PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY TAR HKEE
THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1933
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BULLETINS
Commencement Invitations On sale
today for last time. May be obtained
in YMCA from 9 to 1 and from 3 to
6 o'clock.
Dr. Zamora Speaks this morning in
Spanish at 10:45 in Hill hall.
Barclay Acheson Lectures tonight at
7:30 in Graham Memorial.
Motion Pictures Of coffee and rayon
industries to be shown tonight at 7:15
in 113 Bingham hall.
Dancing Class Satterfield's class in
ballroom dancing begins this evening
at 8 o'clock in 123 Peabody.
Band Rehearsal Tonight at 7 o'clock
in Hill Music hall. '
Girls' Glee Club Meets today at 5
o'clock in Hill Music hall.
Playmakers Present fifth public pro
duction tonight at 8:15 in the Play
maker theater.
Students Vote today in YMCA for
Publications Union board member.
May Day Board Meets in Graham
Memorial tonight at 7 o'clock.
Buccaneer Business Staff Meets in
the office at 4 o'clock today.
Buccaneer Photography Staff Will
meet tonight at 7:15 in Buccaneer of
fice. Judge J. Will Pless Speaks tonight
at 8:15 in first year class room in
Manning hall. -
Delta Phi Alpha First official meet
ing tonight at 8:30 in 212 Graham
Memorial. Professor Von Beckerath
to speak.
Coeds To Participate
In Duke Play Day
(Continued from first page)
training in the coed archery practice
group here. Frances Roughton and
Nan Tinsley will be the only ones
from here playing golf in the tourney.
THE NEW PALM BEACH
SUITS AND SLACKS
FOR COLLEGE MEN
For a lesson in "permutations and combina
tions" see the new Palm Beach suits and
- slacks. Take a blue, tan and white suit . .
mix them with a few pairs of Palm Beach
slacks... and enjoy smartness, comfort and
economy ad infinitum. Goodall weaves Palm
Beach cloth and tailors Palm Beach suits.
That's why men can get a whole Palm Beach
wardrobe at such a small cost. See Palm
Beach at your favorite clothier today. . . and
ask him to show you the new Palm Beach
Evening Formal.
PALM BEACH EVENING FORMAL 20.00
PALM BEACH SLACKS 5.50
TAILORED
PROM THE
IP IT BEARS THIS LABEL
IT'S GENUINE PALM BEACH
GOODALL COMPANY CINCINNATI
Let your body breathe in Palm Beach
Senator . Pope To Speak On Peace Here Wednesday
Cuban Government
Professor To Talk
In Spanish Today
Dr. Juan. Zamora Will
Bring To Close Series
Of Three Addresses
Dr. Juan Clemente Zamora, politi
cal science instructor at the Univer
sity of Cuba and director of the study
center of the Institute of Welfare and
Social Reforms in Cuba, will bring to
a close a series of three addresses on
the campus when he presents an in
formal talk in Spanish this morning
at 10:45 in Hill Music hall.
Dr. Zamora is speaking here under
the sponsorship of the Institute of
Inter-American Affairs, an organiza
tion which is supported by the Cuban
government and 10 southern Ameri
can universities. He has acquired an
extensive education, having studied at
Harvard, the University of Havana,
Columbia, and Paris.
Duke university was host recently
to Dr. Zamora where he conducted a
series of lectures similar to those he
is presenting here.
Phi Bete Favors
Raising Requirements
(Continued from first page)
no way interferes with the present
entrance requirements.
If, when the plan is brought up be
fore the chapter at its next meeting,
probably within the next two weeks,
it is approved, it must still be passed
upon by the national senate of the
fraternity, and consequently will
probably not go into effect until at
least next year.
While the new plan makes it more
difficult for junior classmen to be
elected into the organization, accord
ing to its present terms it will not
affect the election of senior class can
didates. 000
BY G O O D I. I.
GENUINE CLOTH
North Carolina
Debates Begin
Practice
Practice for the May Day dances
will be held tonight at 7:15 in the
banquet hall of Graham Memorial.
The following are requested to be
present: Misses Anna Margaret Bal
lantine, Rachel McLain, Evelyn
Barker, Janet Lawrence, Eleanor
Edwards, Dorothy Kelly, Marguerite
Lipscomb, Martha Gunter, Edna Ben
gal, Barbara Smith, Agnes Nicholson,
Mary Elsie Pemberton, and Gladys
Best Tripp.
Parker Turns
Back State
(Continued from page three)
ning and was greeted with three more
runs. The chief Tar Heel protagon
ist in the six run first two inning
uprising was Captain Tom Burnette,
who unloaded a single in each inning
to knock in four runs.
Just as the Hearn crew was get
ting away in fine fashion, in came
some rain to delay proceedings for a
half hour, just long enough to cool
the club down. For when play started
' in the third, State, helped along by
a home run and a double by Bob
Wicker and a triple by Doc Smith,
Jr., started picking up enough runs
to tie the count in the seventh, while
the Carolina sluggers could not tally
again until the ninth when a run
meant the ball game.
Box score:
CAROLINA AB R
Stirnweiss, ss 2 2
H O A E
13 2 1
12 3 0
12 0 0
2 3 0 0
0 11 0 0
2 1 4 2
12 0 0
0 3 10
3 0 3 0
11 27 12 3
H O A E
0 13 0
13 0 0
0 10 0
0 10 1
110 0
3 2 3 0
0 5 10
2 4 10
16 0 0
0 0 10
2 0 3 1
Craver, 2b 4
Nethercutt, c 3
Burnette, cf 5
Bissett, lb 5
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
Grubb, 3b 3
Cox, rf 4
Bricklemyer, If 4
Parker, p 4
Totals 34 7
STATE
AB R
Kearns, ss 5 0
Griffin, cf 3 0
Berlinski, cf 2 0
Honeycutt, If .: 4 0
Beam, rf 5 0
Wicker, 3b 3 2
Hoyle, 2b 5 0
Smith, c 4 1
Harris, lb 4 0
Holsehouser, p 0 0
Green, p 4 0
Totals 39
None out when
6 10 2412 2
winning run
scored.
State 001 102 2006
Carolina 330 000 0017
Runs batted in: Burnette 4, Wicker
2, Smith 2, Craver 1, Grubb 1, Cox 1,
Kearns 1. Home run: Wicker. Three
base hit: Smith. Two-base hit:
Wicker. Struck out: By Parker 3, by
Green 4. Base on balls: Off Parker 3,
off Greeen 3. Hit by pitcher: By
Holsehouser, Grubb; by Green, Grubb.
Double play: Grubb to Craver to Bis
sett. Wild pitches : Parker 1, Green 1.
f tiRO. wv eoui fiE sans is (!EW n
fJmX Betty GRABLE Jackie COOGAH 'JrmfTn 1
I xl FLORENCE GEORGE JOHN PAYNE JJMu 1
Br-' Ns ROBERT CUNNINGS SKiNNAY ENHiS LZSttk I 1
lfctSmffi filllfi Jr THE SLATE BROTHERS I
IlllitS TODAY
I SfWl THURSDAY .
High School
Here Tonight
Contest Of f icially
Inaugurated At
2 This Afternoon
Sixteen debates will be in progress
simultaneously tonight in as many
auditoriums scattered around the
campus by declaimers from 67 North
Carolina high schools.
Hundreds of youthful orators will
debate the query, Resolved, That the
several states should adopt a unicam
eral system of legislation.
Inaugurated
With a meeting of all debaters and
teachers in Memorial hall this after
noon at 2 o'clock, the 26th annual
final contest of the North Carolina
High School Debating union will be
officially inaugurated. G. M. McKie
will preside and drawings for sections
and pairs in the first preliminary will
be held.
Under auspices of the Di and Phi
societies, the first preliminaries will
begin at 7 o'clock, with an audience
of at least five persons assured for
every debate. Three faculty judges
and two student officials will be on
hand.
Second
Second preliminaries get under way
at 8:30 tomorrow morning. Final de
bate for the Aycock Memorial cup
will be held at 8 o'clock in Memorial
hall, with Dr. Frank Graham presid
ing and E. R. Rankin acting as secre
tary. Five judges will hear the final
debate: A. W. Hobbs, W. W. Pierson,
Jr., M. T. Van Hecke, F. F. Brad-
shaw, and H. R. Douglass. Dean R. B.
House will award the cup.
Entertainments have been' planned
for the visitors, including a band con
cert tonight at 7:30 in Memorial hall
by the University band, and a recep
tion in Graham Memorial.
Official Action
Not Yet Taken
(Continued from first page)
Freshman Handbook and Daily Tar
Heel; University service plants may
advertise in the Student directory;
the Carolina inn may advertise in the
Yackety-Yack and football programs
and none of the University agencies
may advertise m the .Buccaneer or
Carolina Magazine.
Before the student group submitted
their recommendations, the plans
were presented to G. M. Hill, super
visor of purchases, E. F. Cooley, man
ager of Swain hall, Leigh Skinner,
manager of the Carolina inn, and
J. S. Bennett, supervisor of utilities.
Blue Imps
Win
(Continued from page three)
Carolina; time :54. Other firsts made
by the visitors were James in the 880,
Brown in the pole vault, and Wagner
in the mile and a half.
Joe Judge, former first baseman
with the Washington Senators, coaches
baseball at Georgetown university.
First Official
Meeting Of German
Fraternity Tonight
Professor Von Beckerath
To Speak To Group At 8:30
In Graham Memorial
Professor Herbert von Beckerath 1
will speak tonight at the first official
meeting of the new chapter of the
national honorary German fraternity,
Delta Phi Alpha, to convene at 8:30
in room 212 of Graham MemoriaL
ir- Ttr 'RoVrntVi,s talk
The signifcance of German
Culture." All students interested in
German are invited to attend the
meeting, and those eligible to mem
bership in the new fraternity are
asked to see President John Kendrick
or Dr. Jente, head of the German de
partment. Pardon Me,
But
(Continued from page three)
Mike Ronman came in antTchal-
enged Wolf to a round or so of
handball, but left after "Bear"
took a playful swing at him and
announced the impending golf
match. "
Soon both football men were
dressed. They stepped outside.
The rain started down faster.
They went to the gym and
played handball.
Between drizzles yesterday,
Coach Wolf stated that he
would go to Louisiana State
university as an instructor in
the football coaching school
there from August 2-6. Also,
during the last two weeks of
August, he will be host to
coaches from far and near at
the annual school held for
them here.
Manly Defeats
Mangum
(Continued from page three)
ning to take a lead that was never
headed. Mangum counted once in the
next frame but Manly evened things
J j 1 1 i -
ior me inning Dy Tallying 1 run in
its time at bat. In the next inning
the Manly team put the game on ice
by scoring 5 runs. Stevens led the
victorious team in scoring by tally
ing 3 times. Rogers led the losers
with 2 runs.
Score by innings:
Mangum 001 020 0 3
Manly 031 502 x 11
Zeta -Psi
Score by innings:
Zeta Psi 002 100 4 7
Chi Phi 000 102 03
Ruffin
Score by innings:
Aycock 200 100 1 4
Ruffin 000 105 x 6
Tennis
All of the tennis matches were
postponed because of rain.
EXTRA!
Walt Disney's
Mickey Mouse I
In I
'Hawaiian Holiday' .
In Technicolor 1
ADDRESS IS
SPONSORED BY
POUTICALMON
Event Is Part Of
Program Sponsored
By Venidas Group
Senator James T. Pope of Idaho
will present the feature addre3 of
an extensive peace program scheduled
for next Wednesday, April 27, Caro
lina Political Union Chairman Alex
Heard announced yesterday.
Pope's address, on some topic ap
propriate to the peace program, will
be sponsored by the CPU and will be
delivered as part of the series of
events planned by the Venidas organ
ization, a campus peace group. It will
begin promptly at 8:30 in Memorial
haU- Campus Poll
On Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes
day of next week the union will spon
sor, in cooperation with the Daily
Tab Heel, a campus poll dealing with
some peace problem, to be definitely
announced soon.
Heard said he was hoping to have a
representative student from Carolina
and one from Duke to make short
talks following Pope's speech, present
ing other viewpoints. He is also plan
ning to hold another of the popular
open forums after the address.
Another important feature of the
day may be realized when Pope
speaks to several classes in the
morning.
Playmaker Series
Continued Tonight
(Continued from first page)
preceded by a 15-minute organ con
cert by Mr. Panetti of the Andrews
Music company of Charlotte.
Tomorrow and Saturday's program
follows :
"The Worm Turns," by Jean Brab
ham, directed by the author, with
Dell Bush, Molly Holmes, Clifton
Young, Bob Steward, Rose Peagler,
and Mary Louise Greene in the cast.
"Three Foolish Virgins," by Ber
nice Kelly Harris, directed by Noel
Houston, with Gwen Pharis, Eietta
Bailey, Josephine Niggli, Lois La
tham, and Burr Leach in the cast.
-'Murder in the Snow," by Betty
Smith, directed by Lynette Heldman,
with Don Rosenberg, Bill Morgan,
Dan Nachtmann, Don Muller, and
Fred Myer in the cast.
"This is Villa," by Josephine Nig
gli, directed by J. L. Brown, with
Bob Nachtmann, Dan Nachtmann,
Harry Davis, Wieder Sievers, How
ard Richardson, Cary Vaughn, and
Rietta Bailey.
In Tune With
Fashion
Palm Beach
Slacks
The new Palm Beach slacks
hit a new high in comfort
and smartness. They har
monize splendidly with suits,
odd coats and sport shirts.
Washable, permanently shape
ly . . . available in solid shades,
plaids, checks and white.
$5.50
TAI !! Y
Durham Men's Shop
118 W. Main St.
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