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T M AANt V. ?~,'UNI~*SIY~F onPage5)V .4C1W UN ondd10 MB$ Stations[ Cover Battle Of Carolinas Many Students Follow Team To Chapel Hill To See Opening Game BY GORDON HILL (Gamecock Sports Editor) The classic football game of the Carolinas will be renewed tomorrow when the Gamecocks of South Carolina invade the home field of the Tarheols of North Carolina. Game time is 8:80 daylight time. One hundred and eighty radio stations of the Mutual Broadcasting system will broadcast the game throughout the countr,Mutual picked the Carolina-0arolina tilt as the game of the week. Station WC OS is a network member. Sta tion WIS will broadcaost the game locally. PRICE OF GAME . All USC students going to I Chapel Hill to see the South Carolina-North Carolina foot bal game will be admitteA for 50. csets if they present their - first semester, athletic cards. North Carolina officials an nounced that the South Caro ' lina students will be admitted through Gate Two. Students who haven't had athletic pictures made yet and who wish to attend the game, should go by Whitey Rawl's ve offici in the canteen to get re- R( ceipts which will admijt them an for the student price. Athletic ec pictures will be distributed - pr again today from 3 to 6 p. m. M pl, Ray Reeves of station WRAL ar Raleigh will describe the game over , the Mutual, network. Reeves, a vet eran air reporter, covers all Mutual th games in the South. st Following the Gamecock team two hundred miles will be several hundred students from South Caro lina who will travel in every con ceivable method except fly. Trains,P buses, cars, and thumbs will trans-: port the representative body to this, b the opening game of-the season for be the Birds. The two schools have-met twenty t times in the football histories of the t two schools. }{grth Carolina won four'teen of these games and South s Carolina two; four- ended in a dead- w lock. The last t,ime the two teams in met was in 1937 when the game ended 13-13: U.S8. C. Untried Coach Rex 2,nright will carry his fourth. Gamecock squad to Chapel ~ - jill, untried as yet this season but not so uncertain. A veteran back (cONTINUED ON' PAGE 6) P1 Music Set In Rutledge .un SIs Open From. 8 To 10 * rel Musical classics in recorded form ar~e available to students of the Uni- lie versity and to the public each nikht p1l frons '$tsntil 10 o'clock through the wc United'lty' Carnegie record set, ag, h1ich Monday for the year, on Hugh ?~ .lhlamson, director of the depart du of music, announced ort yesterday. . - Dci New loca *( the University's P1 record -colie sRtledge Col- Ti lege, front a the third floor. New re 't may be heard W( each nig 'several albums Sli of Schub -n and Hugo Ph WIolf I4dt ~ of record- El , ~ings by edIs ~ d,and five Ki complete QgiOar9 a Beg- a gapr's Opera, ?t .Madame thi ttterfly and ZA b Bizot's ter 4Ar. SWKTRHE Ready For Last Season AL GRYGO Ions Ner Cornpletiot Fbr-NdvalRTC Lrmory; Application Approved By WPA Complete Equipment For Training Of Future Ensigns To Be Housed In New Naval Building Preliminary plan's for the Uni rsity's new 150,000 Naval Extension Classes )TC armory have'been completed d application to the Work Proj- 'Sign 150 Students ts Adminisiration has been ap oved, announced Pres, J. Rion Oe cKissick early this week. Final ts are now being drawn by the Night, Saturday Classes -hitect. ' .2 .With the registration. period on13 'The main purpose of the project to provide adequate quarters for half over, 150 have already signe Naval ROC unit and the up for evening and Saturday classes lf," he stated. held by the Extension Division o rhe project will be divided into the University. o buildingg-one parallel to Registering of students begar ndleton street in the -rear of Conte College, and the 'otherSet18inhefivsosnwof rallel'to Pickens- street and ad-fisinteodlbayuligan :ent to Sloan College. 'The twowilctiuthugOt.1 ildings will form an elI and willThtoanubrfexnio connected by a passageway. suet ofri bu h aea Drill Hall rhe drill h*ll will be located ontacmp~l ie h is first floor of the building on eetrlsya. ndleton street and will be two Toa'rgtaiofrbthsms >ries in height. The drill halltr atya as60suet~o llb 8feet in width by14 foeet agoprenae Adjacent to the hall will be stor- Fwesodrsaeepcdt (CONTINUJEO ON PAGE S) sinuthssmtedutQeex 'ri-Delt Giirls . coe n oeb' ead Scholars dd uiesa~iitain c Delta Delta Delta sorority and Egih ieat,gooy ega ii Epsilon Pi fraternity. led the lnugs scooy oil~ iversity 1041 fraternity-sorority adsca ok tolastic ratings, according to the ristrAr's offi. S u e t n S All-lorority' average headed the t o summarized ratings com- It o go e edby the tegistrar, with .all men's and all non-so'iority, aver es taking sc(id and third places BylonHgeplr the campus( .utabu veyhngfo Dther leading sorori'ties in the peutbtead N Prk ier of their a rages were: 4jpha in"insttedbarad Ita P1, Cpi - iega, Sigitia Dlelta,Clmo cas drn th Bets Phi, Kappa Delta, Zeta shle,bd,adwnosis u Alpha, Delta Zeta. -nteroso l~Clee )ther fraternities as they scored tenwwmnsdt)tra re: Sigma Chi, Kappa Sigma,thUnvrtyoSuhCro pma Na,gipn Alpha Epsilon,li. li Kappa SIg a, P1 Kappa Alpha, Th os rveyeaan Kappa Ph hs im Kappa, leydcre4iaikex ppa Alpha; ~ et1 Ie u~.~6 idw ill-1women's verage -was higher adlst,p aeIg u Ln the al-meae aferige, with fra- hnm lljv culd nity ratings lI ing 4 1 men's te~frtqoQb. is held. ac b y Exteion Dvio o jAletic ctrd All 8 tns who registere. late or iave not had plc. t~isna will report to Davis eelege, jm 10, between the fours of three to six p. m. Wednesd* to have athletio pic. tures xnai, W. Flinn Gilland, assistant , gstrar, announces. This aples only to those stu dents pa* the student activ ities .fee 'U regular students and specil4 students who pay the fee.) 4 late fee of 50 cents will be chi*ed after this date, Commandant lall Pleased-At Total Of Nav4 'Unit Three Cog-panies Are Organize This Year Because Of Increase "I am very pleased in the in terest shown," 'Capt.- R. A. Hall, Commandant o. the University's Naval ROTC u*. stated yesterday, looking over regoster - of .thii year's 170inaiV Nival battalion. "Pr6babti three-fourths of the freshmaW class applied for entrance into *fe unit," he continued. "It was ntcessary to reject quite a num ber of excellent men who hA' not the necessary mathemati' training to take the' navigation in the ftresh man cdurse." %A,There' re over 200 applications, including 25 made during the sum mer, for the ninety ROTC training v.ancies allowed for the freshman :claps. Three 'Companies . Battalion organization this year Wvill i'nclude three companies, the 4ermanent organization, the original e battalion of last year having only two. Eighty of tlte 104 Men - in last year's unit have returned to school and drill activities of the new regrtilts have begun. S6phomore students iz1 thle unit will study -navigation, for the entire 1941942 session. Thirty-seven of this t clasA' gained some actuai. sea ex perie*ce during the surnmer ~rulse, although the use .df vesselg iv lIin. ited to short trips the captain -said Seamanship, element'ary gunn and communications, and naya la tory will form the. curricuup' ~o be studied by the freakhnan Class. Captain Hall so released for' s publication the battalion organiza tibn and its.- officers. This group will keep its comniand until second semester and no lbermanent-officers will be chosen for the battalion un- d til the senior year of. the first cj s 11 the class of '44, has been reached. s ms College Comn ation Of Pickles ualized and differetdfrom every other. The shelves display extreme ly varied collatiots of kiuack knacks, photogaphof friends ad relatives, tea&eta and cups, jars of picklieb, "piggy" banks, and tennis rackets. Peannants frosa . the Upiver sity -of South Carolina, Clan-. son, Citadel, Piarman6 huke, an iPiCeton deeo0 Sthe w a f evry oo'a Oi early . every bed Is :prced~ qe. phu,rabbit, %sAlp aseduIt 111-Icomes inner James C. Royster, Edgefield, 1941 winner 6f the Phi Beta Kappa scholarship to U.S.C., receives a welcoming ha;d from Alva Coggeshall, Darlington, 1940 winner. Coggeshall is a sophomore. Meqn's And Womoe,-s.Glee Club:Will.Join Choruses; Widen ScopeOf Presentation Both Groups Have Had 6rganization Meetings To Hold Tryouts, Make Plans. For Coming Year Jobs Halt For the first timne i the history Defense of the University, the girls' and On outS b,y,' glee clubs -will combine Progress Onchoruses, so they may have a wider scope in their musical presentations. McKissick Promises To The ensemble will meet every Wed nesday afternoon at 5 p. M. Work For Construction The primary business that the Girls' Glee Club has transacted has Constructioti on nine new tennis Consructon n nie nw tenisbeen the election of officers. Those :ourts for Carolina students to be .outs or aroinastuent tobepersons selected were Harriet Wil rected on land leased in Maxcy liamson, President, and Joyce Het leegg Park is being held up by the el Secretary-Treasurer. The Club iational defense program, Pres. J.z 4ain9dfes rgam rs has yet to select a vice-president tion McKissick stated Tuesday in hapel exercises.anapulctdieor hapelexercses.Mrs. Hugh P. Williamson, the Application through the WPA directress, said that the club is now vas made early this sumnier and he construction is not a4thorizedcopsdfthryevngl,bu 'ecause that agency is now build-shpt iygrlbynxwek nig defense projects only.Me'GleCu The courts, to be used exclusive- TeUiest fSuhCrln y by students, will b'e latated inme'glecuhldtefrtry faxcy Gregg Payk, ip the eg near ot fte14-2sho era he University's bQotAhivat' grden. teCae nRteg olg ni e&y walkihg "distdee fr pi allMnaHvnn.A h aetm - >rmitorIes, "this' greatly neededplnweeaoucdbHghP ddffidr to the UniWeet' ill re- Wlimo, mec dprmn .evthe present crowd'ed conditionhadndircooftem 'sge f the varsity co6rts,'President Mc-clbtohvaclegcorshi Cissick stated.yer "Be assured that the University Tetr-usMnawred vill do its sutmost to get them ascrbdy f.Wilasns"h ooFspsil,h ocue.(OrTIeDfrs ONm PAG the hit CONCLEESfS theUivesthes girls' an Th SudntConcl etjet-Taesml Ofl Carolinar Wed sy afternoon,atoedecideawhethermt been tneeeecttinn*offofliteesofTiceea uden kodypresient.South Carlinae Folk Tale, aWcl _________________leimon,o Prjesent animJoyc Het sueSrnatarraural. Th Ja ee lu hasu.om coy prne y t)eeca Unver esouet ardia andlicit diecor.iabefr MMrs. Hugh P. Widisamson,ithe diresess soied wearte cled asnw Sign posed bout dbcar ppaed for thiry-sve~n byls bt Whie Pss)ges" nd Be- Loshe oes t ocrase the mebe thevisto. Pt lans,iga wreshipoft gir.b Red'mth,eek sins, unn boksandempy dan fThe iversity' Souharolina .OOcaColaottle whicmhaneschole cub hetonld the airthry net, r n hemidl ( o~Unitsiftye 1914 choo yera floor, sit add tothe Chsaa ae lum of Rutldge Comeg o~ aCouso glrs rom. rMsnda morening. At6 tepsamettme Wit afiIt's a nWili ages, muesoltic departet od~s"~ nds ~ ~ wrers an rJctor o th4e4 men' tolee tot ~ a ~5t ~ club, Co ae af clege c~othisbe T4e t-ot Moda were-des cribedby 4i. Wlimoas"-4 EUD University Is Encouraged At Totals--Chase 1,117 Men, 617 Women Enter University For First Term, Of 1941-42 Registration for the first se mnester of the 1941-42 sespion of he University of South Caro lina reached a total of 1,734 tudents Wednesday, Sept. 24 it was learned from John A. Chase, Jr., dean of adm' i'itra bion, today. To date, 1,117 men and .617 women have entered the Uni versity, with totals showing a ffight decrease from registra ,on of last year. McKISSICK WELCOMES President J. Rion McKiasick, genially known to upperelass men as "The Colonel," .has is sued the following welcome to Carolina newcomers: "Our freshmen are as we! come to the University as a fat check fror4 .4Ae .o an unex Pe tel kiss from a tar-eyed divinity is to a Caroliia'sttdent. "Their alma materi delighted to have here these -new men and women of Carolina, hopes that all of them will fully avail themselves of their extraordi nary opportunities here for liv ing a happy life, for develop ing their bodies, minds and souls, and for training thein selves for useful serviee beyond our historic walls." "The University is very muth eo ouraged over the slight decrease n enrollment," Mr. Chase said, Because of th'e selective service nd unprecedented opportunities or employment, we had feared that here would be a heavier decrease," The total enrollment at this date last year was 1,809 stu dents, with 1,191 men and 667 women reistering. 1,866 stu dents ehiolled during the first. semeste , and 3,004 in the year, 19409p fljChase emphasized the f~fthat the Administration is ver optimistic about the en rollment, even though the de crease can be seen. Saturday Last Day H-e pointed out to students that aturday, Sept. 27, at one o'clock, Sthe last date for registration for he first semest&, and also the last ate for making changes in regis ration. Wednesday, October 1, is the last ate on which a student may with raw and apply for a refund of ma iculation fees for the first semester, tudents Must Pay New ederal 'Dance Tax Soon :Beginning October 1, all script ances and pierformances carrying dmission charges will be subject a federal tax of' one cent on each mn cents of the admission fee, ac rding to a bill passed,.by Congress st week and signed by President ~oosevelt, Saturday. This will apply to all functions of ie university which have admis on charges. The Social Cabinet ance tonight will not be taxed, of outse. Under the'- law ~before this bill ras passed, eharitable and educa onal lnstitutioqs were exempt from 4e tax. The new bill abolishes the icemptions.' prank Taylor, Jr., acting- director f student activities, fe.notifying 11l ranisations afooted by the law,