SUNDAY, APRIL 27. 1$41 PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL Guilford Choir Joins UNC Symphony For Concert Here This Afternoon - v " " ' - . -v. " .- . i . . v it . --. J r " " . v - . If l . i .t . !',,',, ' j f. !...; . , .-;.'.;:,--:.'. 4 " . f ,. . . . ... V in,. ' . - . ; if v . l. - : , i: V '; I " . '. r' - J " ' . i W ,nif,f,T,i -v-jtt.. iri- 'T'-i -n-'i it -- 1 " . . , .. - . -,i - i i : : I s i . v . j I'l ... , - i ' ' ' 5 i ' i - -aAita'; ,-rt Program Includes Several Numbers By U.S. Composers The Guilford college A Cappella choir of 45 carefully chosen voices and the University Symphony orchestra will appear in a joint concert this aft ernoon at 5 o'clock in Hill Music hall. Directing the choir will be Dr. Ezra H. Weis and the orchestra will be un der the baton of Dr. Benjamin Swalin, faculty member of the University music department. Sponsored by Graham Memorial the concert, open to the public, is one of a series which the choir is presenting while on a spring tour of North andj, of the KaIendar Prince from Guilford College Choir i Us v -I i i m il .. t 3 W Mi 1 4h if i ? i ' ' . SPRING IN ALL ITS GLORY has come to Chapel Hill. There are blossoms in the arboretum Oavia Poplar is green again, and coed sports are becom ing distinctly noticeable. These lovelies are, upper left,- Sarah Ruark sighting a putt; right, Marjorie Johnston, WAA president, climbing the diving board for a dip in5 the pool; and below left, Ruth Patterson heading for the tennis courts. Photos by Rudy Faircloth. South Carolina, Georgia and Florida Organized for 13 years the choir normally consists of SO trained sing ers, but for the concert tour 45 mem bers have been selected. The choral group has, during its history, appear ed in nearly all states east of the Mississippi. The University orchestra which" is participating on the joint program is composed of faculty members, stu dents, townspeople, and local high school students. . The first concert of the school year was presented last No vember. The symphony orchestra was organ ized in 1905 by the late Charles Wool len, at that time controller of the Uni versity. Then it consisted merely of a group of local townspeople, as the University music department had not yet been installed. Mainly through the work of Woollen the department was set up in 1920 and since that time the orchestra has achieved wide notice for its work, appearing in concerts in : numerous neighboring cities. The program for the concert this afternoon will begin with two selec tions by the orchestra, the introduc tion, the intermezzo ("Borghild's Dream"), and the triumphal march from Grieg's "Suite from Sigurd Jorsalfar," and Rimsky-Korsakov's "Scheherazade." The choir will then sing a group cf songs mostly by American composers, "Hozannah in Excelis," Lockwood, "Let the Words of My Mouth," Hyde, "Ave Marie," Archer, "Legend of the Bells," Rhodes, "Sleep Holy Babe," Ganschow, and "Easter Bells," Chris tiansen. To conclude the program the choir accompanied by the orchestra will sing Franck's setting of "Psalm 150." BOX SCORE (Continued from page three) Score by innings: Carolina 000 100 0034 Navy .. 200 320 OOx 7 Runs batted in: Stowe 4, E. Smith 2, Hearn, Myers, Mathes. Earned runs : Carolina 2, Navy 3. Two-base hit: Howrard. Three-base hit: Hearn. Sac rifice hit: N. Smith. Double play: Jen nings to Hearn. Base on balls: off Smith 4, off Tomlinson 8. Struck out: by Smith 2, by Tomlinson 1, by Chesh ire 5. Hits: off Tomlinson, 6 in 6; Cheshire, 0 in 3. Losing pitcher: Tom linson. Passed ball: Lavrakas. Left on bases: Carolina 8, Navy 8. Um pires: Mattingly and WoodHead. Time of game: 1:47. TRACK (Continued from page three) McLeod tied with Ike Hanff of S; at 12 feet for first in the pole vault Pat Patterson and Vaughan Wj-. borne, former Tar Heel leaders, were one-two in the high jump. Leading scholastic performance was that of McKenzie of Salisbury, who outdistanced Tyndall of Greenville ia the Junior AAU mile in 4:36.8. Boxed three times in the first 660 yards, Mc Kenzie broke loose to overtake the 1940 high school champion; he is 134i champ. Two hundred of the 670 students at Norwich university are freshmen. There will be only 52 graduath:; cadets in June. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. All advertise ments must be paid for in advance and the ad must be turned in at the Tar Heel Business Office by fsur o'clock the day before publication. LOST One TEP pin No. 8? some . where on campus. Finder please re turn to Zena Schwartz, Dorm N. 2. ft Tlif fiiTTi 5- SUNDAY-MONDAY Spring, Young Man 's Fancy Coeds in Brief Sports Dress By Mary Caldwell Comes spring and the men students finally become aware of coed sports tennis, golf, baseball, skeet shooting, badminton, swimming, archery Mar gie Johnston chasing a tennis ball, Sara Ruark practicing, her putting, 'Frenchie Gibson catching ilies in the outfield; Martha Clampitt getting the "bird," Frances Dyckman in a gay colored swim suit, Jean Hahn striking a pose with a bow and arrow. It seems to take warm weather, with the girls scampering about the tennis courts and the coed field in brightly-colored shorts and flying skirts, for the campus as a whole fully to realize that coed sports and the Woman's Athletic association exist, and have existed throughout the winter. Nor are the Carolina coed athletes big, muscley, straight-haired crea tures who gallop about the " field in -orgies of exercise. Coed sports draw their participants from girls, pretty girls, attractive girls, personality girls girls like Diddy Kelly, Dot Jackson, Katherine Gould, Ella-Keen Steel srirls who exercise for the same reason the men do: to have fun and to keep in shape. Carolina coeds have been able to secure a physical education "minor" only during the last 2 years. Ten years ago when Mrs. J. G. Beard, di rector of physical education for wom en, came to the University to do ex tension work, there was no active, or ganized sports program for women. Soon President Graham was persuad ed to buy a few bows and arrows for the girl students; and that year 20 girls were taught to shoot. Archery continued for several years, until Mrs. Beard was made official part-time instructor and a few classes were organized in tenni3, bas ketball, and archery. Part of the bas ketball games were held out-of-doors; while the rest were played in Bynum hall, the old gymnasium. Several years later, in 1938, Mrs. Beard was made full-time director, and in 1939 a program was arranged whereby coeds could get a physical education minor by. taking at least 20 quarter hours of regular physical edu cation classes. Studies include the administration, principles, and teach ing of physical education with empha sis placed on swimming, baseball, bas ketball, and various types of dancing. The purpose of the instruction is to equip girls to teach physical education in high schools in addition to their major subject. This year 20 girls are working on their "minors." However, most of the girl students do not enter into sports "for credit." Extra-curricular athletics draw the majority of the girls and are conduct ed by the students through the Wom an's Athletic association. Already this spring over 50 girls have signed up to participate in the purely extra-curricular tennis tournament; 16 girls have enrolled in senior life-saving class; 5 in instructor's life saving class; 20 in the standard first-aid course. Also scheduled for this spring are extensive coed programs in baseball, archery, golf, fencing, and riflery. Throughout the year the "group" game sports, such as hockey and base ball have taken the form of intra mural tournaments. For each of the major sports, two leagues competed for the championship one league being composed of girls living in Spencer, Dorms 1 and 2, and the other league being made up from girls liv ing in the sorority houses and Archer house. Four hockey teams were active during the fall quarter; while eight basketball teams scrambled and shot during the winter quarter. Marjorie Johnston, president of WAA, explains the slight shift in em phasis towards coeducational recrea tional sports as a "sensible, progres sive action" smoothing the way for double enjoyment of sports after stu dents leave school, with the girls being skillful enough to hold their own in sports with men. Officers of the WAA this year have been Marjorie Johnston, president; Ann Williams, vice-president; Caro line Dalton, treasurer; and Jean Lind say, secretary. Next year's "officers, who will take over soon, are Diddy Kelly, president ; Breezy Breazeale, vice-president; Eva Mae Nee, secretary; and Randy Me bane, treasurer. 4rV YAGCE SEATS, AMERICA! 7 A' :?- . il. vunain i swing upin ins thriving successor to "The Great , ZiegfeW"! Stars In briKiant clus ters! Spectacle without end I Hit parade songs I Hundreds of glori fied girls! Its equal has never been seen before 1. I ir tl TOUT ri r- vJ" : 1 1 WiTtJi K" " "its 4 ii 7 mMtWM til it ii mi ii -fiv -,jr JAMES 1 C ' i .JUDY I -S,&r U Jk i4..wSr ij S, - A V J o) -; if i U13 , m ii.i.i .in rinirrnr in i. . , i 4 f i $ ' Afn HEDY nn a fo)fo) niinjin) LANA o)nr JUuv JACKIE MARTIN COOPER IAN CH&&LES HUHTER VVINNINGER EOWASO EVESETT PffSUP HORTOn DORN Also LATEST NEWS . EVENTS 7 om Jiiti. HEAR 'AUnnie from Trinidad" "You Stepped Out of a Dream" 'Caribbean Love Song" We Must Have Music". "laugh, I Thought Vd Split My Sides' "Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean" I'm Always Chasing Rainbows" Tuesday ALLAN JONES MARGARET LINDSAY in "THERE'S MAGIC IN MUSIC Wednesday BOB CROSBY RUTH TERRY in "ROOKIES ON PARADE II Thursday-Friday Preview Fri. Reg. Showing Sat. "BDOHrK2iSPPE'RICHARD ARLEN-HELEN MACK DOROTH1 LAMOUR JEAN PARKER CLIFF EDWARDS in "ROAD TO ZANZIBAR" Pnw,pmvr