PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY TAR
Phi Defeats Question
Of Mag Combinations
After Spirited Forum
After a lively and thorough debate,
the Phi Assembly rose up to hand the
proposal for a combination of the two
campus magazines a crushing 14-7 de
feat. The two sides of the question were
represented by the editors of the two
magazines, Henry Moll of the Carolina
Mag and Hunt Hobbs of the Tar an'
Feathers. Introducing a new form of
discussion in the Assembly, these two
visitors were permitted to state their
arguments, after which they were en
gaged in answering rapidf ire questions
from the floor and each other. Hobbs
stated that he would be glad to answer
questions from anyone except Moll, but
that he "sure (was) tired of arguing
with him."
Moll stated that he was in favor of
two magazines, but thought they should
be combined because of circumstances
due to the war. He said that paper and
other costs were rapidly rising. To
Hobbs charge that humor and literary
work don't go together, Moll referred
to Collier's, Saturday Evening Post,
and other mixed magazines. Hobbs
emphasized that the whole idea of a
humor magazine would be ruined as
such, that a combine would result in an
essentially serious publication, merely
interspersed with jokes and cartoons.
As for a reduction of expenses, he stat
ed that the resulting cut in national
advertising would reduce the income of
the publications. To Hobbs' query as
to when a combined issue would appear
in view of the tardiness of the Carolina
Mags this year, Moll replied that the
holdup had been due to a shortage in
technical resources following a change
this year in the type of magazine pub
lished which would not occur next year.
BASKETBALL
(Continued from page three)
this evening. Last year it will be re
membered that they devised a defense
aeainst George Glamack that made
Lange's team work for a hard-earned
38-30 victory. With the news of Wake
Forest's success in stopping the Tar
Heels with a zone, spreading like wild
fire throughout the Southern circuit,
the visitors may give Coach Murray
Greason's clever device a try. VMI
gave it a whirl on Friday and all told
the Phantoms went through it success
fully with the exception of a brief
period toward the end of the first half
when the Keydets used this style of de
fensive play with effect.
Coach Lange will probably start Ju
lian Smith and George Paine at for
wards, Captain Bob Rose at center and
Reid Suggs and Bobby Gersten at
guards. Both Smith and Suggs, after
hitting a mid-season slump, snapped
out of it against VMI and came through
with 12 and nine points respectively.
(CirosswcDirdl IPnnEzsITe
ACXOSS
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24 Adorn with ears
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26 Becamt vapid
29 Horse's head-flaps
33 Detested
34 Margin of aay
water
3ft Tear
3 S Footless animal
37 Unauthorized
popular lanruagt
3 Natural cavity
in hill
39 Appendage of fish
40 Rapidly
41 Euchartatle plats
43 Accumulate
44 Send away forcibly
45 Measure
48 Gesture (archaic)
41 Do over again
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32 Wasted
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37 Utters In confused
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40 In state of confusion
41 Virulent epidemic
43 Changes
44 Hsve fun reliance
49 Helmet
47 Indian orlnc
48 All time
43 Rhymster
50 Rend asunder
51 Was carried
62 Level
53 Small depression
6ft Totem pole
SEMI-ANNUAL
SALE
Suits and Topcoats
Now Going On
126-128 E. Main
Durham .
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SWIMMING
(Continued from page three)
standing, for it approached the Nation
al intercollegiate backstroke record for
150 yards in an unofficial timing. Bar
clay got a new mark in the 200-meters.
Hammond's time was so encouraging
that he will swim the 150-yard back
stroke against Rider Friday instead
of the 150-meter distance. The present
mark is collegiate 1:41.6 and is held
jointly by Dripdale and Heydt, both of
Michigan.
Lees, Elmore and Eshelman were
cited for their excellent performances
in the freestyle events. Lees, shifted
to the 200, paced Barclay over the first
100 metersand then fell behind to take
second place. Elmore, who usually
swims either the 200 or 400, participat
ed in the 100 and finished third in a
good race.
Eshelman swam two vain freestyle
egs in the medley and freestyle relays.
TRACK
GARRETT
(Continued from first page)
week with a talk on "Regionalism" by
Dr. Ht W. Odum, Dr. K. C. Frazer on
The League of Nations, the 'New
Order' and the Moral Order," and "The
uture: World War or World Peace"
to be delivered by Dr. H. K. Beale.
The audience was invited to ask ques
tions after each talk in the forum which
ollows and discussion by those present
is particularly stressed. The forum
will be led by Harry Comer, YMCA
secretary.
(Continued from page three)
perience he may develop into one of the
team's top dash men.
Frosh Look Good
Giving promise of good things to
come, Hubbard Maynard, John Wells,
and Al Myrick all turned in some star
tlingly speedy races and although they
failed to qualify for the final dash,
turned in 60 yards of some swell sprint
ing before the afternoon was over.
The meet goes into the home stretch
this afternoon with the seniors well out
in front. The 440-yard run is the only
event scheduled for today and it will
start at 5 :15. The hurdles tomorrow and
the broad jump Wednesday will bring
the meet to a close.
FROSH CAGERS
(Continued from page three)
two weeks with an injured shoulder is
slated to return to action tonight. Al
though he will not be in the starting
lineup, Hartley will probably get in
the game if needed badly. The little
southpaw forward is the leading scorer
on the frosh team and his presence will
help a lot.
Coach Siewert is planning to start the
same five that started the Wake Forest
game. Jimmy Hart and Frank Warren
will be at forward, Bob Altemose at
center, and Don Henson and Jim Hay-
worth at guards.
The centennial of Hollins (Va.)
college will be celebrated in May of
this year.
fc FraeHin D. Roosevelt
QUOTE:
W0V0
OF ALL NORTH CAROLINA
EDS ARE. ..UNDERNOURISHED
Yon Definitely Don't Want to Be One of Them
Strengthen Your Body
Delight Your Palate
Relax Your Mind
Let BAmi
Eaelp ymn
Sua si "sweell33 way
WAR PROGRAM
(Continued from first page)
program keeps busy hundreds of stu
dents, working in all phases of protec
tion and morale. State-wide forums,
keeping scattered communities in touch
with the program, and spreading infor
mation throughout all regions, has em
ployed the x talents of many; while
maintenance of the student information
bureau, dormitory forums, and bulletin
boards has kept students busy. The or
ganization of all forms of civilian pro
tection, and the planning of immediate
training by officers from Washington,
is in full swing.
Equally important is the Carolina
Volunteer Training Corps, fostered by
student Henry Wisebram, and chiefed
by Colonel W. A. Raborg. Classes i
elementary and advanced military sci
ence and widely attended, and active
drill classes twice a week have shown
"tremendous progress," according to
Washington officials. Special attention
has been paid to the Carolina program
by War Department officials, and stu
dent leaders have been commended on
their "thorough, active, efficient train
ing groups."
On the active military side four di
visions have been opened:
The generous gift of Professor Hor
ace Williams and the close cooperation
of the government has enabled the
University to provide pilot training for
UNC students. Many of the 317 stu
dents having this training are now in
the various aviation services of the
government.
The University, by prbmpt applica
tion to the government in the fall of
1940, was able to establish a local unit
of the Naval Reserve Officers Train
ing Corps. Two hundred students are
now enrolled, and all graduates become
officers in the Navy.
North Carolina was the first Uni
versity to institute a far-reaching pro
gram of physical training for the du
ration. Radical alteration of the pro
gram of the Physical Education de
partment, recommended by a student
committee, provides a regular physical
program for all undergraduates.
Outstanding change in the academic
field is a speed-up of the entire pro
gram. Admission by achievement has
become the policy since this , quarter's
start, and many secondary school stu
dents have obtained admittance through
comprehensive examinations. .'
. Freshmen at the University have
been invited to secure advanced cred
it through examinations. Faculty vote
to accept a good scholastic record from
any university as the basis for trans
fer, replacing the old method of credit
counting, has accelerated the change of
students from university to university.
Degrees are now awarded whenever the
candidate has completed the require
ments instead of in June and August
only.
Special programs of classes begin
ning in February have enabled students
from schools on the semester system
to enter immediately, and the possibili
ty of a 12-month' schedule has put
graduation within the grasp of many
more students.
All departments of the University
have lent their services and facilities
to the nation. The Art department pos
ters and the dramatic and radio pre
sentations of the drama department
have been recognized as of the utmost
value in the national morale effort.
Courses in German, Japanese, Rus-
- T . 'I t . -I i
sian, JNazi doctrines, military msiory,
map reading, meteorology, industrial
organization, and many more, have
been organized to aid the student in
preparing for his part in the war and
post-war world.
For the duration of the war the Law
school faculty proposes to reduce its
admission requirements from three
years to two years for qualified stu
dents. The program of the law school
has been accelerated so that a student,
bv attending summer sessions -and
regular sessions, may complete his le
gal training in a period "of two calen
dar years. Special courses in govern
ment contracts, defense legislation and
military law are under consideration,
A report of the graduates of the law
school reveals five men in the FBI,
three in the Marines, 12 in the Naval
Reserve, 16 in the Army and, two in
the Air Corps.
The University medical department
is conducting special studies of quinine
and other anti-malana drugs for a
substitute for the supply previously im
ported from the East Indies. Members
of the Medical Corps at Fort Bragg
have been taught by the University
medical extension courses.
Behind the scene in all units of the
University work there is loyal and un
dramatic service growing out of the
nation's war program. Problems arising
in the student aid office have taken the
time of administrative and student
workers in an unprecedented degree.
Soldier entertainment on the campus
has required extra work from many.
Vocational and pre-service guidance has
employed a staff of experts, headed by
S. W. J. Welch.
'Hellzapoppin' Opens
For One Night Stand
In Durham Tonight
"IIellzaDoprin ." Olsen and Johnson's
boisterous musical revue featuring j
Billy House, Eddie Garr, and a cast of
almost 100 performers, clowns : and
chorus girls, will be presented tonight
at 8 :15 in the Durham Carolina theatre.
This successful revue, noted for its
rowdy humor, its high spirits, its non
sensical antics and mad mohkeyshines,
has been doubling up Broadway with
laughter for three years & record not
even approached by any other musical
in the history of the American theatre.
Any revue, in which timing plays
so important a part in getting laughs,
is dependent on the split-second speed
with which thecues are met and the
props delivered, and backstage at a per
formance of "Hellzapoppin" an army of
unsung workers does more than its
share to make the show the fun it is.
BRAZIL
(Continued from first page)
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1942
Frosh Council Meets
The Executive Committee of the
Freshman Friendship Council will meet
in Mr. Comer's office at the YMCA
this afternoon at 5:30. Members are
urged to be on time.
store's slip Dr. Tavares had to rush
dispatches to his paper treating the
incident as a great joke.
"Otherwise," he said, "some of our
journalists could have caused a lot of
ill will by relating the incident in a dif
ferent light."
It is to wipe out such blunders, to
educate the people about the largest,
most powerful country of Latin Ameri
ca that Dr. Taveres will travel among
the North American universities, lec
turing and listening to what,, others
have to say about Brazil.
As special correspondent for the sec
ond largest newspaper in South Amer
ica, Jornal do Brasil, as investigator
of Catholic universities in North Amer
ica, as representative of the University
of Sao Pfaulo, and as tabulator of
United States war news, Dr. Travares
is guaranteed to have his hands full
during the minimum of six months he
plans to spend in the United States.
Dr. Tavares is well fitted for his
mission. A resident of Sao Paulo, Bra
zil, the Doctor is at present a professor
of educational biology in the university,
there. He took his doctor's degree at
the University of Louvain, Belgium,
where he specialized in social genetics.
Another great advance in Dr. Tava
res good-will work will be accomplished
in a few weeks when MacMillan pub
lishes his book, "Dear Neighbor, Here
is Brazil." There has been so much
faulty reporting on South America
by North American journalists that the
Doctor decided to write "the truth about
Brazil." -
lTTf 1
vve are tne great unknown, ex
plained Dr. Tavares. "Your citizens
know very little about Brazil. That
we have 42 million people, more than
the combined population of all other
South American countries. That our
merchant fleet is six times larger than
the combined fleets of our nineteen sis
ter countries. And . what you main
ly don't realizevis that Brazil has one
fifth of all the iron in the world. Bazil
will be a war power 100 years from
now.
"Yes," he said, "when I go back to
Brazil I will turn the tables arid write
a book about the United States."
ELECTION BILL
(Continued from first page)
money in the election of freshman of
ficers. No freshman candidate shall
spend more than $5.00 on his campaign.
No political party may spend more
than $50, in total, for the campaign of
all its candidates. Each candidate and
political party must submit to the elec
tions committee on or before the day of
elections an itemized list of all political
expenditures as well as receipts for all
expenses."
AH "and any violations of this act
will be immediately turned over to the
Student council and dealt with accord
ingly. Disqualification for office will
be the probable sentence for offenders.
First election expenditure bill jwas
passed by the legislature in the spring
of 1940, when it was found that cam
paign expenses on the campus totaled
$1250. The first bill limited expendi
tures to $1100, but only $705 were ac
tually spent. The new bill, to be pre
sented Wednesday night, will limit total
expenditures to $750, if only two can
didates are run for each office.
Two representatives from the Stu
dent party and the University Party
were present at yesterday's meeting
of the election committee, Bucky Har
ward, chairman, announced, and all
representatives "agreed to the provis
10ns as framed in the new proposal." .
Send the Daily Tab Heel home
S&F Chorus to Rehearse
The boys chorus of Sound and Fury
will rehearse in Graham Memorial at
5:30 today. . .
NEWS BRIEFS
(Continued from first page)
carried out is large scale pre-arranged
plan "successfully."
f WASHINGTON American flying
fortresses have joined' in the defense
by blasting Japanese airdromes in Ma-,
laya, the War Department said tonight.
Meanwhile General Douglas MacAr
thur's soldiers have launched another
smashing drive in the battle of the Phil
ippines, shattering a huge offensive
movement designed to crush the de
fenders in its steel jaw.
BATA VIA Several East Indies fly
ers said today that they sank what ap
parently was a Jap battleship with a
direct bomb hit amidships in the first
day of the now famous battle of Macas
sar straits.
SINGAPORE Three Jap troop car
rying vessels approaching Singapore
island in the first naval feint at the be
leaguered fortress were revealed today
to have run into an offense barrage
which sent one to the bottom.
Dean Paul Brosman of the Tulane
university college of law has a hobby
of . collecting pipes. His office and
home are littered with briars of every
shape from every country. '
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 four
o'clock the day before publication.
LOST Black and white wire-haired
terrier puppy. Finder please tele
phone 8566.
Pick Theatre
TODAY
IS . -i VrJJsf jf m W VWL.k-. s
wf IAN HUNTER
KTE8 LORME - PAUL LUX AS
CfesfftftCtssstttt
I
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Cartoon-Novelty
JTODAY AND
WEDNESDAY
EAR MUFFS
Herman's Dept. Store
Chapel Hill
1 v W i.
6
JOEL UREA
VERONICA LAKE
rorontovnt Pictvr with
1 " """vn - mmaui UCJildlCil II
M Margaret Hayes . Porter Hall S
Franklin Pangborn . Eric BloreJJ
written and Directed by 4m
r Preston Sturges
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Comedy-Novelty