THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1942 PAGE FOUR 00 Troops Waimnrinht SuimRnders CormaidorToSuve w - - - - - - or NC HighSchool Newsmen Attend Press Institute Over one hundred students from 20 high schools throughout the state have already signified their intentions of attending the sixth annual North Carolina Scholastic Press Institute to be held at the University tomorrow and Saturday. Professor Walter Spearman of the Journalism department, director, has just announced the complete program of the Institute, which is sponsored by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction and the Journalism depart ment and the Extension Division of the University. Registration will be held in Graham Memorial from 2 until 5 o'clock to morrow afternoon followed by the opening session presided over by Wil liam Turner of Greenville, president of the Institute. From 7:30 to 8:30 that night in Ger rard hall Fred Kendrick, director of the South. Carolina Scholastic Press association, will speak on "Enlivening the School Paper." - The high school journalists will be guests of the University from 8:30 un til 10 o'clock at the May Day exer cises and Awards Night to be held in Kenan stadium. From 10 until 12 o'clock they will be entertained at dance in Graham Memorial. , Saturday morning the individual high school newspapers will be criti cized in Bynum hall from 10 until 12:30 by the faculty members of the Journal ism department, Mr. Kendrick, and campus publication leaders. Two panel discussions one for printed and one for mimeographed pa pers on the problems' of a high school newspaper will take place in Bynum hall from 2:30 until 3:30. These dis- Fordham University SCHOOL OF LAW New York Case System Three-Year Day Coarse Poor-Year Evening Course Co-Educational Member of Assn. of American Law Schools College Degree or Two Years of College Work with Good Grades Required for Entrance Transcript of Record Must Be Furnished Morning. Early Afternoon and Evening Classea For Further Information Address REGISTRAR OF FORD HAM LAW SCHOOL 233 Broadway. New York Thi n 1LUW is on P0M71GE SHOES Because Portage Shoes are oa smart men ... men who know style... men who know ralue. II you enjoy supple-soft quality leather, true craftsmanship and STYLE come in and get yourself Portage! Durham cussions will be led by high school stu dents and faculty advisers. William Turner will act as chairman of the printed division and Ray Strowd of Chapel Hill will preside over the meet ing on mimeograph work. Officers for the Institute will be elected and plans for next year's meet ing will be made at a business meeting in Gerrard hall from 4 to 5 o'clock. The closing session, a supper meet ing, will be in Lenoir dining hall. Bucky Harward of Durham, next year's edi tor of the Daily Tar Heel, will preside. Professor William Olsen of the Eng lish department and William T, Polk, short story writer and associate editor of the Greensboro Daily News, .will speak. Entertainment for the program will be furnished by Sound and Fury, campus musical comedy group. The winners' in the feature writing contest will be announced. IRC Applications Due Friday Noon Applications for ten openings in ros ters of the IRC must be in the hands of Tom- Gibian, membership chairman, by Friday noon. Application blanks are available at the YMCA office and from Roger Mann, Mary Jane McCaskill, Gibian, Betsy Ross Howe and Bob Michaels. FROSH BASEBALL (Continued from page three) Bob Parry was the hitting star for the visitors, getting four for four. The Tar Babies tied the score in their half of the fifth and went ahead to stay in the sixth. With Johnny Co lones, who had a single and triple yes terday, on second base, Bill Lee, lined a solid single to center for a run. In the sixth, Gresham opened with a sin gle, went to second on a fielder's choice and raced home on Hackney's one-base knock. Lee banged home another Carolina run in the seventh with a single over second, scoring Pupa, and the Tar Ba bies scored the clinching two tallies in the eighth after two were out. Hackney singled and Colones poked a curve ball deep down the right field line for three bases . Stephens wild-pitched the fiery second-sacker home a few seconds lat er. ' Three well-hit singles scored two runs for the Imps in the ninth and threw a scare into the home club, but the local frosh were equal to the task and the game ended with Hackney throwing home to Lee to cut down Car ver at the plate in an attempted double steal. f S 'I ' - 'ii 3. -v. r liliil A. U). CA)&JCig Rose LGMMSL ' VO, HKfSlJL T&TftCtl , -if i 1 si? I ft v Tl lu--J DUE CHIEFLY TO THE ACCELERATED WAR PROGRAM, which places the University on a four-quarter basis, admits freshmen in June as well as September, makes it possible for students to graduate in three instead of four years and speeds up the program in the professional schools ac cordingly, the enrollment for the first term of this year's Summer Session is expected to exceed 2300, as compared to 1778 last year. Dr. A. W. Clevenger of the University of Illinois will teach during the first term; Dr. Rose Lammel, assistant professor of the science of education in Ohio State University, second term; Dr. William H. Kilpatrick, professor emeritus of education of Teachers College, Columbia University, second term. George H. Ivins, Headmaster of the Oak Lane Country Day School of Temple University, Philadelphia, first term; Dr. Ruth Kotinsky of the Uni versity of the State of New York, first term; and Dri Marian Y. Ostrander, associate professor of education, Adelphi College, Garden City, N. Y., will teach during the second term. . ' WEIL MAY DAY ( Continued from first page ) be incorporated in the pageant, with Dr. Graham's address as an introduc tion. All the usual University awards will be presented, plus a new one, "which promises to become the most outstanding award of the year," the John J. Parker award for outstanding service in student givernment.' FOR VICTORY: BUY BONDS "CAN YOU USE $35.00 A WEEK THIS SUMMER? 500 College Men averaged $420.00 profit last summer. Some made $1200.00. We have a limited number of openings in the United States and should be happy to include a few ambitious University of North Carolina men. Write today Fuller Brush Company, College Agency, Greensboro, N. C, for personal conference. WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OF MOTHER'S DAY CANDIES HOLLINGSWORTHS GALES ALL SIZED & ASSORTMENTS CAROLINA PHARMACY P. Lloyd, Prop. Phone 6141 ( Continued from first page) a technique whereby through recal citrant materials the insight arrested may be brought to painful birth in .'.tone, in rhythm, , in color, in sound, or in whatsoever form beauty can be made by discipline to appear. "New forms of beauty must con stantly leaven the lump of old beauty, or ugliness will rear' its hideous head through the wilting flowers of yester year," Dr. Smith stated. "We take poetry as our best illus tration of the ideal of beauty, and Emily Dickinson is allowed to pre scribe the discipline for beauty through art as Pasteur has been per mitted to speak for truth through the discipline of science: and one bee, And revery. The revery alone will do I 11 ucco aic xcn. The Weil Lecture Fund, established by the families of Sol and Henry Weil of Goldsboro, brings each year to the campus speakers on American citi zenship. In the past Dorothy Thomp son, Herbert Agar, Charles A. Beard, and other noted speakers have ap peared. Dr. Smith spoke in Chapel Hill for the first time in the spring of 1939 when he appeared on tne pro gram of the University's Institute of Human Relations. Swalin to Speak Dr. Benjamin F. Swalin will address the North Carolina Symphony club to night at 7 o'clock in Hill hall. REFERENDUM (Continued from first page) make a valid decision. The legislature enactment, briefly, nrovides for the abolition of the two present magazines, the establishment of a combination literary-humor maga zine, the election of an editor-in-chief, a humor editor and a literary editor in campus elections, with complete au thority and finality to lie with the editor-in-chief. The editor-in-chief and both subor dinate editors will be appointed by the Publications Union board this year to avoid "reversal of selections made in recent campus elections." " GOLF CORDON (Continued from first page) than any other member of the most famous opera company. 'I just happen to be able to learn a role rapidly," he explains. "There's just one way. When I find that I must learn a new role on short notice, I sim ply shut myself 'up in a room with an accompanist and keep working at the thing until I know it." , ! During the opera season Cordon spends most of his time at the Metro politan usually 10 hours a day. "And when the time for perform ance comes you have to go on, whether you feel up to it or not. Sometimes audiences forget this, and blame a singer for a performance not up to par when perhaps the poor devil's too sick to be out of bedv "But American audiences are the kindest in the world. One thing that has helped me to learn my roles is that I haven't any difficulty with lan guages." - PARKER (Continued from first page) conduct in these difficult times." Other problems which may arise on the campus will be the "possible mili tarization of the campus," the "threat of the self-help students," and the fact that "a majority' of the student body probably will be living off the campus." (Continued from page three) decided by close margins. Coach Erickson is planning to enter eight men in the tourney which is ex pected to draw40 or 50 entries. The Tar Heel entrants will be Captain Shooky Neese, Dick Doeschler, Gray don Liles, George Case, Dave Rumph, Billy Peete, Kirby Moore, and Bahnson Gray. All except Moore and Gray have played in dual competitions this spring. Moore and Gray have shown Jap Hordes Slap Fortress Daily; Total Ruin When Men Call Quits WASHINGTON, May 6 (UP) Lieutenant General Jonathan . M. Wainwright today surrendered Cor regidor fortress to save an estimated 10 000 defenders and refugees from outright slaughter at the hands of ov erwhelming Japanese hordes. The end oWO ftor an historic battle which leveled Corregidof's insulation, left its hungry and weary defenders on tne verge of physical collapse, and result ed in the sinking of five Naval craft, two of which were scuttled. LONDON, May 7 (UP) Bloody street fighting was reported raging m the streets of Diego Suare today as British besiegers and French defend ers battled for mastery of the Mada gascar naval base which has been un der a bombardment by land, sea and air all day yesterday and far into the night. CHUNGKING, May 6 ( UP ) Jap anese spearheads driving ahead in spite of United States Army air attacks that have knocked out 74 of their planes this week, have pushed 50 miles into China's Punnan province along the Burma road, where a major battle now looms before the 3,000 foot banks of the upper Salween river, war dispatches said tonight. VICHY, May 6 (UP) Fresh troops landed from gunboats have re captured several lost provinces in Mad agascar and "the most violent fighting still continues on the island," it was announced today. GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEAD QUARTERS, Melbourne, May 6 (UP) American and Australian fly ers are encountering many Japanese fighter planes in their assault of in vasion bases above Australia, a sign that the enemy's air strength is ebbing and that his southward advance may have been halted were evident, dis patches said tonight. MOSCOW, May 6 (UP) The gov ernment newspaper Nizbestia said to day that the war with Germany has entered a new phase, "that of final repulsion of Germans from "occupied Soviet territory and that it will be won in 1942 partly because our allies, Brit ain and the United States, are helping us more and more daily, pumping into the Red army fresh and vital juice." much improvement in practice and Coach Erickson has decided to enter them in the tourney along with the top six. The meet with VMI and the confer ence tourney will be played on the Old Town country club course in Winston- Salem. Only the four top men will count toward the team score. Carolina's hopes of upsetting Duke ie with Doeschler, Liles, Neese, and Case. If these four are in ton form. they may edge out Duke for the title. ARROW SHIRTS VARSITY Single and Double Breasted Tuxedos and Tails For Rent or Sale-Very Reasonable GROSSMAN, The Tailor Over Pritchard's Drug Store MOTHER'S DAY is Next Sunday Corcoran & Chapel Hill Sts. Remember Mother on Her Day with a suitable greeting card. We have a large variety of beautiful cards for your selection. Enclose one with your Gift to her. Visit our GIFT SHOP for a gift for your Mother. Wide range in prices. v BOOKSTORE Durham, N. C. CLASSIFIED 50c each insertion. AHadvertise ments must be paid for in advance and the ad must be turned in at 1 ' the Tar Heel Business Office by 4 o'clock the day before poblicaticu LOST: Wed. AM between 8:00-8:30 in the vicinity of the Y or Peabody a small dark blue purse with red stripes containing $15 in bills and some change. Finder please leare at Y office or call Elithe Outlaw, Z2 Kenan. , - WHITE FORMAL JACKETS 25 OFF One Special Group of White Formal Jackets Reduced One Fourth Not All Sizes But A Good Selection at 126-128 E. Main Durham PAtlTY! DOROTHY LAMOUR N ufiiiiMii tinmrii WILLIMI.I IIULULII EDDIE BRACKEN JIMMY DORSEY AND HIS ORCHESTRA futwtaf i BOB EBERLY and HELEN O'CONNFM ffl mmm also SPORTLIGHT-CARTOON TODAY if j Dtm$ of a bride J : . ) haunted hvf the ter$ I iror of her hu&nfo& I secret life! - "GART GRANT'-.. jam HMNE (ID PrilDlft UinnuriAvr NIGEL BRUCE niHF MAY VVUITTV 1 mm also COMEDY-NOVELTY TODAY PICK THEATRE