SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1940 THE DAILY TAB FIEKJ PAGE FOUE 91,000 People Have Visited Student Union Maybe it's Fish's popularity, or pos sibly his planning, but anyhow there have been over 91,000 in attendance At the various activities of Graham .Memorial Student Union during the cial figures released last night by Di rector Worley. The 1940 figure of 91,021, or an average of 30,000 a month, compares favorably with the 1932 figure of 25, 000 for the fall quarter, the first year that the new building wa3 used. The most popular facility of the building is the- Grill which has served 36,000 meals since September. The game room is second in popularity with an attendance of 13,902 for the quar ter. The barber shop has served 4,200 patrons, and 8,026 persons have attend ed the 234 committee meetings held this quarter in Graham Memorial. Popular Social Program . The social program of the Student Union has been extremely popular to judge by the attendance figures. Five dances with orchestras were attended by 1,590 students and five dances with recorded music brought out 3,250 stu dents. The five square dances held this quarter exercised 3,250 hardy souls. The 14 tea3 and freshman recep tion entertainment 3,053 students, and 4,319 persons attended the 32 ban quets and receptions. Five hundred people attended the three movie programs and 3,017 were educated at the football clinics. The J two amateur programs brought & crowd of 529. Concerts and Recitals ' Six concerts and recitals accounted for 2,829 of the total, and the 11 re corded concerts were enjoyed by 587 people. There were 556 persons at the 15 radio broadcasts of football games and concerts. Three vocational programs discover ed 81 students interested in their fu tures, while the bridge tournament unearthed 104 bridge sharks. Three hundred at the election day party, 2,100 at the two open houses, and 5,372 students using the publica tions offices complete the grand total of 91,000 for the quarter. KAU1U dl UU1U (Continued from first, page) the same stations from 4:15 to 4:30. The Chapel Hill Choral club com- women's glee club3 under the direc tion of Clyde Keutzer will broadcast part of their annual Christmas pro gram entitled "Fantasy on Christmas Carols" by Vaughan-Williams on the University Music Hour over station WPTF from 9:05 to 9:30. Lefler to Speak Dr. Hugh Lefler will talk on t'Th& Story of Naval Stores A Forgotten North Carolina Industry" as a part of the series of programs on North Caro lina History. Stations WRAL, WAIR, WSTP, WGTM, WSOC and WFTC will carry this program Thursday aiternoon irom.z:3U to z:4o. - Buck Timberlake of the Journalism department will interview Bill Lange, basketball coach, about the prospects for the Carolina team for the coming season. The same stations will broad cast this program from 2:45 to 3 o'clock. The University School of Music will present Jan Philip Schinhan, organist, in a recital from Hill hall over sta tions WDNC, WBIG and WSJS from 4 o'clock to 4:30 Thursday afternoon as the last program of the week. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. All advertise ments must be paid for is advance to the Tar Heel Businesi Office. ' FOR RENT Apartment, 3 rooms, pri vate, 3 or 4 boys. Bob Lovell, 126 Fetzer Lane. 3041. FOR RENT Suite with living room, bedroom, and bath; steam heat, fire place in living room; attractively and comfortably furnished; near campus. Phone 6241. Social Notes Br Marion Lippincott The Pi Phi's entertained members of the faculty at tea on Sunday after noon. AnDroximately 50 people call ed during the afternoon. Mrs. Sedalia Gold poured tea and was assisted by Cornelia Clark, Bobby Win ton, Eunice Patten. Martha LeFevre, Eleanor El Hot, Margery Davi3 and Stacy Crockett. The Kappa Sigs entertained Mr and Mrs. Sam Emory and Miss Sally Taylor at their house last Thursday evening. . Alpha Delta Pi gave its second an nual Christmas party for the poor chil dren of Chapel Hill last Friday night at the American Legion hut. Only dis maying incident .during the evening was when one little girl on being hand ed a present from Santa Claus (Nancy Mclver) replied, "Thank you, ma'am." Tau Epsilon Phi entertained Mrs. Gustav Lichtenfels, president of the North Carolina Association of Jewish women, last Wednesday night at din ner. Mrs. T. S. Graves of East Frank lin Street entertained the members of Alpha Delto Pi sorority at a tea last Saturday afternoon at her home. Christmas decorations furnished an attractive setting for the occasion. During the course of the afternoon Mrs. Graves held a spelling bee' of knowledge of ADPi. INTRAMURALS (Continued from page three) low jerseys finally get a laundering and are put away until basketball sea son . . . All campus team appearswith Wilson outstanding ball toter . . . Wrestling Wrestling replaced football, and once again the frats turned out in force, with a total of 330 entrants . . . Dorms lagged as usual, with less than 50 contestants . . . Phi Gams led first few days, but were replaced by Zetes, who won for the third consecutive year . . . Defending champions came through in fine form with Mordecai, Spransy, Thomas and Bill Feuchtenberger re peating . . . Kimball again proved great crowd-pleaser and did a great job in winning heavy crown by pinning White . . . Robinson of SAE in 136 pound class, Perrin of Phi Gam, 145 pounder, and Amoss of Delta Psi .in the 175-pound division, were the class of the frat league . . . Kingsley Elder of Ruffin, 165-pound champ, follows in the footsteps of his dad, former in structor at the. University, how teach ing'at Annapolis, where he was captain of the Academy mat team in his under graduate days ... George Spansy Charlie Baker heavy final was a whop per, Spransy winning with a very slight time advantage to annex ' his third consecutive mural heavy title . . . And so the mat tourney ended, the mats replaced in the varsity room, so the carriers of the Carolina colors in wrestling can once again get down to work, unhampered by the murals . . . Praise Handball again was the weak sister of the fall quarter . . . Too much com petition from other sports . . . Seems like something should be done to al leviate the conflict . . . Ruffin, led by McKeever and Gersten, took the dorm crown with best team seen on mural courts in many a year ... And so the curtain comes down . . . But a word of praise for Director Schnell, genial and well liked father of murals and Bunny Hines, former State college football captain and capable assistant director of murals . . . Hitches in the program were few and far between, due to the steady guiding hand of these two men . . . and they'll have their hands full come the winter quarter. V "TIN PAN ALLEY," 20th Century-Fox's musical of our exciting times which comes Sunday to the Carolina theater, is even more ex citing because blondes Alice Faye and Betty Grable are starred in it! NEWS BRIEFS TENNIS (Continued from page three) Miss Goold won over Julie FitzSim mons in an upset match, while Miss McCormick came out ahead of Olivia Rhodes to enter the final round. mA gold tennis racquet pin will be presented to Miss Goold in the near future. 3a QGfiif xr cilia mxrmc? cwe 01 "MO 4 IV . - mr- V, J itti r v' ft BITTY r, L in 7 ninrv r?w JACK JOHW OmilB PAYUE t:l ALLEN JENKINS ESTHER RALSTON NICHOLAS BROTHERS BEN CARTER A tOtk Caiarrr ftatai (I a 0(10000 j SUNDAY MONDAY (Continued from first page) army" across the western desert, under "blitz" blows by land, sea, and air and shattering attacks deep into Libya that set afire parts of the Fas cist bases at Tobruk, several miles across the border, and at Bardia. British casualties in contrast with those of the Italians were described as "very light," and wounded British sol diers returning to the rear asserted that neither the Italian Blackshirts Benito Mussolini's pride nor the na tive Libyans wanted to put up a fight. That, they said, explained the large number of prisoners, which already includes five generals. Three captured generals were brought to Cairo by plane yesterday. In the wake of the Italian flight, British infantry mopped up a 400 to 500 square mile desert battlefield, gathering vast amount of valuable ma terials, including Italian mechanized equipment. British pilots described their con stant bombing assaults in which RAF hurricane squadrons have carried out 67 attacks behind the Italian lines in the past 72 hours. They reported "great fires" blazing at Solium and other bombed towns and bases, and said long columns of Italian mechan ized vehicles were attempting to reach Tobruk. ATHENS, Dec. 14 (Saturday) Greek forces today were reported sweeping toward the bomb-shattered Albanian seaport of Valona after seiz ing the port of Baleromo, in what the Greek high , command calls "intense" assaults all along the 135-mile Alban ian front. The Greeks pushed upon , Valona, gateway to central Albania, as reports reached Athens of frantic Italian ef forts to evacuate the virtually de stroyed seaport and military bases. ROME, Dec. 13 The Italian press tonight called for greater resistance to "the greatest antagonist Rome has had in her thousands of years of existence," as the high command ad mitted that Britain's desert offensive has struck close to the soil of Italian Libya. Today's war communique said that Italian troops were battling - "with great valor" against British mechan ized columns "at the Libyan frontier" between Solium and Sidi Barrani," as well as in the desert waste to the southeast. MIAMI, Dec. 13 President Roose velt and the Duke of Windsor, meet ing for the first time in 21 years, today discussed America's naval bases in the West Indies, and talked "only in gen eral" of the war and international af fairs. NEW YORK, Dec. 13 William S. Knudsen, chief of production in the total preparedness drive, tonight warned that the output of war planes is 30 per cent below earlier estimates, and called on industry and labor for "speed, speed, and more speed" in the entire rearmament program. MUSS NOW PLAYING i a I;. In a Land Aliv. - With Death and Diamonds! c1 - AWAXNUIftOS. I'' w' 5 '""I Also Cartoon-Novelty CONFERENCE (Continued from page three) meet was postponed this year from the day of the Duke-Carolina game to the following Monday at the request of Duke and several other schools. New Member Sure George Washington is almost sure of being voted into the conference. The school prepared the groundwork for getting into the groups at the circuit basketball tournament last winter in Raleigh. The cross country date, also, will probably be changed after the suc cessful way in which it was carried out this year. Fights, though, loom on the Enright and State proposals. The proposal by State, will hardly affect enough men to be included in the conference rules. It has been reported that opposition has been known to be " developing to the South Carolina coach's idea and the matter is almost surely to come up on the conference floor in some form. Even with the four proposals, though, the meeting is not expected to last past noon today. The annual dinner will officially close the con vention tonight. SCIENCE FRAT (Continued from first page) son, David Seifert and Sherill Gre gory to promote interest in science among undergraduates on the campus. Officers of the fraternity are War ren Harrelson, president; Sherill Gre gory, vice-president; David Seifert, recording secretary; Bennett Creech, corresponding secretary; and Bill Stone, treasurer. Other members are Jim Ritchie, Fletcher Bailey, Lit Sel- den, John Church, Jim Allran, Hobart McKeever and Dan Hamilton. Faculty adviser for the group is Dr. Sherman Smith of the chemistry department. BASKETBALL (Continued from page thre) was halted at 30-21, and the Phan toms' scoring resumed- Jimmy Howard, Glamack, Paine, Hank Pessar, Reid Suggs, Bill Loock, Ed Antolini and Glamack several times all contribut ed buckets or foul shots. Menghetti, Guilford's starting guard, collapsed in mid-court toward the end of the game, after bumping two Carolina men. He was removed from the game, but not hurt seriously. Smith and Pessar at forwards were the starters. George Paine went in for Gersten late in the first half, started the second at guard and went to forward when Howard and Gersten returned to action. Joe Nelson had replaced Smith at forward and Ed Shytle had taken Howard's post. Hank Pessar even had his try at center, and in that spot fed enough balls to guards so that they could pile up impressive scoring totals for the few moments they played. George Glamack was mobbed be fore and especially after the game by local high schoolers who wanted his autograph . . . Bunn Hackney, who played for Carolina back in 1925, had his first turn at refereeing a game in which the Phantoms played. The other official was a Guilford man. Freshmen, Sophomore JNeed Appointments BLAISDELL (Continued from first page) pressed, of course, in his own auto biography, and if further evidence is needed, just read the volume written by one of Hitler's former close asso ciates and high ranking leader in the National Socialist Party, Hermann Rauschning, one-time president of the Danzig Senate, who in a book called "The Revolution of Nihilism" states Hitler's philosophy even better than the Fuehrer himself." All General College freshman aj sophomores who have not yet secured appointments for registration sho.j do so immediately by consul tic 5 -;-a their advisers. f 0 1 J Paramount Pnwnh Clarence E.f.lulford's WILUAr.l BOYD Also Comedy Novelty NOW PLAYING PICK THEATRE - sXi vs ' fa m 11 m Ixfer -jS- Mr lfV ,' A kk c 1 r j- . ma mm mom :' r - m-jm ' ' ' ''M w rv s ' cartm f ' lfy -' ' Chesterfields with their "'"'& MILDER BETTER TASTE will ve your ens more Vft; pleasure than anything m else yu can buy for m A ' i 1 1 n r n n neo in the attractive Gift carton that says . 'j Oprrifbt 1M4, Lwcnt ft Mtbu Tmaco C.