Editorials
Upside Down Angle
'College As Usual Boys
Standardize
Headlines
Jarboe Sentenced
'Badid Daddy Opens
CPU Results
-THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH-
VOLUME L
Bmi
t837; Circulation: 98S4
CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1942 thui: ; n: usu n:
NUMBER 111
Sultan's Harem Unveiled
arlboe Senteitced To Foer Year
fcjiu 1111 J-Ullum mi iimilm i r iiMTlii'flHiOT I-" ' " 1 nniMriwiBiMniu I
.Dance Expenditures
To BeC
Red
onsid
ere
d by
uction Measure
legislature Tonigh
Photo by Hugh Morton
ALLURING FOIININE CHARM is personified as eight members of the
sultan's harem shower their affections upon his majesty in an exciting
moment from "Bagdad Daddy," Sound and Fury production to be presented
tonight, tomorrow and Friday night in Memorial hall.
'Bagdad Daddy' to Open
Three-Day Run Tonight
Cast of 100 Included in Lavish S&F Show
To Be Presented in Memorial Hall at 8:30
Climaxing four weeks of intensive rehearsals, Sound and Fury presents its
lavish musical spectacle "Bagdad Daddy" tonight in Memorial hall at 8:30 in
the first of three performances. Similar performances will be given tomorrow
aight and Friday night.
Written by a Carolina student, George Latshaw of Akron, Ohio, "Bagdad
Daddy" is the screwball tale of a Hollywood movie company on location in Bag
dad where it gets entangled with the
sultan and his 365 wives.
Directed by Richards
Director of this year's production is
Bob Richards and producer, is George
Grotz while general supervisor for the
show is Randy Mebane; president of
Sound and Fury organizzation.
The cast finds Diddy Kelly in the
principal feminine role of Barbara, Au
thor Latshaw as Smythe, the Holly
wood movie director, and Arty Fischer
as the sultan. Other leading- parts are
taken by Jackie Ray, Ann Lewis, and
Jack Potter.
Original songs for the show have
been written by Bob Richards, Tom
Waldman, Jane Dickinson, Stuart Bae-
sel, Sanford Stein, and Tom Avera
while all the musical orchestrations
were done by William MacDougald.
1 Freddie Johnson and his campus or
chestra will play all the musical scores.
"Bagdad Daddy" is the third produc
tion given by the three year old Sound
and Fury organization and is expected
to be as popular as its highly success
See "BAGDAD DADDY", page 4
Railey Requests
Dormitory Canvass
For RC-WSS Funds
Dormitory councilors were asked by
Dick Railey at last night's meeting of
the Interdormitory council to canvass
their dorms for donations to the Red
Cross and World Student Service
drives.
Railey said at the meeting that fhe
dormitories with their 1400 student
residents should raise a large part of
the ?1,000 asked in the drive. Students
who have not yet been contacted by
their dorm councilors are urged to do
so soon. Dick pointed out that the Red
Cross work evident on the campus
should be an incentive to giving.
The council also proposed a Spring
Cleanup week. Dorm residents are to
get in the housekeeping spirit and clean
up their rooms, remove the accumula
tion of wall markings, and generally
put their houses in order during the
spring quarter.
German Course
To Be Offered
Non-Credit Course
Is Experimental
Spoken German newest of language
courses occasioned by the war will be
added to the University curriculum
next quarter in the form of a three-hour
non-credit course, the Defense commit
tee announced yesterday.
Offered by the German department
and taught by Professor Richard Lerde,
it is an experimental course in the Ger
man language of military and diplo
matic usage and will begin in March.
Scheduled for the afternoon, the course
will be held at a time to be arranged
for the accomodation of the largest
number of applicants.
To Notify Department
Students interested in the course
were requested by the committee to
notify the department in order that an
indication of the number of students
may be obtained.
The course follows the University's
policy of offering courses in the rarer
languages and those of especial value
in the present emergency. A non-cred
it course in Japanese was open in the
SSee NEW COURSE, page U .
Measure limits
Dance Expenses
To $2,200 Total
Meeting its "first real issue of the
year," the Student legislature will to
night hear and vote upon the campus
splitting question of reduction in dance
expenditures.
Representing the majority opinion
of the Ways and . Means committee,
Buck Osborne will present the bill
which includes a cut to $2,200 of the
expenses for any set of dances and to
$1,100 the expenses for any single
dance. The minority opinion of the
committee will present revisions of the
bill as stands which curb expendi
tures for any. set of dances to $500,
abolishing the former big-name week
ends, k
Considerable opposition to the bill
has sprung up since the announcement,
the German club bloc presenting a for
midable foe to the bill's advocates. The
legality of such action by the legisla
ture has been questioned by dance group
representatives in Ways and Means
committee meetings during the past
week.
Alternatives to the bill fall into two
channels:
First; present the entire question to
the general campus in a referendum
vote.
Second; turn the question over to the
Dance committee to be handled as it
sees fit. This last proposal will be voic-,
ed by Bill Alexander in the legislature
session tonight. Ferebee Taylor, speak
er, said that Alexander will be extend
ed the courtesy of the floor for this
proposal.
Sentiment in dance and legislature
circles last night swiftly veered toward
Dance committee jurisdiction on the
matter.
Germans, May Frolics,' and Junior
Seniors will be hardest-hit if the bill is
approved; most active opposition stems
from these committees.
"The need of immediate funds for
CVTC and OSCD offices is apparent to
all. CVTC drills are held at present with
no equipment; the students need guns
and uniforms for training. The student
civilian defense offices in Memorial
hall are working on the slimmest mar
gin and uniforms for training. The stu
dent civilian defense offices in Memor
ial hall are working on the slimmest
margin that can be maintained, and
many of the useful and necessary ser
vices that this organization should per
form to the campus and the state are
curtailed or cut out entirely by lack of
funds," said Truman Hobbs, student
body president and original impetus to
the movement. "This bill can be neith-.
er just nor effective unless all dance
groups are equally hit," he added. j
Co-Op Proponents Seek
Standardization of Texts
Plans Advanced
For Student
Book Exchange
By Hayden Carruth
Swift -action keynoted the opening
moves of the newly-formed Cooperative
Book store yesterday, as Curry Jones,
co-op head, whipped plans into shape
for the debut of wide-scale student co
operation at Carolina.
Planking the growing movement with
solid points from the first, Jones last
night revealed that one outstanding
principle of the co-op will be confer
ences with Administration heads to
ward the standardization of Univer
sity texts. "The committee feels that
much of the existing trouble may be
eliminated by standardized texts. Thus
books will be used for more than one
quarter, whereas at present they are
often discarded by the professor after
one quarter's use. The re-sale value
of texts would be multiplied many times
by standardization," Jones said.
Cooperation Stressed
"Secondly," Jones pointed out, "the
co-op will flourish or perish at the
hands of the students." Established
for student welfare and originating
from plans germinated in the Student
council, "the movement will fall en
tirely under the jurisdiction of student
government." It is entirely a" student
proposition, and "the student body as
v
f Ml
Hugh Morton
Morton Voted
Staff Nominee
Endorsement Given
ForY-Y Editorship
Hugh Morton yesterday received the
unanimous vote of the Yackety-Yack
a,whole stands to gain or lose by its staff for editorship of the publication
success or failure," Jones stated
Giving full credit to Bill Cochrane,
Graham Memorial director, and the
Student Union, Jones said that "the
See CO-OP MART, page h
CVTC Tuition Charges
Valid, Bradshaw States
Members of the Carolina Volun
teer Training Corps, Dean Bradshaw
announced in a general meeting yes
terday, will have to pay regular tui
tion charges, under North Carolina
state law.
The law states that no student may
receive credit toward graduation
from the University unless he pays
regular specified tuition fees or has
a scholarship.
Students, however, may avoid
CVTC payment if they do not need
the credit hours involved or have not
substituted the military science and
tactics courses for some, other ac
credited course.
Tuition will be the same per credit
hour as regular University rates.
next year, as the Annual became the
first publication of the year to hold
staff nominations.
No one else was named to oppose
Morton, who was declared the staff
choice by a vote of acclamation.
Recognized as Carolina's outstand
ing "man with a camera," Morton has
a three-year history with every cam
pus publication and over half dozen
state newspapers.
Morton started nis UWU career
with the old Buccaneer, contributed
two years of work to the Carolina
Mag and Tar an' Feathers, three years
to the Daily Tar Heel and three years
to the Yackety-Yack.
In addition, Morton, who last week
received the SP nomination for Yack
ety-Yack editor has done work for the
University News Bureau, and the
Alumni Review.
With three years on the Yackety-
Yack, he served as photographer his
freshman year,; photo editor last year,
and went up to the post of divisional
editor this year.
Morton's work has gone far beyond
Carolina and State publications. The
See MORTON, page U
Coat Thief
Found Guilty
In Trial Here
Prisoner Slated
To Stand Trial
On Duke Charges
By Jimmy Wallace
Pleading guilty of stealing on two
counts and throwing himself on the
mercy of the court, Hubert Jarboe
was convicted yesterday by the
Chapel Hill Recorder's court and sen
tenced to four years on the roads.
Admitting the theft of policeman
Hubert Yeargan's coat and that of
Ralph Burnett, a Carolina student,
Jarboe received his sentence and was
taken to Durham by officers late yes
terday to stand trial there charges
of the theft of a Duke student's coat.
Jarboe's wife convicted on aiding
and abetting and receiving stolen
goods, was sentenced to six months
on each count to be served concur
rently. This sentence was amended
to read six months and later suspend
ed provided that Mrs. Jarboe would
leave Orange county and go back to
Henderson where she would report
monthly to the Henderson Welfare
Board over a period of two years.
Bad Heart
Since his internment here Jarboe
has complained of being a sick man
Police acting on ; this called in
W. B. Abernethy who found that Jar
boe has a bad heart. The ailment
will be "taken into consideration"
when he goes to the prison camp and
it was indicated that he will probably
be treated by one of the physicians
maintained there.
During his trial J arboe had no law
yer representing him and throughout
his internment and the trial he has
never admitted stealing the other
coats that were missed on the campus.
No definite plans about where Jar
boe will serve his sentence have been
released, since they are pending his
approaching trial in Durham. When
this trial is over Jarboe "possibly will
be turned over to the Durham prison
camp" to serve liis time, a local police
official said yesterday.
Jarboe's car, a 1935 Plymouth, was
repossessed by a creditor from Wash
ington, D. C, and was sold to a local
junk dealer.
Bull's Head Tea
The weekly Bull's Head tea will be
held this afternoon at 4:15. Dr. Her-
nane Tavares de Sa will speak.
Incomplete CPU Poll Returns Assail Honor Sys
tern
Playmaker Tryouts
To Be Held Today
Tryouts for "George Washington
Slept Here," comedy by Kauffman and
Hart fresh off Broadway, and the first
Playmaker production of the spring
quarter will be held this afternoon at
3 o'clock and tomorrow at 4 o'clock in
the Playmaker theatre.
"Everyone interested in acting is in
vited. There are sixteen good parts to
be filled, many of which are women's
parts," Director F. H. Koch said.
Tunney Interviews
USNR Applicants
Lt.-Commander J. J. Tunney, USNR,
will interview applicants for positions
as physical instructors in" the Naval
Reserve tomorrow, Friday, and Satur
day at the Naval Recruiting Station
in Raleigh. The position is officially
known as Chief Specialist (A) (Act
ing Appointment), Class V-6, United
States Naval Reserve.
Qualifications
Applicants must be between 21 and
33, hold a degree in physical education
and have had practical experience in
physical education work. Each apph
cant must apply in person and present
a copy of his official transcript, his
birth certificate, and a photograph of
himself two inches square.
The selections will be made on a basis
of the applicant's academic background,
experience and leadership qualities.
An interview with Lt.-Commander
Tunney will not obligate the Navy de
partment to accept the applicants for
enlistment it was announced.
Remember Pearl Harbor I
Schedule of Examinations for the Winter Quarter, 1942
Note: The schedule below gives the order of examinations for academic
courses:
By action of the faculty, the time of no examination may be changed after
it has been fixed in the schedule.
Wednesday, March 11, at 4:30 .
All Hygiene 2 classes.
Thursday, March 12, at 9 o'clock
All 11 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 11 o'clock M. W. F. classes.
Thursday, March 12, at 2 o'clock
All 12 o'clock T. Th. S. classes, English 1, 2, 12 classes, and Commerce 71,
72, and 177 classes.
Friday, March 13, at 9 o'clock
All 12 o'clock 5 and 6 hour classes and all 12 o'clock M. W F. classes.
Friday, March 13, at 2 o'clock
All 11 o'clock T. Th. S. classes.
Saturday, March 14, at 9 o'clock
All afternoon classes, 'and French 2, 12 classes, Spanish 1, 2 classes, and
German 1, 2, 3 classes.
Saturday, March 14, at 2 o'clock
" All 8:30 M. W. F. classes and Commerce 173 class.
Monday, March 16, at 9 o'clock
All 8:30 5 and 6 hour classes and all 8:30 T. Th. S. classes.
Monday, March 16, at 2 o'clock
All 9:30 M. W. F. classes.
Tuesday, March 17, at 9 o'clock
All 9:30 5 and 6 hour classes and all 9:30 T Th. S. classes.
Tally Favors Mag Abolition;
Students Support US Policies
By Paul Komisaruk
Carolina's long-fought-for Honor System, under constant attack from many
quarters, seemed destined for a severe rebuke last night, as incomplete results
of yesterday's CPU poll were tabulated.
A possible record-shattering vote in the poll kept tabulators recording ballots
far into the night, with indications that no final results could be obtained until
early this morning.
At 12 o'clock last night it appeared that well over 2,000 votes had been cast.
Campus opinion had apparently split
wide open over the Honor System ques- ing to tabulated votes, officials report
tion. The difference of only a few ed, but stated many objections were
votes separated those who answered voiced as to where the appropriations
that, a violation, if seen, would be re- were to go. Students by an estimated
ported, and those who replied that it 5-3 vote generally favored reductions
would not be reported. in dance expenses, but some balked at
Similarly, Henry Moll's Carolina actual appropriations to definite cam
Mag seemed headed for an almost cer- pus groups of these dance funds.
tain defeat, as the incomplete returns . . c.
revealed that students favored abolish
ing the Mag first, and then Tar an' CPU heads added last night that
Feathers, the Daily Tar Heel and the campus opinion tested yesterday for
Yackety-Yack, in that order, in the the first time since Pearl Harbor had
event that the abolition of one .of the taken a positive and perhaps over-
publications was necessary, whelming affirmative stand on issues
A slight majority of students favored troubling the nation s administrators
the cutting of dance expenses, accord- on Capitol -Hill.-