bill to provide payment of the debt incurred in the week of the Duke-Carolina football game when a non-student's car was damaged, splashed with paint, and damage done to some prop erty was unanimously passed This bill was brought up by Jimmy Wallace. Voted in the Junior class of ficers. A motion by Wallace that stu dents pay a one dollar fine for not voting in Student elections of major importance was refer red to the ' Ways and Means committee. ; RADIO REPAIRING Sets Called for and Delivered f Tubes Parts Phone 4392 ' F. M. Carlisle Historian's Task W ill Be Elementary . Declares Professor By Hoke Norris For thirty years Dr. J. G. deR. Hamilton has been collecting documents which shed light on the South's poorly illuminated past, but he isn't particularly worried about the present. He thinks that will take care of itself. "The present system of keep ing files of periodicals and busi ness and other records," said Dr. Hamilton, director of the Uni versity's famous southern his torical collection, "will make the future historian's job easy as compared with ours." Cloudy History "Whereas the South's history is cloudy in many spots because of the absence of documentary material, everywhere now news papers, magazines, government proceedings, business transac tions everything connected with our present life is recorded with such a completeness that the historian of the future may well suffer from the abundance of available material. His prob- em. will "be quite the opposite from ours, because we have had to dig for what we've got about our past. One Weakness There will, however, be one weakness in the records of the present, he said, explaining, "the modern letter is practically worthless, whereas the very ar ticulate correspondence of the 19th century offers a wealth of material to the historian. Today, communication is too easy don't write, telegraph, you are told. If you don't telegraph, you phone, or go to see your rela tives and friends, and if you're forced to, you write a letter, which is a very poor product when compared with the full records provided by the corres pondence of our ancestors. "And war-time letters from service people. they're worth less to anyone who's interested LFL ABNER And Tax Free at That!!! By Al Capp J SO VOU'RE E3ET- TH MONKEY WHICH A BETff-1 KNEW YAD CHANCE YOUR MND ABOUT SEEIN'ME-WHEN YOUR BUTLER WHISPERED ya rr. s W J 3X T-TUiT QUIETS 6-SOME- ONE. MlGHT HEAR7' AfTTHATD BLAST YERf REPUTATTON-EhLBUB f BUT DOMT WORRY-1 VONT TELLTH' WORLD THAT A DUMB HILL-Biuy KID HAS WON EYRY BET HE EVER MADS WITH YA.V- V THAT'S M-M1CHTY WHITE OF YOU.r rr sure is. bus. and CONSIDERS B&CT THAT CHARQN' YA C1NLY I FORGET FIFTY GRAND FOR THE THTAVOR'- y WHOLE v Ji K.1 .- " r- ERIM'TH' NOW . 'J.DL'S, iAT I AM -VO'J Lt J , - UNTIL. . MATT C- EH r- !5 K,!-TY Hear Bing Crosby's NEW Album "Bell's of St. Mary's" at Ab's Bookshop v, ' ,V fff Zsm&Jr' 4& WORLD ( Continued from page two) resulted in national anarchism. So long as any single nation re mains unbowed before, and in- Music Heads Leave For Music Festival Earl Slocum, Glen Haydon and Herbert Livingston, all of the music department, left yes- Robert Walker and June Allyson, who scored together in "Her Highness and the Bellboy," are reunited on the Carolina screen in "The Sailor Takes a Wife," a story of young love in a New York brownstone flat. Hume Cronyn, Audrey Totter, Ed die "Rochester" Anderson and Reginald Owen are others , in the cast. and did during those trying years, iou won t get any sucn in what soldiers and sailors are doing. The censor erets what the future historian would like to j picture from the personal let have, and the result is a note which satisfies nobody. "There were no censors during the Civil War. The G. I.s of that day could write home about any thing they wanted to, and many of them wrote home about every thingtroop movements, com ing engagements, morale, status of equipment, things which would put the modern soldier in the guard house in short order. As a result we have here in our collection a very good picture of what the soldier of the 1860's was like and what he thought Crossword Puzzle ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE ACROSS 1 In horse's mouth 4 Titles 9 Pea shell 12 A constellation 13 Lift up 14 Portuguese coin 15 Out of the way! 17 Harmonious group of notes 19 Makes 17 across 20 Problems wrinkle it 21 Little brown birds 23 Aerial pixie 28 Some like meat this way 27 Rugged mountain top- 28 Refusal 29 Some 30 Keeps hand warm 31 Not a soldier 32 Type genus (abbr.l 33 Where we slide 34 Drug source 35 Leading lady in soap opera 37 Suave 38 Sea bird 39 Hurries 40 Huge 42 Traveling bag 45 Bother 46 Escape 48 Adam's wife 49 Genus of cow 60 Horse race fixer 51 Time of BL.IOW IT I i H STAjB EAVE.WOE E, R J A YElARL NSMEITd E AT 5a R I AL ASP" I T AL YC SAD SPlHc E SpEjL I) DE pjlI.dE rTTp lTTr qim E RM S OIR AP Rls He t3a Respite e 1 IDLE ClM E E SA F E " V lie" A R AGE onus e reT ""OPE N tIaIl k LlEiPMsle-lElD i 2. T" It s p sT 9 io ii Iz" U : R 5T yjf TvF 7 3 40 m - 4 47" " " o "" "" A si "7" DOWN 1 Thief's carryall 2 Man's name 3 Place to cure leather 4 Salamanders 5 Winged 6 A merry month . 7 And (Fr.) 8 Hide 9 What hunter ' does 10 Over (poet.) 11 Performed 16 Left 18 No place like It 20 Musical note 21 Ire 22 Cowboy's home 23 Search blindly 24 Bump on skull 25 Jotted down 27 Unescorted 30 Shone 31 Bumped 33 Rail 34 Herring 36 Parts of movies 37 Nipper 39 Fault in rock 40 Gossip's occupation 41 Where they fly to 42 Eat 43 Famed lce-crosser 44 Late Nazi criminal 47 Behold! For Tasty Pastry of All Kinds do-nuts cup cakes rolls brownies layer cakes HILL BAKERY ... V You can always depend upon the fresh wholesome . qualities of our products. ters of the modern soldier." Historical Collection The Southern Historical Col lection was formally established by the Trustees of the Univer sity of North Carolina in 1930, but it is based on work which began in 1833 with the charter ing of the North Carolina His torical Society. War, reconstruc tion and poverty interfered, but the project continued in a small way until the mid-twenties. Since then, Dr. Hamilton, who has directed the collection since its establishment, has traveled half a million miles throughout the nation in his "search for the past.". He now has 1,862 collec-' tions (or groups of papers), ranging in size from one docu ment to 100,000, and he estimat ed the total number of individual manuscripts as 2,000,000. Now, as a vast collection of source ma terial relative to the 14 old slave states of 1860, it is an invalu able and in fact well nigh neces sary aid to the investigator of Southern history. Third Edition There has been such a demand for "Trees of the Southeastern States" by Dr. W. C. Coker and Dr. H. R. Totten of the Univer sity Botany Department, that the University Press has just brought out the third edition. ADPi's Hold Banquet Alpha Delta Pi sorority held a banquet last night in honor of their founders day. tional authority, no nation, in deed no combination of nations, is immune to atomic oblitera tion. The introduction of atomic weapons into modern warfare has given the tiniest, poorest country an equal advantage with the largest and most resourceful How can the end of world gov ernment be attained? Some con tend that the United States, be ing the only nation in the world which is at present in possession of atomic bombs sufficient to ef fect such a purpose, could prob ably bring the rest of the world to its feet and thereby establish an international authority. But that would not be world govern ment; that would be a barbaric imposition of tyranny over, and not government of, by, and for the nations of the world. There is but one reasonable course which meets our perspective : to display to the rest of the world that we are ready, indeed an xious to give up those sovereign rights, which, if given up by all, will form the nucleus for a world order sustained by international law. Such a step would incur the surrender of atomic control, in fact the control of all war making implements. In short it would mean that each nation would sacrifice wholly and per manently its long-exploited power to make war at all. There are those who consider such voluntary sacrifices fantas tic, outside the realm of possibil ity. There is but one answer to them. The idea of the atomic bomb was also fantastic, but our generation has seen it become a vivid reality. It is a reality de serving of more than a casual consideration. For it precludes the possibility that man can go nonchalantly on his way, disre garding for his first and last time the fact that his selfish ten dencies are being pampered at the cost of not merely millions of human lives, but civilization itself. dependent of, such an interna- terday for Athens, Ga., where they will take part in a musical festival this' week-end. Saturday morning they will present a program for clarinet, flute and piano, consisting of a Brahms sonata, a sonata by Hindemith, "Serenade for Flute and Clarinet" by Johnson, and "Tarentelle" by Saint-Saens. Sunday, Mr. Slocum will be featured as solo flutist with the Mint Chamber Orchestra in Charlotte. His presentation will be "B Minor Suite for Flute and Strings" by Bach. SAVE TIME and MONEY The Classified Way Read the classified. It's a profitable habit and an inter esting hobby. New opportuni ties each day. For Classified Service DIAL 8641 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PICK THEATRE NOW PLAYING 5 f3 UAMEStS MOST THBIU.IM&T PHI ASSEMBLY (Continued from first page) campus government as it now stands. He admonished that WGA will not be destroyed un der the proposed constitution but will be put in its respective place. "The time is now or nev er for liberal reform. Let us hope those who oppose amalga mation do not do so for senti ment." Fear Competition Thompson charged that coeds fearing amalgamation were in dicating fear of competing with men on an equal basis. He told coeds they should have more faith in themselves and that they "should think twice before re questing a separate place to play." Student Body President Char lie Vance drew loud applause with his reply to the charge of inefficiency in men's govern ment as compared with that of the women. Said Vance, "We men have fought a war. There has been rapid turnover in our officers, something the women. have not had to face. But watch us in the next few years, and I think we'll leave WGA far be hind." NOW PLAYING a $ee K f ill A AUDREY TOTTQ.-.-v " EDDIE "ROCHESTER ANDERSON REGINALD OWEN i t i ' Also Passing Parade "Magic on a Stick" LATEST NEWS