FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1942 PAGE FOUR THE D AIL": TAR HEEL . ; . , ; ; : 1 ; 1 : 1 ' American Planes Blast At Jap Forces Im B British See Possible Nazi Defeat Before Stalingrad WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (UP) Carrier-based Navy planes in the Solomons have damaged five Japanese ships, strafed two others, destroyed eight planes and damaged an airfield, the Navy announced tonight. The Navy task force hit a concentration of Japanese ships as General Douglas MacArthur's bomb- Consumers' Group Will Meet Friday The charter meeting for a Chapel Hill consumers association will be-held Friday night, October 16 in the ele mentary school building, it was an nounced yesterday. Discussion of "Foods, groceries, and consumers in war time," will be held during the first part of the meeting with the last part of the meeting be ing devoted to discussion and action on the proposed Constitution and by-laws, and election of officers and board mem bers. Townspeople,' University faculty members and their wives, Navy per sonnel and their wives, and others in terested in consumer problems, con sumer education, or consumer coopera tives are invited to attend the meeting. Announcement yesterday that a steering committee was to be held last night was erroneous. Tickets Available For Church Supper The ladies of the Pattie Battle Cir cle will hold a special dinner in the Parish house of the Episcopal Church on Tuesday, October 13, at 6:30. Plates are one dollar each and tic kets may be obtained from the informa tion booth in South building and from Mr. Sambrough in the Bank of Chapel Hill. INTRAMURALS (Continued from page three) ner's offensive and showed that they could really carry the mail. Harley also played an outstanding defensive game. For the losers Parsley, Nichol son, and Nesbit were outstanding. This was a fast and thrilling game and proved to be a crowd-pleaser. Exciting Game One of the most exciting and thrill ing games of the day was the Steele Kappa Psi affair which the latter won after a ding-dong battle, 7-6. The game was hard and close throughout and could have easily gone either way. This game produced some of the best passing of the day. Another thriller was played by "Whitehead and Phi Delta Chi, with the latter winning by edging out the former 7-6 in a thrilling duel. Rey nolds scored for the losefrs Shaw equaled it for the winners and Canady then calmly place-kicked the extra point to give his team the game. Naval Boys Triumph The Naval ROTC boys were well prepared for he boys of Old West and handed them a 23-0 trouncing. The Old West boys tried hard but could not stop the slashing attack of the Naval boys. The DKE team fielded one of the most powerful scoring machines of the day as it steamrollered its way to a decisive 25-0 victory over the Phi Kappa Alpha boys. The game was much closer than the score indicates, but the DKE's took advantage of every break to mount up the score. Wideman, Dill, and Gibbons looked very good for the winners. District 2A won a close and hard fought victory oyer a scrappy Smith team. The winners finally eked out a 19-13 victory. St. Anthony showed good prospects as they trounced a game Phi Alpha team 13-0. Singer proved to be the star of this game by scoring 12 of the winners points. Are you a Scrapper? CLASSIFIED Advertisements must be paid for in advance and turned in at the Tar Heel business office, 203 Graham Memorial, by 1 o cloSc the day preceding publication. Fifty cents ($.50) each insertion. LOST A Phi Mu Alpha pin with the initials L. A. H. on the back. Finder please notify Zan Harper at 34 Steele Dormitory. FOR RENT Large room with four windows, large closet, connecting bath, and steam heat. 214 Glen burnie. Phone 9336. . - LOST Brown pocket-book in bus sta tion by Josephine Newell. Contains classes, money, and identification O- - J w r cards. Finder may keep money; please return rest to Jane Newell, s- ers were smashing Jap bases. GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEAD QUARTERS, AUSTRALIA, Oct. 9 (Friday) (UP) The situation in the Owen Stanley mountain sector of the New Guinea front where the Allied counter drive has slowed down be cause of difficult terrain, remained un changed yesterday a communique said today. Allied planes bombed the enemy in the Kokda area of New Guinea. LONDON, Oct. 8 (UP) The Ger mans will advance their frontal as sault on Stalingrad and destroy what is left of the city by artillery the Ber lin radio said tonight, raising the pos sibility that Hitler may swing his armies south ahead of the Russian snows and try to break through the Caucasus during the winter. British experts also saw the possi bility that Hitler, faced with defeat in the greatest battle of the war, was pulling his badly mauled forces back to winter quarters on the Don river. MOSCOW, Oct. 9 (Friday) (UP) Stalingrad's defenders annihilated ; four German battalions (2,000 men) and destroyed 16 tanks Thursday but were forced to fall back in a suburban community, the high command an nounced today. Meanwhile a Russian relief army bearing down on Stalingrad from the! northwest pounded the exposed Ger man left flank with artillery, routed the Nazis from defensive trenches and destroyed 11. block houses and a company of infantry, the Soviet mid night communique reported. BOSTON, Oct. 8 (UP) Acting Secretary of State Sumner Welles de clared tonight the refusal of Argen tina and Chile to sever relations with the Axis was permitting the other American republics to be "stabbed in the back" by enemy agents operating within their borders. TORONTO, Oct. 8 (UP) The American Federation of Labor today unqualifiedly endorsed the refusal of James Caesar Petrillo and his Federa tion of Musicians to make "canned music" for broadcasting. 4 i 1 v State Tag Examiner To Be at Town Hall A state license examiner will be in Police Chief W. T. Sloan's office in Town Hall every Wednesday be tween 9 and 5 o'clock to issue li censes, it was announced by Chief Sloan last night. 1 Mrs. Moxley Dies In Duke Hospital Mrs. Ellen F. Moxley, wife of the late Richard Davidson Moxley and mother of Mrs. Francis F. Bradshaw of Chapel Hill, died Wednesday night in Duke hospital following an opera tion necessitated by a fall last week. Mrs. Moxley, who was 83 on August 3, has made her home here with Dean and Mrs. Bradshaw for the last six years. She had been particularly ac tive in gardening and was a member of the DAR and a Chapel Hill book club. Surviving dre four children, Mrs. Bradshaw, Chapel Hill; Mrs. Ray Whyte, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Mrs. Walter Girdler, Louisville, Ky.j and Richard S. "Moxley, Culver City, Calif.; four grandchildren, and two great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held this afternoon at 4:30 in the Chapel of the Walker Funeral Home with the Rev. A. S. Lawrence of the Episcopal Church and the Rev. Charles M. Jones of the Presbyterian Church officiating. Interment will follow in the Chapel Hill cemetery. Pallbearers will be Dean R. B. House, Dr. W. D. Perry, Harry Comer, Dr. W. C. Ryan, Dr. Leonard Fields, and Dr. J. F. Dashiell, all of Chapel Hill. VNC (Continued from first page) ing raced his brother to the doors of the University for the honor of being the first student to reopen North Ca rolina after its closing during the days of the Civil War. A military air will somber the pro ceedings this October 12. After the principal address, delivered by D. Hi den Ramsey, the CVTC will be present ed their regimental colors. There also will be short memorial service for the Carolina men who lost their lives at Pearl Harbor, in the air over Europe, and at Guadalcanal. m fOBCE Vie A"' "!SlaVy' :s Camel- coast J (BaScd on as) changes a" CAMELS ARE WITH ME. THEY THE MSkPAIESS I WANT AND THEY DON'T TIRE My TASTE. A CAMEL ALWAYS H ITS THE SPOT WITH ME UuJU 0. Graduate Students Hold Convocation A convocation of graduate students and the graduate faculty will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in Hill music hall, it was announced by Dean Pierson yes terday. Speakers for the evening will be Dean Pierson, head of the graduate school; Dr. Hardin Craig for the Hu manities; Dr. R. W. Bost for the Sciences and Dr. H. W. Odum for the Social Sciences. MRS. JOHNSON (Continued from first page), She received her MA in psychology the following year at the age of 19. While a student in the University of Kentucky, Mrs. Johnson was a mem ber of Phi Beta Kappa and was elected to membership of the following honor ary campus organizations : Mortar Board, Phi Beta, and the YWCA, of which she was president for a year. She graduated with top honors in psy chology, was awarded a scholarship as the outstanding junior coed, was a member of the broadcasting and con cert orchestras, the. Glee Club, Little Theatre, Dolta Delta Delta, and Pan Politikon. s On leaving college, she served for a year as clinical psychologist in Orms by Village, Anchorage, Ky. In 1938-39 she was named personnel officer for NYA at Louisville and also part-time director of Young Peoples' Activities at the First Christian Church there. DRUITT (Continued from page three) tana. NAVY over Princeton. NORTH CAROLINA NAVY over N. C. State. NORTHWESTERN over Purdue. NOTRE DAME over Stanford. OHIO STATE over Southern Cali fornia. TEXAS over Oklahoma. OREGON STATE over UCLA. PENN over Yale. GREAT LAKES NAVY over Pitt. RICHMOND over Randolph-Macon. SOUTH CAROLINA over West Vir ginia. SYRACUSE over Western Reserve. TULANE over Rice. VMI over Virginia. WASHINGTON & Lee over Rollins. PENN STATE over Lehigh. they say millilli'' aracb-u1 te to p It .t::i ACES HAVE worn Registration Extended Day. -.by We Phi Committees To Meet Jointly A combined meeting of the executive and ways and means committees of the Phi Assembly will be held at 2 o'clock in the small lounge of Graham Memo rial, Elton Edwards announced last night. Attendance is imperative. WORKSHOP (Continued from first page) adequate coverage to each program presented. The board of reviewers, he stated, would be selected according to their knowledge and interest in the fields of dramatics, music, creative writing, modern dance, radio, art, and photography. Their articles, he ex plained, would appear on the editorial page and would be in addition to the regular TAR HEEL coverage. A cal endar of events among Workshop mem bers was also scheduled for regular appearance on the editorial page. The Carolina Workshop was created a year ago under the guidance of Sam Selden, faculty adviser, and Richard Adler, present chairman. Chief func tion at the time was the development and encouragement of student work in the creative art fields, as well as the stimulation of student body interest in the achievements of the several depart ments. Climax of last year's efforts came in May with the presentation of the Carolina Workshop spring festival. The five-day program presented round table discussions, plays, modern danc ing, contests, and classes to acquaint the students with the outstanding work that had been done in creative art. Final meeting of the festival featured student reviews of all the presenta tions. INDIAN (Continued from first page) understand, will be the IRC's next guest here." Before Bajpai arrived in America, he was secretary to the Government of India, Department of Education Health and Lands, from 1932 to 1940. sass S i&j 31 mm- S to NW:;:::;:::-:;;:;-" The "T-ZONE" Taste and Throat is the proving ground for cigarettes. Only your taste and throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you . . . and how it affects your throat. For your taste and throat are abso lutely individual to you. Based on the expe rience of millions of smokers, we believe Camels will suit your "T-ZONE" to a "TV Prove it for yourself! XL J. Keynolda Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem. North Carolina Deadline bo With almost all of the campus cars registered for the fall quarter, Safety Chairman H. D. Webb has extended the deadline until tomorrow so that all students will be able to complete the "registration process before the weekend. "The committee has had very good results with the registration," said Webb, "and the students are cooperat ing with us." Last minute blanks may still be had from either Webb at the Phi Gamma Delta house or Kitty Flannagan at Spencer dormitory. Both these com mitteemen will aid in filling out the information needed by the group. Following the registration, the com mittee will be better able to work out a set of safety rules applicable to cam pus and town driving. Local police authorities are planning to help Webb in drawing up the laws and will see that they are obeyed. Students who plan to bring their cars in this weekend will be granted an ex tension date for registering, said Webb. Campus groups are split over the issue of students keeping cars on the campus. It is expected that the Student Legislature will discuss the bill in a future meeting and have safety com mittee leaders there to present their views. This is the third year that students have had complete campus registration of cars but safety council members are placing more emphasis on the drive this year than ever before. With gaso line and tire rationing it is felt by board members that a complete regis tration of all autos may be useful for identification purposes. Loan Fund Applicants Must Meet Tonight Students who are within two years of graduation, on an accelerated study program, majoring in physics, chemis try, pharmacy, or medicine, and who have made or wish to make application for a loan from the Students War Loan Fund are asked to meet tonight at 10 o'clock in 206 Venable hall. Eash stu dent should bring to the meeting a fountain pen, blotter, and some writing paper, it was announced by E. S. La nier. FOR VICTORY: BUY BONDS mm iff cigarettes are judged 'i - ', ) i I 315 Mclver.