PAGE SIX TUESDAY, MARCH 11, iUl PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAB eulej Movie Stars, BarMiig Dogs Harass Former Student, As Hollywood Cop Meyer Honored With Degree LL.D. Given By Florida College William L. Ruf ty Visits Campus; Tells Experiences By Shirley Hobbs William L. Enf ty, probably the only police court sergeant in the world who read3 the Saturday Review of Litera ture, has been visiting the University which graduated him in 1940 with the degree of A-B. in journalism. Now be 13 "calling all cars" in Beverly Hills, LAKELAND, Fla, March 10 Florida Southern college has fast con ferred an honorary Doctor of Laws degree on Professor Harold D. Meyer CaW famous borne' of the movie star of the University sociology depart- Mter graduation Eafty decided to mens, at aa academic convocation nere m Ma 4 pas3 (Ha father is an lias wecJc employee of the Southern Railway at J5jx. ocner prommeni personage. 1 Spencer) to see the San Franicisco were also presented with honorary World Fair. He paused to study steri- cegrees at toe- same un otyping at a business colege in Lo Lectsres Given- - (Angeles where he casually tool: a civil Professor Meyer recentry gave a se- service examination in his stride. The lies of lectures at Florida Southern examination landed him behind the where he a n popular speaker. He desk at the Beverly Hills police court, addressed the convocation as one of a J Euf ty cannot compare his court to series of Founders Week speakers an average one because Beverly Hills which included Governor Holland and is not an average community. It cov Bishop Moore. : ers about four square miles with a A member of the Carolina faculty population of 22,000 and capital for the last 20 years, Professor Meyer wealth over $100,000,000. With the ha3 long been recognized as an an- exception of a few old-timers, all the thority on' recreational activities and members of the police department are has been active in directing sucb work college graduates. Will Rogers used in this section. He 13 chief of the bu- to be mayor of Beverly Hills. Now his reau of recreation of the University son fills the office. Jack Benny is Extension division, chairman of the honorary dog-catcher. Jack and his recreation committee of the North wife, Mary Livingston, are great Carolina Conference for Social Science, friends of Binnie Barnes. j educational director for the Boy One night Binnie took her" nightie Scouts of America in region six, and j to their home and at the point of re a past president of the North Caro- J tiring decided that she wanted 1 Una Physical Education association, j nightcap and pressed the button at " I the head of her bed. The button was a burglar alarm and brought four policemen instead of a cup of coffee. Lupe Velez also is included in Ser geant Ruftjs bedtime stories. "Lupe 13 very superstitious," he says. "A Gypsy had been blessing her and mak ing incantations. Lupe supplied $2, 500 to be sewn into her nightgown. The woman said it would double itself after Lupe slept on it. The star's curiosity would not allow her to wait all night. She looked during the night to see if the money had started in creasing. The Gypsy had sewn news paper in the gown and fled with the money. Our search for her was in vain. The police caught her in Chi cago, but she got out of jail on bail and disappeared "Dogs give me the most business," says Ruf ty. "People complain because dogs bark, because they walk across their lawns, because they have lost their dogs. One woman phoned and said to send an ambulance quickly. At first she was too excited to tell me what was the matter. I finally learned that her cat was having kit tens in the living room." Rufty's greatest disappointment has been seeing the glamour girls in per son. "They are not as pretty in per son as on the screen," he says. "They are too artificial and use too much peroxide. I admire only a few such Scientific Society To Hear Van Cleve . Dr. C. D. Van Cleave will be the main speaker at the 407th meeting of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific society here tonight. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 206 Phillips hall. Dr. H. B. Gotaas will also speak during the meeting. He will talk on: The Natural Disappearance of Bac teria in Air and the Effect of Chem ical Disinfection on. Air-Borne Bac teria. Dr. Van Cleave will speak on: The Inductive Effect of Several Non-living Tissues upon Isolated Gastrular Ectoderm. Friederich Announces Literature Course Dr. Werner P. Friederich yesterday announced that Composition Litera ture 155 (Goethe in English Transla tion) will be taught next quarter in spite of previous decisions to the con trary. The course will meet Mondays through Fridays at 2 p.m. in Saund ers 110. TODAY and WED. SPECTACULAR . for Its tfrtl SPECTACULAR ...tor It thrift i I L as Hedy Lamarr and Lana Turner.' Wilkinson Addresses Young Republicans Mr. John Wilkinson, President of the state Young Republicans, last night addressed the Young Republi can club. He discussed plans for an excursion' to Ocracoke Island spons ored by the National organization. Plans have been made for a banquet to be held in the spring sponsored by the local Young Republican club at which it is hoped that Wendell Willkie will speak. OHLYOrJCEIN A MFETIHE... Suek IMS (rpc of Art- thrlUUg romsncii Also COLOR CARTOON SUNDAY-MONDAY ( Roptvrow Romance! I in I'T I a COIUMHA HCTUU I I -rrc I ycm "Will Noted Latin Scholar Here State Department Sponsors Tour Dr. Ecgemo Perexras-Salas, noted foDdorist and professor of Latin- American history in the University of Chile at Santiago, is visiting his old friend and colleague, Dr. Ralph S. Boggs, tnTofesior 6f Spanish in the University here this week. Dr. Fererras-Salas is one of three' distinguished Sooth American uitel lecteal leaders who are now touring institutions of higher education in the eastern section of the United States as guests of the federal gov ernment. Invited here by the State Depart ment, which Is paying all expenses, the three scholars now making their headquarters in Washington' have been in the States a month and have spent most of their time thu3 far in New York and in Philadelphia. They hope to learn while they are here just what progress American scholars are making in various fields of study, their methods of research, and -how best to further cooperation between North and South American intellectual leaders. " Dr. Pereiras-Salas, who met the group of 110 South American delegates to the University's recent winter "Summer School!? in Washington this week, is on his second trip to the states, in he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship for study at the University of California.' , : 1 : 1 A DRAMATIC TRIANGLE . . . With Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy both in love with Claudette Colbert,- the dramatic triangle is all set in 4Boom Town spectacular oil drama coming to the Carolina screen to day. But there is another woman in the case, in the person of Hedy Lamarr, who rounds out one of the most sensational casts in the history of - motion pictures. Van Hecke Names Law Faculty For Summer School Also COLOR CARTOON TODAY ONLY PICK THEATRE Student Union Plans Holiday Entertainment All the entertainments and facili ties of Graham Memorial, and several additional features, such as a dating bureau, will be open to students and faculty during the spring- holidays, Fish Worley, the director, said yes terday. Dances and parties and continuous entertainment have been planned to help those who stay in Chapel Hill pass' the time. Ffsfr said yesterday that he would personally operate a dating bureau which will guarantee satisfaction. Written,, telephoned, or personal, ap plications are in order any time be tween now and . the end of vacation. Several new games have been added to the collection of games kept in Graham Memorial. These may be used at any time. Among these new en tertainments are a bingo game which may be used by as many as 100 peo ple; a horse-race game; "Monopoly"; "That's Me," a dice and block game; "Mexican Pete"; and "Rook," "Flinch," and "Polyanna," old-time favorites. SWIMMING (Continued from page three) and missed the VMI and W&L meets. Captain Jim Barclay ranked second in the 220. . Weiss also had the top times in the 440 a 5Y2S against Navy, and 5:21.7 in the Southern conference meet. In the backstroke Roy Gibson and Louis Scheinman were the No 1 and 2 men all season. Gibson placed first in every meet except the Duke tilt when Scheinman marked up his best short course time of 1:47.5 to lick him. Gibson's- best short course mark was 1:45.6 which gave" him second behind State's Sid Ingram in the conference meet. His top long course time was 2:04.5 in the Georgia Tech contest. Southern conference champion Bob Ousley was the No. . 1 man in the breaststroke. He established a new conference record of 2:35.1 in the loop meet and swam to a 2:36.8 in the Duke engagement for his best times. Although strong enough to score in both the 50- and 100-yard events in the conference, the sprint events were the weakest. Whit Lees was easily the superior man in both races, but his better times were recorded in the 100. Against Navy he swam 55.3 for second place. Bob Rose,. Buzz Mitchell and Coxhead were' strong in their sprint events in the conference meet. Jim Barclay was used several times in the 100 with good results. The diving of Don Nicholson, who placed second in the National junior one-meter hoard diving here last Sat urday, and Johnny Feuchtenberger, who got fourth, was easily one of the features of every meet. Unfortunate ly, except for Nicholson's work in the Nationals, the best diving was done away irom home. euchtenberger looked good in the Washington and Lee meet and Nicholson was unbeat able in the conference meet. The visiting faculty in the 1941 summer session of the University Law school will include Professors Edmund M. Morgan, of Harvard uni versity; William E. Britton, of University of Illinois; and Judge Charles E. Clark, of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, according to an an nouncement yesterday by Dean M. T. Van Hecke. Professor Morgan, who will teach Evidence throughout the summer ses sion, was a member of the summer law faculty at the University in 1928, and addressed the North Carolina Bar association that summer at Ashe ville. Before going to Harvard in 1925, he taught in the Law Schools at Minnesota and at Yale. ' Professor Britton, who will teach Sales during the first term, was a member of the summer law faculty at the University in 1929. He has taught in the summer sessions of the Law Schools at Columbia, , Stanford, Cornell, Northwestern and Colorado. Judge Clark, who will teach the new federal rules of civil procedure during the second term,, addressed the Federal Judicial Conference at Ashe ville in the summer of 1937. He served as Dean of the Yale Law School from 1929 to 1939, and was president of the Association of American Law Schools in 1933. He has been a judge of the Second Circuit Court . of Appeals, with headquarters in New York City, since the spring' of 1939. The members of the regular faculty who will be in residence this summer include: first term, Henry P. Brandis, Jr. (Taxation); and M. T. Van Hecke (Trusts); second term, Fred B. Mc Call (Future Interests) and John P. Dalzell (Insurance). General College Men Need Appointments General college students who have not arranged appointments with their advisers for registration should do so today without fail, Dean C. P. Spruill said yesterday. ' Commerce Reading Test the; To Be Offered Today The general reading test in -French and Spanish for students in the School of Commerce will be given today, from 9:30 to 10:30 in room 313 Murphey. All students who are interested in taking the examination must leave their names with Mrs. Stephens at the School of Commerce office not later than 12:30 Saturday morning, March 15. A student to be eligible to take the examination must have com pleted at least French or Spanish 3 or 13. Each player strives to gain the twen tieth ball, which they esteem a favor ite divine gift." All of the Redskins turned out to root for their favorite gamesters on the teams. X-ray photographs of starving in sect larvae have given University of California scientists a complete rec ord of the process of starvation. COUCH (Continued from firtt page) searching for a source cf f tads to cc set these offers and are also endeared ing' to convince him that Chapel Ellfj beauty and low cost as a place cf rs-. dence more than offset the salary K creases. Couch has been connected with tie press since his student days here 1922 when he began work under D Louis R. Wilson, its founder arxi first director. Since that time the crgatk. tion has published more than 300 rel umes, most of them on subjects cc- cerning the state and the South. Partly Self-Supporting The press is 75 per cent self -sen. porting. Ten per cent of the subsidisa tion comes from the University to cover costs of publishing periodicals and Some of the books. The other 25 per cent come3 from book authors acd from various contributing organiza tions in the state. Send the Daily Tar Heel hone. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. All advertise ments must be paid for is adva&ce and the ad must be turned in at the Tar Heel Business Office by f eta o'clock the day before publication. LARGE 3-room furnished cotbw All modern conveniences. For couple only. $30.00. Phone 3726. RENT FREE to couple or womaa to live in house. Telephone 8301. DENTISTS Dr. Robert R. Clark Dr. John E. Pleasants Over Bank of Chapel Hi Phone 62S1 NEW SHIPMENT OF ARCHER NYLON HOSE BERMAN'S DEPT. STORE BASEBALL (Continued from page three) teristics of its original ' prototype." The Ball used by the savage was made of & piece of scraped deer-skin, mois tened and stuffed with: deer's hair, and strbnjgly sewed with deer sinews." The ball sticks were about two feet long and were worked with deer-skin thongs. "Between these," says Adair, "they catch the Bali and are enabled to throw it a great distance when not prevented by the; opposite party, whose effort it is to intercept its pas sage. . Although the description given by r Adair resembles closely accounts- of lacrosse as; it was played by the In dians", it is possible that this expert wishes to trace baseball to the Red skins. Lacrosse; it is known, started in the region of the St. Lawrence river. It may have spread by some way to the Indians in Georgia, and doubt less was altered in its development. At each end of the goal, which was some five hundred yards in length, the Indians fixed two long, bending poles, three yards apart at the bottom, but much farther outward at the top. When the ball was thrown over these, the score increased one; but if the ball went underneath, it was cast back and played for as usual. The : gamesters, who were of equal number on both sides, began each course of the ball by throwing it high in the center of the ground and in a direct line between the two goals. Sometimes the crowd of players prevented the one who caught the ball from throwing it. directly, in front. To send it in the right course, the player used an "artful, sharp twirl." "They are so exceedingly expert in this manly exercise," said Adair, "that between the goals, the ball is mostly flying the different ways, by the force of the playing-sticks, without falling to the ground; for they are not al lowed to catch it with the hand '. . . composer of over 50 college hit songs in 'Pted$Oftf Time" FOR UNC MON TVES WED THURS.,FRL of ' 7 P.M. : N. D. C Stations ' .... .:i, ?, at 7 P.M. mm mmmm 1 -Vm mwmmkmmmmiim MILLER America's No. 1 Dance Band Leader in "Moonlight Serenade' FOR UNC TUES., WED., THUZS. at 10 P.M. C. B. S. Stations L fepjrnght 1941, liccm 6c Myeju Tosacco Ca