Page Four T II E TAR H E E L Noted Speakers Will Feature 134 Commencement June 7-10 Complete Program Reveals De tailed Plans, for Commence ment; Fourteen Classes to '" Hold Reunions. s t Detailed .plans- of. the - University's 134th Commencement were .revealed when the complete program, was -announced. ' ' i .: T 'm -: 1 GRADUATE SCHOOL LISTS POSITIONS Bureau of Appointments An nounces Positions Secured for Students. Sir Esme Howard, British'. Ambas sador to the United States; is. to de liver the Commencement address on Monday, June 10, arid Rev, Dr. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington and a noted clergyman, is to preach the baccalaureate sermon on' Sunday, June 9.' . ; f'm"; y " Saturday, June' '8 is set aside as Alumni Day, the principal 1 features of which are to be the general meet ing of the Alunini Association,' the Alumni luncheon', reunion suppers for the 14 classes 'coming back, and the President's reception , and " Alumni Baii. : .; ; Friday, June ,7, the opening day, is to be given over to the final exer cises Of the graduating class. ; The complete, program follows: , Friday, June 7 Class Day 9:30 A. M . Senior Prayers in Ger- Tard Hall. , : f u : j , 10:30 A. M. Senior Class Exercises Under Davie Poplar, , 5:30 - 6:30 P. M. President's Re ception to Seniors and their Guests. Saturday, June 8-r Alumni Day 10:30 A. M. General: Meeting, Ger- rard Hall. - - 1:00 P. M. Alumni Luncheon, Swain Hall. : 4:30 P. M. Band Concert,- Davie Poplar. -1 V - -1 5:00 P. M. Induction of '29 into Alumni Body." " ' 6:00 - 8:00 P. M. Reunion Class Suppers. 8:30 P. M. President's Reception and Alumni Ball, Swain Hall. Sundya, June 9 Baccalaureate Sunday 11:00 A. M. Baccalaureate Sermon, ' Memorial Hall, by Bishop James E. ! Freeman, Washington, D. C. -'4:00 P. M. Glee Club Concert, Me morial Hall. 5:00 P. M. Band Concert, Davie Poplar. 7:30 P.M. Vesper Service Under Davie Poplar. Rev W. D. Moss. Monday, June 10 Commencement Day 10:30 A. M. Academic Procession forms at Alumni Building. -11 :00 A. M. Commencement Exer cises in Memorial Hall. Address by Sir Esme Howard, the British Am bassador. j 1:00 P. M. Luncheon for Trustees and Official Guests of the Univer sity, Ball Room, Carolina Inn. 3:00 P. M. Meeting of the Board of Trustees in Graham Memorial. "Idol of Paris" ; To Be at the Carolina A new matinee idol for motion pic ture fans looms on the horizon. Not, of course, that this particular actor is riot used to the term "idol." As a matter of fact, he has -long been called "The Idol of Paris," where he has been the outstanding star at the at the Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic. Here Paris. To the American public, however, his is an entirely new personality. Having signed a Paramount contract, he has been at work on his romance "Innocents of Paris' which will play at the Carolina. His name, of course, is Maurice Chevalier, acclaimed by critics of two continents, as one of the most engaging personalities in the theatri cal world of our day. He is said to combine the humor and pathos of Chaplin with the silver toned voice and human qualities of Al Jolson. He is young and handsome; gay, happy-go-lucky and decidedly ro mantic. And he has the most delight ful accent yet heard on the audible screen. In brief, Chevalier has that indefinable something that should make him a prime favorite with au diences everywhere. ' For some time since his arrival in "New York, he has been the headliner at the Viegfeld Midnight Frolic. Here in the company of such notable en tertainers as Eddie Cantor, Pau Whiteman and Helen - Morgan of "Show Boat," Chevalier has won his way into the hearts of the so-called blase New. Yorker's. In "Innocents of Paris," Chevalier is surrounded by a good cast which includes Sylvia Beecher of the legiti mate stage who makes her debut on the screen; George Fawcett, John Miljan, Margaret Livingston and the child actor. David Durand. Richard Wallace, who directed "The Shop worn Angel," directed Chevalier', first picture. ' Pi Kappa Phi announces the pledg ing of John U. Gilbreath, Wichita Falls, Texas and John G. Slater, New Bern. The Bureau of Appointments, which is conducted by the Graduate School of the University, announces posi tions which it has secured for several graduate students. Ralph C. Hon will be at Nebraska Wesleyan University as Head of the Department of Economics and Busi ness Administration. J. Huggins will be Professor of Education in Meredith College next year. . . . : J. T. Penny will be Professor of Biology at the University of South Carolina next year. Mrs. T. T. Walker has been selected as Head of the Science Department of Queens College. Miss Kathryn Wilson has secured the position of Head of the Depart ment of Latin at La Grange College, of Georgia. - R. C. Blackwell will teach at Fur man University next year, serving as Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Henry Rankin has been appointed Assistant-Professor of English in Clemson College. v H. T. Shanks will be' Assistant-Professor of History at Birmingham Southern University. E. P. Willard has secured the posi tion of Assistant-Professor of Classics at the Florida State College for Women. Instructors positions have been se cured for the following men: Theo dore Burdine, Instructor of Mathe matics and Science, Mississippi Delta State Teachers College; James How ell, Instructor in English, Sewanee Military Academy; Thomas Madden, nstructor in English, Notre Dame; Maurice Moore, Instructor in English, University of the South; Miss Lou Shine, Instructor of English, N. C. . W.; E. P. Vandiver, Instructor in nglish, Mississippi College. Individual Desks To Be Set up for Each Of Senior Engineers The Mechanical Engineering De partment of the School of Engineer ing is preparing a room on the main loor of Phillips to be used as a class and design room for that department. Each senior enrolled in mechanical engineering will have t a desk in the room, ana tne nies oi drawings, photographs, and models that have been collected by the department will be kept there also. E. G. Hoef er, head of the depart ment, says that he has already re ceived contributions in the form of drawings and models for the use of the department and that he has re ceived a full size airplane propellor from the Hamilton Aero Manufactur ing company. This propellor is to be the first of a set of model airplane parts that will be used in the new aeronautical engineering Course. Several large desks of. a novel de sign, which were built by the Build ings Department, have been put in the room and will be used by next year's seniors and possibly by those juniors who are not on co-op work. This will be the first time that seniors taking mechanical engineering have had desks that can be called their own, although the civil and electrical seniors have had this convenience for. several years. Di and Phi Select Bingham Debaters The annual Bingham Commence ment Debate between the Dialectic Senate and the Philanthropic Assem bly will be contested by J. C. Wil liams and Garland McPherson, of the Di and Ev H. Whitley and G. P. Carr, of the Phi. The query which will be debated is "Resolved, That the United States Should Enter the World Court." The Dialectic Senate will be represented on the affirmative side of the ques tion, while the Phi debaters will pre sent the case of the negative. Local Radio Men Operate Own Broadcasting Station Five Dances Staged Here Last Week-End Attract Many Girls Five dances were given in all by the Carolina students during the past week-end. The Grail dance Saturday night ended these festivities. Three dances were given Friday evening: the annual Senior Ball, and the Sigma Phi Epsilon and , Acacia fraternities dances. The Woodberry Forest, Augusta Military, Academy and Virginia Episcopal School clubs combined to give a dance to the visit ing track teams Saturday afternoon and evening from six to nine o'clock, The Senior dance was the outstand ing event of the week-end. It was given in Bynum gymnasium, which was artistically decorated in the class colors, black and red. Jack Wardlaw furnished the music. The figure was led by Buck Carr, retiring president of the class, with Miss Eleanor Ew ing of Norfolk, and was assisted by Walter Spearman with Miss Eunice Glenn of Asheville. Another cause of things is the fact that conference of international finan ciers can break down because one con feree is so hateful the others see red. Continued from page one) On one wall of th station, which is in the East Wing of Phillips Hall is a full size sheet of wall board en tirely covered with cards from sta tions in foreign countries. As an ex ample of some of these countries, the following are listed on the card which the station sends to those with whom it , carries on conversations : Canada, Newfoundland, Mexico, Cuba, Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Virgin Isles, Alaska, Canal Zone, Nicaragua ,Costa Rica, Venezuela, Brazil, Ecuador, Bo livia, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, South Shetland, South Georgia, Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, Fanning Island, Hawaii, Sweden, Fin land, Poland, Denmark, Germany, Holland, England, France, Belgium, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Jugo Slavia, Hungary, Austria, Portugal, Madeira, Morocco, Algeria, Cameroons, South Africa, Rhodesia, Palestine, Iraq, and Ireland. " ,,' In addition to the board with --its showing of cards there is a .globe hanging from the ceiling which has acks stuck in it wherever there is a station with which W4WE has been in communication. The tacks are very hick in Europe, and there are quite a few in Australia, but there are only two in Asia. This is explained by the fact that there are almost no stations in that entire continent. Whereas there are about 20,000 amature stations in the United Slates alone there are ess than 10 in the whole continent of Asia. One of the most valued pussessions of the local station is a letter from E. F. McDonald, Jr., commander of; the S. S. Perry, of the McMillan Arctic Expedition commending it for valu able service rendered the expedition in handling its messages while it was in the Arctic in 1925. However this is not the only expedition to the polar regions that W4WE has worked since during the past winter the station talked to the Bird Antarctic Expedit ion .and received greetings from the expedition to the student body of the University. Students Adopt Unique Form Of Dormitory Government (Continued from page one) . used the rooms constantly and con tinuously. A fine spirit of comrad erie has been developed among the stu dents in each building. The Dormitory Club has proved a big .factor in prompting quiet and order in the buildings. Each dormi tory has a duly elected council whieh is a sort of disciplinary committee. Students making any unnecessary dis turbance are warned by the council. If the disturbance is repeated the stu dent is placed on dormitory proba tion, which, if violated, will automat-. eally expel him from the dormitory. Students thus expelled 'cannot secure a room in any other dormitory and must move off the campus for the next two quarters. - - Leader in Student Government The University was informed re cently by a national educational foundation that" it had the most com prehensive and perhaps , the oldest form of student government in the country. The foundation had just completed a survey which covered 14 leading institutions selected over the whole country as representative of various types of student welfare. The survey was concerned with the in fluences that make for the devefop ment of character and those . that make for the development of the individual. ent for the affair, gathered .from all parts of the United States were very highly pleased with the program that the Glee Club rendered and ap plauded each number heartily. Fordham Leads Young Lawyers NOTEBOOK LOST LOST Small black leather Leaf ax notebook belonging to B. B. Lane, Jr. Finder please return to the Y and receive reward. . EAR-RING LOST Eleven Members of Glee Club Given Awards for Year's Work 4 (Continued from page one) to a hilarious give and take of joyful banter, featuring talks f in behalf of the three classes, byv Charles Price, Henry Brandis, and Andy Mcintosh; hoinemade psrodiesn popular songs With locaV hits r eccentric d&iicferlby Moore Bryson and Andy Mcintosh; a rhymed melodrama by Moore . Bry son; and a burlesque of a law faculty meeting, the mimics being Andy, Mc intosh, Charles Price," J. H. Chad bourn, Phil Whitley, Henry Powell, and Jack O'Brien. . Professor M. T. Van Hecke, equip ped with an Egyptian dinner-gong J an alarm clock, and an electrically operated Klaxon automobile horn, acted as toast-master. One hundred and twenty-seven attended. " LOST Beautiful blue ear-ring be tween library and rear door of Saun ders. Please return to Janet Quilan at Woman's Building. NEW VICTOR RECORDS RELEASED EVERY FRIDAY UNIVERSITY BOOK AND STATIONERY CO. (Sutton Bldg.) (Continued from first page) Last evening the Glee Club ap peared in concert at the Carolina Inn before the convention of the Ameri can Institute of Adult Education. A lecture recital had been planned, with Professor Weaver giving the lecture and the University Glee Club illustrat ing it by the singing of a number of negro songs. A quartet of negroes from Chapel Hill would also have participated, but due to difficulties which occurred in the matter of time and place, the pro gram necessarily had to be shortened and a great part of the lecture and the performance by Chapel Hill negro talent had to be omitted. At this appearance, the Glee Club sang about twelve negro songs illus- trating the different types of negro music. Professor Weaver gave a brief explanation emphasizing the instinctive harmonies that are pecu liar to negroes, a phase of negro music which has received no atten tion heretofore by writers on musi cal subjects. Professor Weaver has made a definite study of this type of music during the past ten years and is now preparing for publication a series of negro songs as a result of these studies. Along with this group of songs, the Glee Club sang five regular concert numbers, including two modernistic settings of folk songs from the North of England and two songs from the Russian Liturgy. The several hundred people pres- called the Carolina Dormitory Qhib. The Carolina Dormitory Club s an organization composed of the presi dents and managers of the 16 dormi tories at the University. Included in its membership are also an executive secretary, a student in the employ of the Dean of Students, and the Dean of Students who acts as the repre sentative of the University and the ad visor of the Club in all matters per taining to the University and its policies in regard to student prob lems existent in the dormitory sys tem. This does not mean that the Dor mitory Club has taken the place of the time-honored Student Council. The Club does cooperate with and supple ment the work of the Council, but the Club and Council function as separ ate and distinct organizations, each within their own jurisdiction. Provide Social Centers -The Dormitory Club has existed for six years now, during wnicn it nas witnessed the ups and downs of suc cess and near-failure. The Club was organized in 1922 as a result of the demand of the dormi tory occupants for a medium through which they could express themselves as a unit. Before this time, there had been but six dormitories on the cam pus, and the problems of orientation and assimilation of the new men had not been so acute. With the continu ed expansion of the University and the construction of new dormitories al most every year, there arose the need for the integration of each dormitory into a social community that could deal with the problems of living and working together "within the walls." Each Dormitory Has Council A room was set aside in each dor mitory as a social center and a group meeting place for the dormitory in naDitanxs. . suitaDie turniture was placed in these rooms, and they were made attractive and inviting. The occupants of these dormitories have Read Tar Heel advertisements. Summer's Come and it's TENNIS, GOLF AND SWIMMING TIME Check up on Your. Supplies WE CARRY A FULL SPALDING LINE Students' Supply Store Everything in Stationery Extra Special B. F. Mosei WINS CARTON OF CIGARETTES Come in and sign your meal checks for chances on next week's carton. -at-- flip's Coffee S)I;op CIGARETTES Per Carton, 1.15 2 Large Pkgs., 25c SUNNYFIELD GINGER ALE 3 for 25c lc Deposit on Bottles ALL 5c CANDY BARS AND GUM, 3 for 10c The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. The Pines is the, favorite rendezvous for Club Gatherings, Bridge Luncheons and Fraternity get-togethers. We solicit this kind of patronage, feeling certain that everyone will be highly pleased. Mrs. Vickers has the happy faculty for assisting in the preparation for such functions and will cheerfully rdnder her as sistance to make such gatherings a huge success. For those as sociations and organizations which like to have dancing as a feature of their program we offer our dance floor. For a simple luncheon or a banquet, The Pines solves the problem. THE PINES TEA ROOM Chapel Hill Boulevard 4 Miles from Chapel Hill What is the big idea? BLEND-SUITS with Super- Shorts Two ideas, in fact. The smartest style ideal7 joins the biggest comfort idea since under- wear began. Super- Shorts have moved center-seam discomfort out of the way; and let you move with a new peace of mind and body. They never' pull 6r bind in any pos ture. Add the latest thins in two-tone effects and a shirt to harmonize. . and you have it: Blend-Suits. You'll never know what the alumni missed until you try them. WI1LSON BROTHERS Per Short, FATCNT APFLIID rOR S y LJ'J Center Seam I f . " DISCOMFORT ( 1929, Wilson Br . ' . " J: J .w, M , ,,,.,, mHnniranijij,,,,, .iWiwn,MWWWtlwumuijniwLiijpiiii Your campus hab erdasher is now fea turing Blend-Suits for $2.50. So are the stores back home.