PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL SUNDAY, JANUARY 10. 1037 BULLETINS Cosmopolitan club Meets Tues day, January 12, in choral room, Hill Music hall, at 7 p. m. The Moving o Finger o By C. W. Gilmore Radio Highlight WDNC 1500 KC. 9:00 Sunday Eve. Hour. 10:00 Community Sing. 110:45 H. V. Kaltenborn. Shirley Sings and Talks Chinese Berlin, Jan. 9. Waving the n-oo News: Poor's Orch. loan of 25,000 German troops inll:30 Jay Freeman's Orch. C. P. U. executive and advisory the f aces of insurgent leaders, 12 :00 Lopez Orch. committees Meet tomorrow AQ011 mer looay gave "orders night at 8:30 in small lounge of fortnecaPtureofMadrid within Graham Memorial. . Important two weeKS . . -a m I A Z J? . 1 -m that all members oe present; pic- aiuuous ior a snowaown in ture to be taken. , the Spanish crisis . which has Y. W. C. A. Meets tomorrow reached international complica- nizht at 7:15 in Y. M. C. A. tlons the Nazi Number One Man building. All members asked to is said to have demanded speedy be present for election Of secre- "e iuauriu campaign (Continued from page two) tary. irom general Tancisco jbranco, correspondence! for. countless Phonograph program-Tomorrow Pf1 leaae5' wno repeatedly has other scholars. He had inspired 1:25 p. m., Hill hall: "Symphony 7:30 Bob Ripley. 8:00-Do You Want to Be an Actor. 9 :00 Manhattan Merry-Go-Round. 9:30 American Album of Familiar Music. 10:00 General Motors Concert. Kittredge r-i '". . . . i No. 4 in A Minor," Jan Sibelius; Stokowski and c the Philadelphia Symphony . orchestra. Chapel Hill choral club Meets Tomorrow night at 7:30 p. m. in Hill Music hall. Ail iresnmen Assemble on aeciarea mat ne neeas vu.uuuiout of t.hpir indiffprPTiop nnH more German troops to wm. frightened out of their skins two s- Germany has lent the Spanish (generations of Harvard under rebels $180,000,000, and 10,000 graduates. He had taught Cam- machine-trained soldiers of the bridge taxi-drivers to halt their and talks Chinese in her most remarkable starring picture. Now Reich. Benito Mussolini has cabs and idle at attention when- playing at the Carolina. supplemented Germany's dona- The chief force in bringing them together, Shirley Temple holds Alice Faye and Robert Young that way in a scene from Twen tieth Century-Fox's "Stowaway," in which Shirley even sings Wrestling tions with tanks, airplanes, pi- steps of Manning hall at 10:30 lots' and food supplies. a. m. Tomorrow for group Yack- ety Yack picture. There will be no assembly at chapel period to morrow. Radio club All persons inter- Meanwhile French officials or dered the troop strength of French Morocco increased 60, 000 men as a threat to German occupation of Spanish Morocco, ever he decided to cross the street, for he never condescend ed to stop, look and listen at the curb. Authority i-roiessor jvrctreage as a Shakspere lecturer h3s two es sential complementary asnects. "Cut" Privileges (Continued from rt page) students, and to force the indi vidual instructors to keep very intricate daily records which should be transmitted to the cen- ested in f orminff a radio club will through which insurgents have those of the teacher and of the tral administrative offices of the please meet in Graham Memorial smuggled Fascist soldiers and scholar. Only the brave among schools. Unannounced was the Tuesday-evening at 8 p. m. supplies. Harvard collegians dared regis- fact that students might really Alpha Phi, Omega Meeting at It is believed by observers that ter.for his English 2, in which "cut" five times; the catalog 8 p. m. Tomorrow. Pledges re- Germany . intends to 'occupy four or fiye of Shakspere's read: suspension from the Um pired to be present. Spanish Morocco : and hold the Plays were studied intensively versity after unexcused absences infirmawThAio nrvrvfrrA in tfiP tprritnrv in nrcler tn bartrnin fnr throughout a year; with the exceed the number of times the m I 1 JJ T1 -1 i t t 1 -a infirmary , yesterday r were B. other colonies. Drucker, W, M. Bowman, Earl As a result of an aerial bomb Grady, . R. M. Wehrle, O. L. ing of Madrid in which two Brit- Souse, W. L. Poole, E. W. Mears, ish subjects were wounded and Chas. Hudson, R. E. Whitehurst, four killed, the British govern R. M. Bernstein, J. 11. Ellis, J . J menu , Decame increasingly m- A. Taylor, C. P. Nicholson, Mur- volved in the crisis by censoring rav Weiss. Elais Friedland, Paul the insurgent government of D'Ascensio, Laurie Stewart and Spain motto, "Find out what Shak- spere said and what he meant when he said it." The fabulous 'Kitty," with his annihilating wit, his tall majesty and. his class meets per week ! New Ruling Five years Carolina ran on that arrangement; then last year the faculty acted again. Now all Shavian beard, was terrible to the - , I , , matters oi class attendance reg- mill Tna onTiaioniiiniio t-1- rv rrii vh i A. C. Hall. Duke Boxers Win (Continued from page three) and Polatti just before the final bell. It was a rough and tumble ers and the hat-wearers. But the brave (and they were many; his large classrooms were, always Raleigh, Jan. 9 A bond issue crowded) did find out what amounting to $225,000 and in- Shakespeare said and what he tended to match a PWA appro- meant when he said it. priation for the construction of The Kittredge reputation for a new gymnasium and swim- crnniaToVii ual instructors in the belief that some courses should require ab solute attendance, others not . . . at the discretion of the instruc tor. Honor roll students are no longer so recognized blanket-ly by the University. Results (say commentators) : Increased flexibility, which flexi bility should conform with the natures of the various courses; less detailed recording demanded of the instructor. Some depart ments were forced to make set rules for courses, with many sec tions, as in elementary -English and economics. General lack of a definite creed on which all stu dents, can act consequent room for individual misunderstandings. (Continued from page three) berth. Herring, James, and Pea cock have all been working hard in this division and Coarh Quinlan should find his man from among these three. Her ring and James were on the freshman team last year. 165-Pound Class Bob Williams, a letterman, has the 165-pound class all to himself. Williams went to the finals in the Southern confer ence tournament last year and he should do equally as well this season. Woodson, co-captain of last year's freshman team, Jordan and Strickler are all battling for the 175 pound slot. Coach Quin lan believes Woodson has re markable possibilities. However, Jordan and Strickler are still in the running for the berth. Heavyweight Class Bob Crystal will probably get the call in the heavyweight class. He did well as a freshman last year, and his showing has been improving in practice this year. The match with V. P. I. will take on added importance this year as there will be no Southern conference wrestling tourna ment. Instead the title will be awarded to the college with the best percentage at the end of the campaign. This will make every match as important as a title fray. WANTED TO BUY Used clarinets, trumpets, cornets, trombones, and saxophones. Any student having any of the above instruments to sell, get in touch with Mr. Slocum, room 4, Hill Music hall. J receives two-wav miriff "nnnl fnr tlift Tlnivrsitv was l:n.,4- : ; j?j.t- Kr,if oil Vio wov TxriTi Clnnrmt's! " lUUSliauun 111 UUS epiSOUe UI me bout all the way with Schmitt s soM today by the council of state . lhe University revenue bonds He had iabored a Ion time on were taken by Scott, Horner and a riddle in the Great Bards Mason, Inc., of Lynchburg, Va., deeds He was not fated to find comeback gaining him the win. Gamecock Win South Carolina's only decision victory was in the 165-lb. class when Rex Williams defeated Al Mann, who had knocked him out in the 1936 meet. In the 115-lb. class Frank Jenkins of the Gamecocks was given a draw with Bobby Hoger in a bout that looked like a win for the South Carolinian. ' Captain Harry Hilton won the other South Carolina draw by getting the split verdict with Wilton Mann in an evenly fought bout. Ray Matulewicz, Duke's other If. C. A. A. champ, receiv ed a forfeit from' Jerry Hughes, when the latter could not appear because of "scholastic difficulties." The 125-lb. decision went to Jim Little of Duke over Gilbert Colina in a hard fought bout. Both boys landed several good punches and the decision should have been a draw. and by the Irving company of Cincinnati. The issues bear four per cent interest. ' The federal appropriation for a gymnasium, swimming pool, and women's dormitory was made in the fall. According to PWA regulations, the institution receiving the funds must match hem to meet the total estimated cost. Fencing (Continued from page three) definite schedule will probably be worked out in connection with running the tourney late in March. "I'm all for it and I will cer tainly lend all the cooperation within my power to Coach Coffin and his. assistants towards mak ing fencing a permanent sport here," said Schnell Friday. Student Coach Coffin is also very desirous of having fencing within the school. If the prob lem confronted Coffin of having to choose between intercollegi ate and intramural fencing, he is sure that he would unhesitat ingly prefer to eliminate' outside competition and retain sword play on the campus. Such a prob lem will probably never face the Tar Heel fencing instructor but it clearly shows his attitude to wards mural fencing. Peiping, Jan. 9 As part of the program to stamp out drug addicts in China, Lu Ju-Hsin, 32-year-old narcotic peddler, was shot through the back of the head in a public ceremony held today near the municipal gar bage dump. Ju-Hsin was arrested with 60 ounces of narcotics in his posses sion. Sentenced to death under China's new law prohibiting the use of habit-forming drugs by addicts, he was dragged by sol diers to the execution place. There, half frozen from a long walk through Peiping's streets, he was forced to kneel and then shot before a crowd of 10,000 persons. The drug addict was buried in the potter's field, which, in the next few weeks, will become the last resting place of thousands of Chinese narcotic users. answer. He sailed the sea, crossed the swan-road, came to Oxford. He called upon an Ox ford don. He would weave words with him. This one did not know him ; he had not heard his name over the handclasp. He answered: "There is only one man alive who can tell you that. He is George Lyman Kit tredge of Harvard." "Are you certain he is the only one?" : "Absolutely," gave the other in answer. "Thank you," said Professor Kittredge. J H It's As Good As Her Best! Shirley comes back strong in a picture that stands out with her very best! Far-off Shang hai . . . music . . . laughter . . . romance war lord bandits . . . danger . . . excitement . . . thrills! A gay ne'er-do-well and a glamorous girl who fights his love. with SUNDAY ONLY Hours of Shows: 135 and 9 P.M. ROBERT YOUNG ALICE FAYE Extra Added Attraction: Police Chief (Continued from first page) this sanctum of the law that moves Chief Sloan to yearn for new quarters. Not long ago he was sitting at his desk, writing out a report. The quiet of his retreat was v rudely shattered when a large section of the ceil ing came loose and fell to the floor with a crash. The plaster did not hit the Chief, but came close enough to startle him considerably. Ruth Crowell (Continued from first page) of the publication. "A leader ship fraternity for women should be the guiding influence for all 1 1 women on college campuses where there is an Alpha Kappa Gamma circle," writes the edi tor. Miss Crowell, along with being editor of The Torch Bearer, is the historian of the local chapter of the fraternity and one of the seven women initiated into the Athenian circle for outstanding service to the campus. The local chapter has been ac tive on this campus in establish ing a Y. W. C. A., sponsoring May Day and a fashion pageant, and presenting several enter tainments. In her plea for progress, Miss Crowell writes, "We .must be vital, dynamic, progressive, and inspired, if we are to last. Shal we be trivial, old-fashioned, dull, and static, or shall we be Alpha Kappa Gamma, national leader ship fraternity?" FOUND Black purse in front of Foister's. Owner can claim by seeing Graham Gammon. Ill MONDAY TUESDAY The giggle-guys-and-gals of "The Big Broadcast" raise the roof again in this madhouse revel set to the romantic tune of girls, gags and song hits. f&O&i yl m:4&!& fS. Js. j!Sl vlJsiQS ti Ums&MZs CIOROI GRACIS JACK BEMMY BUR!IS-AllEtl MARYB01A!ID MARTHA RAYE j Marsha Hunt Eleanor Whitney Johnny Downs A Paramount Picture Directed by Frank Turtle And a grand collection of campus cuties L, singing, dancing and romancing to the music of five hit tunes! Also Paramount News -Wednesday The Best Play of 1936 Maxwell Anderson's "WINTERSET" With the Stars who made it great on the stage Thursday WILLIAM POWELL KAY FRANCIS FRANK McHUGH in Friday Midnight Doors open 11 P. M. FOUR MARX BROTHERS Friday CHARLIE RUGGLES ALICE BRADY ONE WAY PASSAGE" SATURDAY: BRUCE CABOT in in 'HORSE FEATHERS" 'MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS" Pictures of the Party Congress Niirnberg MARGARET LINDSAY in "SINNER TAKE ALL' Special Showing Thursday, 9 P. M. Also Selected German Shorts

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