Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 24, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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4 NEWS V-12 Exams New Cafeteria Two Openings EDITORIALS Correspondent's Advice One Man's Meat Serving Civilian and Military Students at UNC BoBtncM and Circulation : M41 CHAPEL HILL, N. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1943 Editorial: NlU. Newt: P-4144. F-U NUMBER 19 W jxtra Bay For Christ Yacatiom Gets IE mas New Restaurant Will Open Here At Start Of Winter Quarter NC Cafeteria To Be Located At Pritchard's Partial relief for strained Chapel Hill eating facilities was assured this week when local restaurant man J. L. Chandler started work on remodeling the Pritchard Drug store for use as the new N. C. Cafeteria. The building was vacated last week and construction work is being rushed, with the opening date set for early January, 1944. Main renovation in cludes addition of a 40-foot depth of floor space to be used as the cafeteria's storeroom and kitchen. When it opens, the restaurant proper will run the en tire length of the old drug store, with the addition and space behind Lacock's Shoe store used for preparing the food. Seating Capacity Seating capacity for the cafeteria was set at approximately 200 by man ager D. N. Brooks, with meal capacity estimated at upwards of 1,000 daily. The N. C. Cafeteria was formerly located in the Franklin street building now being used by the Hospital Saving Association. It was closed at the end of the spring quarter this year and since that time, Chandler and Brooks have been searching for a suitable lo cation in Chapel Hill. Early this quar ter they opened negotiations to take over the Pritchard site, but legal action that dragged through the courts held them up until. this month. Prices Same .. Prices, according to Brooks, will for the most part be the same as those charged by the old N. C. Cafeteria when it closed in May. The owners have completed final ar rangements for obtaining sufficient ration points and have the kitchen equipment of the old N. C. restaurant, plus new utensils.. Construction ma terial for the remodeling is available since eating places were declared a wartime necessity earlier in the year. Brooks also said that "at least 30 part-time and full-time employees will be needed to maintain the cafeteria service." He asked that all students including coeds who are interested in working at the cafeteria contact him. "We need student workers if we are to have efficient service at our new restaurant." Gentlemen, The Carolina Queens 'j tfi Navy Men Eligible for Leave After Classes December 22 Captain Popham and War College Heads Add Monday, December 27, to Holiday By Sara Yokley V-12 Christmas holidays were extended yesterday to Monday night, Decem ber 27, at 2400 when Captain Popham and officials of the war college met to determine the V-12 calendar for this trimester. As soon as their last classes are finished on Wednesday, December 22, Navy students will be eligible for leave. Military drill classes on Wednesday after- " noon and swimming classes at night TkT tt I will not meet, it was announced. New some JMows1 Resume 28th After the holidays, classwork will be resumed on Tuesday, December 28, and will continue through February 17. Navy examinations for the November- Student council vote last week gave ! March trimester are scheduled for a Vice President council post of vice president. New some takes over the job as the first vice president not to hold the dual job of vice president of the student body. He succeeds Frank Alspaugh, for mer student body vice president who is now in Marine OCS at Parris Is-' CHOSEN BY a faculty jury tried and true, here are the eight coeds judged the fairest of them all in the Yackety Yack's Beauty contest. The campus queens are, top row, Jeanne Af flick, Jane Auten, Eleanor Carroll, JuJu Newsome; boU torn row, Millicent Hosch, Dot Hawthorne, Betty Ma jette, Doris Clark. CPU-IRC Renew Question Sessions Reviving an ancient rivalry, the CPU and the IRC will hold an "In formation Please" program this com ing Sunday night at eight-thirty in Graham Memorial. Both organizations will cancel their regular sessions to engage in the con test presided over by a faculty mem ber who will moderate the session, and control the participants. Representing the IRC will be Paul Martin and Wesley Bagby, -while Lee Bronson and Bill Britt will uphold the CPU. The questions have been selected by a joint committee, and the program is open to all. PU Board Will Name ' New Managing Editor PU Board representatives announced yesterday that a new Managing Edi tor of the Tar Heel will be appointed at next Wednesday's board meeting. The post will become vacant in De cember when present TH Managing Editor Jud Kinberg leaves school and the appointee will take over his duties starting with the first issue in Jan uary. Students interested in trying out for the post should send applications, stat ing qualifications and plans, to the Publications Union board, Graham Me morial. All applications must be post I marked before midnight Friday. Debate Council Holds Try outs Tryouts for the debate with Lenoir Rhyne College, will be held next Tues day evening at 8:30 in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial, according to E. 0. Brogden, Debate Council head. All interested in debating are invited to come. Negative and affirmative teams will be chosen to uphold the debate club's query, Resolved: That the United States should participate in an inter national police force upon the defeat I of the axis nations. The date for the ! debate with Lenoir Rhyne has not been jset yet. seven day period beginning February 18 and ending February 24. Original Navy and University plans provided for a trimester lasting until February 26, but the period has fceea. cut by two days. This action has lengthened the leave at the end of the second Navy trimester to 7 davs. land. Last spring Newsome ran on f rom n00n on Thursday, February 24, the Student Party ticket against UP I to midnight March 2, candidate Alspaugh for the post of j Registration for the March-July vice-president. term win be conducted March 3 and 4 Newsome has been a member of theand ciasswork for the third trimester student council since last spring and start March 6. is "familiar with the duties of his new office." In the past two years he has been active in numerous campus . ac tivities and has served as chief mar shal, student head of all War Bond and War Relief Fund drives, chief Air Raid warden, chairman of the senior class executive. committee, dajice com mitteeman, freshman adviser, member of the interdormitory council and mem ber of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Newsome, who comes from Winton, N. C, is a pre-med student. The student council reorganization bill passed by the legislature last spring rules out for the duration the office of student body vice president and accounts for Newsome's status. Tar Heel Staff To Meet Friday All Tar Heel reporters and staff members have been assigned to cover an important meeting to be held Fri day afternoon at 4:30 in the Tar Heel office, second floor Graham Me morial. Attendance is compulsory. Phi Beta Kappa Names 15 Students To Campus Chapter A total of 15 students were initiated into the University's chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at its meeting last week. Among 1944 graduates initiated in to the fraternity were: George Wal ker Blair, Jr., Pittsboro; Samuel Owen Cornwell, Chapel Hill ; Charles Thomas Daniel, Durham; Harold Lacy God win, Fort Bragg; Weldon Huske Jor dan, Fayetteville; Arthur Sanford Kaplan, High Point; Theodore Hall Partrick, III, Raleigh; Elbert Sidney Peel, Jr., Williamston; Lois Phillips, Brookline, Mass.; David Costen 'Sabis ton, Jr., Jacksonville; Thomas Lane Stokes, Norfolk, Va.; Dean Winn, Jr., Clinton, Iowa. Two 1943 graduates, Ida May Davis of Louisburg and Rose Mowshowitz of Hartford, Conn., were also initiated. S$zF And Play maker Shows x'-X-x'-'i '', . i ? s mm mi u,. .. .-. . mi s ! "GADABOUT'S" MALE LEAD, Harold Gould surrounded by a bevy of the beauties that will appear in the chorus line of the S&F musical. 'Gadabout' Starts Three Day Run Tomorrow Night With final rehearsal called for to night, Sound and Fury's "Gadabout" shapes up as a musical in the best Broadway tradition, with coeds brightening the chorus line and many of the lead roles. When the public gets its first view of the production tomorrow night at 8:30 in Memorial hall they'll see coeds march across the stage in a military tap routine, float through a modern ballet and get themselves and their men in the wackiest cam pus situation as they romp through the laugh situations of a weekend. Feature tunes in a Jack Ellis score that came in for pre-opening night praise were "I Knew You When," sung by Betty Don Sweat; Joan Kos berg's rendition of the title tune, "Gadabout;" and Harold Gould's boogie woogie number, with "varia tions on a theme by Meade Lux Lewis." Cast - The cast is headed by Betty Sweat as Judy, a stage-struck and hopeful Playmaker. Opposite her is Harold Gould, playing Tom Richards, foot ball hero extraordinaire. Second leads are carried by Joan Kosberg and Jack Van Zandt. Directors Huse and Ellis will offer to the Carolina public this Thanks giving night a musical review with all the component parts in place song, book, acting, chorus. Highlight Ent ertainment Slate Kellman Play Opening Set For Wednesday Since the first try-outs of "Watch on the Rhine," to be given by Play makers December 1-4, a long-standing principle of casting has been fol lowed by the directors with success. It's always been Playmaker policy to open roles in major productions to students and townspeople alike. In the Lillian Hellman anti-Fascist play this plan has resulted in a first rate casting job that should go far to put over the play. A variety of parts has been given out to the actors from both groups who showed up best in try-outs. Varied Lives Outside of the nightly rehearsals, getting more exacting as opening night nears, the "Watch" characters carry on equally varied lives as their stage counterparts. They include children, Janet Green and Majo Sommer; a V-12er, Sidney Epstein; a nationally-known illustrator and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. William Prince; an ex-dancer, Foster Fitz-Simons; i and a graduate student, Ruth Oncley. Fitz-Simons has the male lead as Kurt Muller, leader in the German anti-Nazi movement who finds little peace in pre-war America. Miss Oncley is his wife and Green and Sommer take the roles of two of the Muller children. Mrs. Prince has the role of Aunt Fanny, one of the choicest bits of stage characteriza tion written by Miss Hellman. 0- 1 W; Si 5 ,: : fjl'W ' -v ' i AN ACTION SCENE here from "Watch on the Rhine" as Underground leader Kurt Muller knocks down Teck, Fascist Rumanian Count.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 24, 1943, edition 1
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