PAGE FOUB
THE DAILY TAR HfiEL
BULLETINS
1
Seniors Interested in learning
how to play basketball meet
Ramsay Potts at the Tin Can
this afternoon at 5 o'clock:
French Club Meets tonight, 7
o'clock, Episcopal Parish house.
Robeson County Club Social
and dance in Graham Memorial
tonight from 8 until 10 o'clock.
Sigma Gamma Epsilon Meets
this afternoon in 401 New East
at 4 o'clock.
Ali Kani Will talk to Professor
Knight's education class at 11
o'clock in 208 Peabody. Public
invited.
Rabbi Zeiger To lecture tonight
at 7:30 in Grail room. Public in
vited. Radio Club Meets tonight at
7:30 in 206 Phillips. Henry Dor
sett, University graduate will
speak on "Power Supplies."
Chess Club Meets tonight at
7:30, second floor of YMCA.
The Men and Women's Glee Club
-Meetat 5 o'clock in the Hill
Music hall today.
Billiard Expert Charles Peter
son to give exhibition in Graham
Memorial tonight at 7 o'clock.
Di-Phi Dance Tonight at 9
o'clock at the Carolina inn.
Tryouts For experimental to
day in Playmakers theater at 4.
Drama Majors
All students majoring in dra
matic art are requested to meet
in 113 Murphey tomorrow at 9
o'clock for the comprehensive
examination.
Council Makes
New Rule
(Continued from first page)
necessary enough to be suffi
ciently desired, it should be pos
sible for those in favor of it to
work up the required vote," Ma
gilf said.
"The argument that fees vot
ed by a small number of stu
dents should be allowed to sting
a lethargic campus to concern
hasn't appeared to hold water in
the past. Fees have been added
over a number of years by small
groups of specially interested
.students, but the student who
couldn't afford to pay them has
never had the nerve to oppose
them. It may be that a campus
legislature is the only institution
that would provide opportunity
for such protests. But until we
get one, it seems wise for the
council to require minimum
votes."
Spessard Was
Mighty But
Beta Gamma Sigma
Grants Membership
To Three Students
W. F.Evans, R. H. Graham, Ray
mond Simon Honored by
Commerce Fraternity
Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary
fraternity in the School of Com
merce, has elected Dr. Clarence
Heer as a faculty member and
three students as student mem
bers, it was announced yester
day. The seniors, Webb F.
Evans, Reuben H. Graham, and
Raymond Simon, complete the
roster of senior members.
Membership is restricted to
those commerce students whose
grades place them in the highest
10 per cent of the class. Other
students previously elected are:
W. F. Aberly, Crist W. Black
well, Roy C. Crooks, Jr., Paul O.
Foltz, John Foreman, Warren
Haddaway, L. W. Jenkins, W. D.
McLean, W. S. Mitchell, Ramsay
Potts, H. J. Rosenbaum, C. A.
Shaw, D. L. Stallings, and L. M.
Ward. -
Here Are
Mural Winners
(Continued from page three)
over Kappa Sigma No. 2, 330 to
282.
Dorm Table Tennis
In the only dormitory table
tennis match of the day Ruffin
eked out a 2 to 1 victory in a
hard fought match.
Ruffin No. 1 showed its might
yesterday afternoon in the intra
mural volley ball tournament by
trampling ZBT, 15 to 0 and 15
to 2. Ruffin had very little trou
ble with their opposition and
was able to score almost at will.
The other matches were extend
ed to three games and were all
well played. Winner in the sec
ond match was Chi Psi over Ev
erett No. 1, 16-14, 14-16, and
15-5. In the other match Beta
Theta, after being mercilessly
defeated by Everett No. 2, 15-2,
rallied and won the last two
games and the match by 15-10
and 15-7 scores.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY!, Vr
Historic Moment
4 -
7
' 2 t
:
v- ' J
With a price on his head, Jean Lafitte, pirate king, played by
Fredric March, confronts General Andrew Jackson and demands
an opportunity to help defend New Orleans in the War of 1812, a
dramatic moment in. "The Buccaneer the Cecil B. DeMille epic
now playing at the Carolina Theatre. Lef t, March and Franciska
Gaal, lovely Hungarian actress who makes her American film de
but in this film.
Schinhan To Give
Recital Here Soon
Will Present Organ Music In Hill
Hall Tuesday Night
Professor Jan Philip Schin
han of the music department
will give an organ recital Tues
day evening at 8:30 in Hill Mu
sic hall.
The program will include:
"Prelude" by Clerambault;
Arioso in 'A"; choral prelude
'Adorn thyself dear Soul" and
"Fugue in G major" by Bach;
"Symphony No. 5" by Widor;
"Prelude" from Lohengrin, Act
I, and "Pilgrims Chorus" from
Tannhauser by Wagner.
Improvisation on a theme will
be given by someone in the audience.
GrapplersTo
Meet Blue Devils
(Continued from page three)
them. Only three Blue Devils
are back from the 1937 team.
Harriss
Johnson Harriss will meet
Dukester Leonard Levy for the
second consecutive time as the
first bout gets under way. Har
riss, a junior, has lost only two
fights in as many years while
wrestling for the varsity. Be
sides Levy, the Blue Devils
have only Dick Newens, 155-lb.
captain, and Alex Summerville,
175-lbs., to offer as veterans.
Unable to muster enough men
for a freshman squad, Duke
called off the scheduled prelimi
nary match with the Tar Ba
bies. Exhibition matches will
be substituted for the enjoyment
of any fans who choose to corner
The Athletic office announced
yesterday that the State match,
formerly scheduled to be held.
here next Friday, will be moved
up to Wednesday, and will be
contested in Raleigh.
Relay Team To
Run In New York
(Continued from page three)
because the second man in the
mile relay dropped the baton.
Another year saw the Tar Heels
win the meet in the relay.
There will be four mile relays
in this year's meet. Entries are
already in for the conference,
non-conference, freshman, and
scholastic divisions.
Georgetown's ace relay club
of Healy, Green, Bogan, and
McPoland, which last year set a
meet record by running the mile
relay in 3:29.8, will again be
back this year to compete in the
non-conference division. Other
schools so far entered in the
non-conference division are
Navy, Catholic university, and
Presbyterian.
J. C. Dunlap Resigns
For Venezuela Job
University Graduate Formerly
With TV A
J. C. Dunlap who has been
on the geological staff of the
Tennessee Valley Authority
since his graduation from the
local geology department nearly
three years ago, has resigned
that position to go with Dr. J. G.
Douglas, a former professor of
paleontology here.
As a petroleum geologist in
Venezuela, Mr. Dunlap will be
the seventh recent graduate to
accept a position with one of
the vajrious ptetroleum compa
nies of the world.
Robeson Social
The Robeson County club will
give a social and dance at Gra
ham Memorial tonight from
8 until 10 o'clock. All Rob
eson county students here who
want dates for the dance should
notify Miss Ann Nash, commit
tee chairman.
Sulphuric acid was the first
isolated acid, being known to the
Arabs in the eighth century.
Patronize our advertisers.
LETTERS
To The Editor
(Continued from
offend in nothing else W--..
ly pick the wrong moment
cough, blow their noses viojl
ly, or drop books on the flr"
WWTe hope that this brief c
line of student habits which
have hastened to offer in
defense will be as open to pT
able interpretation as ' t
"amazincr facts" revpi
terday's paper.
Sincerely yours,
Kester Svendsen.
Waldo F. McXeir.
Talk
Ali Kani, graduate student a:
the University from Persia, q
talk this morning at 11 o'clock
in Peabody 208 to Professor
Edgar W. Knight's class in edu
cational history. Mr. Katf3
subject is "Education in Per.
sia." The public is invited.
Germans drink only half &
much beer today as in 1914.
CLASSIFIED"
WILL HONEST PERSON tfcTt
found a black raincoat that
had been torn and patched
with tape please notify Ev
erett Stutts, 117 Graham.
Last Times Todav
FREDERIC MARCH
in
f
The Buccaneer"
MIDNIGHT SHOW
TONIGHT
HIS PEN WON VICTORIES
WHERE ARMIES HAD FAILED:
, Air. PAUL MUNI
it in "The Life of Emi!e
ZOLA
gale soNDFir.iim. mtFPH
- SCMUDLRALT Ckn HaWta Dsn
REG CARMNGTOfl ASKS COMMANDER ELLSBERG:
SI pill t!
to
Difference
to
etwee
Dl
m
nd other
garottes?
(Continued from page three)
end of the first quarter the
Phantoms were ahead by 11-7,
and Spessard had been held
scoreless. But at 10:25 in the
opening half, Bob sank his first
point, a foul, and the Spessard
parade "was on. By half time he
had sunk 12 points to bring the
Generals up to a 24-24 tie.
For the first part of the sec
ond half, while Spessard seemed
to be shooting under thebasket
shots from an easy chair, noth
ing could break right for the
Phantoms. Long shots rolled in
and out of the hoops, the Gen
erals were getting the ball off
the backboard, and Spessard and
his mates were converting al
most impossible shots.
Then Pete Boone found him
self, and Spessard was through.
But the Phantoms were not, and
after the foul shots of Bershak
and Worley, Ruth sent the locals
ahead with a breathtaking field
goal, and Boone sewed the game
up with another two-pointer. It
was fitting that Boone should
get the last scoring word in, for
it was his guarding of Spessard
in the last five minutes of the
game that made the Carolina
victory possible.
I ' -$C- 7 i tJL . . ,. ..r.
4 -!
&z0& iuj""" ?pp33g;
REG CARRINGTON: "I see you're a
steady Camel smoker, Commander.
There really isn't any difference
in cigarettes, is there?"
COMMANDER ELLSBERG: "You're dead
wrong, Reg. The life of a deep-sea diver is
tougher on a man than most work. Most of
the divers I know are steady Camel smokers
and,believe me,tbey know there's a difference.
Take my own case, for example. I stick to
Camels have smoked them for ten years.
They never get on my nerves. Smoking
Camels, I feel that I enjoy life more. Camel
is the cigarette that agrees with me."
:
8
"Yes absolutely!'' says Commander Edward EUsberg. And
milGons of other steady smokers know there is a distinct
difference in Camels. That's why Camels are the largest
selling cigarette in the world.
1 I $
2- .. O "Xt-VN'"."
?Srr i&i
ELLSBERG is used to fatigue. IN ACTION ! Commander Ells
He says of Camels: "I found berg shares danger with his
that smoking a Camel when I men. He says: "The last thing a
feel tired after an hour under diver does before going down
water-or any tour of duty- -and the first thing after corn
gives me aquick Win energy.- ing up -is to smoke a CameL"
CLUB-ROOM CONVERSATION (abort) so often swings around
to cigarettes an interesting topic to smokers generally. "I
can tell the difference in Camels, Commander Ellsberg says.
"That famous saying, Td walk a mile for a Camel! expresses
how enthusiastic I am about Camels myself."
NEW DOUBLE-FEATURE CAMEL CARAVAN. Two great shows
"Jack Oakie College' and Benny Goodman's "Swing School" La one
fast, fun-tiled hour. On the air every Tuesday night at 930 pm E.S.T.,
8:30 pm C.S.T 7:30 pm M.S.T., 6:30 pm P.S.T., over VT ABC-CBS.
f i ASSESS
Cnicitt. 1S3S. K. J. WiTih '
HIS FAVORITE sport small-boat
sailing. Camels are right beside him!
''Camels fit in with my leisure hours,
too, he says. "I've never known
them to jangle my serves. That
means a lot because I smoke a lot!
LI
ONE SMOKER
TELLS ANOTHER
Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORI
EXPENSIY! TOBACCOS-TurkiA ud Domestic
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