ft r V FRESHMAN SMOKER SWAIN HALL TONIGHT 9 O'CLOCK FRESIDXAN SMOKER SWAIN HALL TONIGHT 9 O'CLOCK s VOLUME XXXIX CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, DECEJIBER 4, 1930 NUMBER 62 , ' i -Ml UfttniidiilA'LA PLANS TO ASSIS m MESSM CHORUS Annual Christmas Concert Will Combine Orchestra, Organ And Voices. The University" symphony or chestra is to provide the accom paniment at the presentation of The Messiah on the fifteenth of this month. -This concert ill be given in the new music audito rium and the profits are to be turned over to the Orange Coun ty unemployment fund. The ad mission price will be fifty cents. The personnel of the orchestra to play at. the performance as given out yesterday by. Prof es sor McCorkle includes first vio lins, T. Smith McCorkle (con certmeister) , Orlindo Cates, Thomas M. Johnson, Ray W. Foster; and J. M. Shachtman; second violins, Benjamin G. Winig, Henry Gartzman, Kath erine Wheaton, F. G. Jacocks ; cellos, Crosby G. Blackwood, Lawrence Hatlestad ; violas, Hugo Giduz, Loretz Ramseur ; bass, James Pf ohl ; oboe, Lyciane Miller ; clarinets, R. Flynt, Wal ter Prescott; bassoon, W. F. Ferger; flutes, Lamar String field, R, M. Chamberlain ; horn, William Abernethy ; trumpets, C. H. White, Jr., H. A. Brooks ; trombone, George Lawrence ; ty mpani, F. B. McCall. Mrs. A.. S. Wheeler will act as pianist, and Professor Nelson O. Kennedy as organist.' The concert is planned.to be a combination of orchestra, or gan, and voices. All of the artists have been secured except the bass. Those secured. Those selected are Ed ward Molitore, tenor, Mrs. Cam illa Molitore, soprano, Mme. Emily Berger Cullum, contralto. The chorus has been practicing and J. Foster Barnes, bass. The chorus has been practicing un der the direction of Dr. Dyer for the last two months. PHI TEAM REGAINS FORENSIC MEDAL Hamilton Hobgood Recipient of Mary D. Wright Award. The Mary D. Wright memorial debate medal returned to the Phi Assembly after a two-year stay in the possession of the Di Sen ate when Hamilton Hobgood, of the Phi, won the prize Tuesday night in Gerrard hall. The vic torious Phi team upheld the af firmative side of "Resolved: that the state of North Carolina should levy a luxury tax for the support of its institutions of higher learning." Billy Uzzell teamed with Hobgood. McBride Fleming-Jones and Clyde Shreve, representing the Di, presented the negative argument. J. C. Williams, winner of- the medal last year, presided. Throughout the debate, the speakers centered their atten tion upon the feasibility of a luxury tax as a means for rem edying the lamentable financial condition surrounding North Carolina's institutions of higher learning at present. The affirm ative saw in such a tax the long-sought-after proper distribution f the burden of taxation for educational purposes. This con tention met with the approval of the judges, vho declared the af firmative, the ''winner.- and Hob good. the abler speaker of that team. . ' ' Council After Good N. C.-Duke Relations Members of the student coun cil are this week making talks m chapel for freshmen and sophomores in regard to the athletic relations which have existed between Carolina and Duke in the past. Mayne Albright, secretary of the student council, spoke yes; terday, and Red Greene, presi dent Student Union,-will speak today and Friday. The idea that the speakers are trying to put across to the stu dent body is that the University is just ndw beginning our rela tions with the real Duke Uni versity, both in athletics . and other fields. The precedent which is established next . Saturday will have a great effect on our relations in the future. The two rivals can profit greatly from each other and a clash or pos- sible severance in athletics would ! 7 , ? ' . . , destroy their mutual advantages ! 15 :het.er slipperiness is the in other fields. However it is 1 only aim' Despite the profound hoped that no such situation will i tfmcal knowledge of the twen arjse ' jtieth century, man does not know . While Carolina is teaching her j exactly what makes oil oily. Or students good sportsmanship for ! mical and physical WMrivoi ctnricnfn:; merely check the umfor- cil of Duke University is doing j the . same thing along this line, j PRESSRELEASES TWaWBOOKS Etchings By Steene and Stories By Cheshire To Be Pub lished Soon. 3The University-of North Car olina, Press . will publish " two books of interest to Carolina students. Six etchings of the University of North Carolina by William Steene and a book, Nonnulla, by Joseph Blount Cheshire will be released in the next few days. William Steene is a member of the Salamagundi Club; the national society of Mural Paint ers, American Federation of Arts, and several other artists clubs. He has exhibited or been represented in the National Academy of Design, the Archi tectural League of America, Grand Central Art Galleries, Milch Galleries, and several other galleries and at several universities. He has been living and working in Chapel Hill for several years and has studied the scenes represented in the six etchings which are to be pub lished. The etchings are the Old Well, the Episcopal Chapel, the Playmakers Theatre, Old East, Davie Poplar, and the Ke nan Stadium. ! Bishop Cheshire is well known as a great story teller. He has at last been prevailed upon to put some- of the best of his stories in writing. The book is more than a collection of stories. It is woven of the very warp and woof of North Carolina the book could answer well to a roll call of North Carolina's great names, with illustrating esti mates and anecdotes. In pres enting these "Not Nothings," as he calls them, Bishop Cheshire has given us a "cross-section" of North Carolina life and legend. Tickets Exchanged - Football tickets for the Carolina-Duke game are be ing exchanged for passbooks today and tomorrow at the Y. M. C. A. As has already been announced students may sit with their dormitory or fra ternity groups by getting their tickets in blocks or asking for seats in their group section. SCIENTISTS CONDUCTING QUEST FOR CAUSE BACK OF OILINESS For Years Research on Problem Final Result That Machinery Has Been Devised to Measure Degrees o By Hendley N. Blackmon, Gen eral Engineer Westinghouse Corporation Mankind, in general, regards a treacherous banana peel under foot as the pinnacle of slipper iness. Just another case of pre judice though; because oil, such as used to lubricate electric ma chinery, would give him a far ther and faster ride than the best banana skin in the country. No one knows just yet what makes oil so oily, but research engineers, are hot on the trail. Scientists have long : known that oil makes a good lubricant j j i : mi of irshipments,. but tell nothing of the lubricating value. A group of scientists, isolated in a building of their own, have been stalking the answer - to "what makes oil oily", for the past few years. Unlike tasting a pot of porridge for seasoning there is yet no test nor instru ment that will tell the answer, tn the past to determine this elusive property the lubricant j was placed in service until the oil wore out ; i. e., lost its oili ness. Researchers getting to the roots of the problem, finally de vised machines for - measuring this slippery property they can tell the degree of "oiliness" ; but j ust what makes one oil more slippery than another is still a worrysome question. Crude oil, as it comes to the laboratory from wells scattered throughout the world, is tested for oiliness and then broken up into its chemical elements. Tedi ous comparative studies " are made of samples which behave exactly alike except for oiliness ; doggedly striving to find what makes the difference. It is not the degree of refinement of the crude oil the same commercial oils are much more refined than others. If oils are too pure they become water white (like the widely advertised Nujol) and lose their lubricating usef ulnessC H A person on ice skates rides on one of the best lubricating surfaces known. The almost ef fortless propulsion is possible because the weight of the skater j melts the ice under the runners BOGGSTO ATTEND FOLK-LORE MEET Dr. A. P. Hudson, professor of English, R. S. Boggs, assis tant professor of Spanish and probably Dr. G. R. Coffman head of the English department, will attend the meeting of the meeting of the North Carolina Folk-Lore Society in Raleigh, Friday, December 5. Mr. Boggs is to deliver a paper entitled "The Legend of the Half-Chick." This meeting, as in previous years, is being held in connec tion with meetings of the North Carolina State Art Society and the State Literary and Histori cal Association, of which, Dr. E. W. Knight, professor of educa tion here, is First Vice-Presi-; dent. ' The last two meet today, ' though the , Art Society opened an exhibition on December 2. Has Been Goinsr On With the of Slipperiness. and he scoots along on a film of water, not ice. Little globules of water cling to the steel runner, another layer is on the surface of the ice, leaving a free layer of water in the middle which gives almost frictionless movement of the skates. In electrical rotating machin ery, an .oil film surrounds the moving shaft and acts like the water film under the skate run ner. Tiny globules of oil adhere to the revolving- journal, other oil molecules stick to the babbitt bearing and the load rides mer rily on the free film of oil in be tween. Automobile bearings need only a small fraction of a thousandths of an inch oil film; large electrical machines require an oil film about .0012 inches thick the same part that 3-4 inch represents in a city block. MpasnrPTYipnt. nf fh nil fhirV- shows that the shaft wanders about in the oil film very curi ously, climbing up one side and slipping down the other. Though microscopic in size, the .film is always thick enough to keep the metals from direct , contact. Trouble begins as soon as the ifilm is ruptured and the metals touch, which happens somefimes due to minute imperfections ;in machined surfaces, misalign ment' of shaft and bearing, and warping of the bearing shell by excessive heating.' Never stingy, Nature has been exceedingly open handed in her gift of oils vegetable oils' are widely used in cooking, animal oil glistens from sleek black hair ; and mineral oils produce our gasoline. Vegetable and animal oils are more oily and therefore the best lubricants ; but their family tree makes them more susceptible to oxidation when in service. Straight min eral oils, preferably with a para ffine base, last longer as a lubri cant despite their lesser degree of oiliness. Like a sprig of mint in tea to enhance the flavor, soap is sometimes added to mineral oil to bolster its lubricating pro perties. v - Oil leads a tough life, how ever. For instance, machinery on shipboard must be well lubri- cated. The boat crosses the equator and a month later is anchored in Alaska the oil must never become so soft it will run away nor too hard to become useless. SLADE LECTURES TO MATH SEMINAR Yesterday afternoon at three o'clock the mathematics seminar was held in Phillips hall. Profes sor J. J. Slade, of the school of engineering, conducted the seminar with his own treatment of the "Differentiation and Tn tegration of ono-integral' orders with application of the theory to the solution of Abel's problem of the fantochrone." The problem is given : a bead on a smooth curved wire. The bead is to fall from point A to point B in a specified length of time. The question is to determine the curve in the wire which will en able' the above conditions to be fulfilled. This problem was solv ed by Abel over two Hundred years ago and has been solved often since. Lawsons' Visitors Extensively Feted Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Graves of Geneva, New York, have been visiting in the home of Dr. and Mrs. R. B. Lawson for the last two weeks and have beeii entertained extensively. Mrs. Graves was entertained at a bridge luncheon Tuesday morning by Mrs. Alex Koonce, and Tuesday evening President Frank Graham and Miss Kate Graham entertained at dinner in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. Graves. Last night Miss Helen Shell entertained at a buffet sup per and bridge at the Irving a partments in Durham. Today at one o'clock, Dr. and Mrs. Collier Cobb will entertain at a lunch eon for Mr. and Mrs. Graves. Thjs afternoon from four to six o'clock Miss Estelle Lawson will entertain at a tea in honor of Mrs. Graves and Miss Kate Graham, v Friday afternoon Mrs. T. S. McCorkle will entertain at brid ge in compliment to , Mr. and Mrs. Graves, and Friday even ing Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Bell will entertain them at a bridge party. Next Wednesday night Mrs. Car rington Smith will entertain at a theatre party. - OFFICERS CHOSEN BY POLITY FORUM Dungan Elected President and Sitterson Chosen Secretary at First Meeting. - Jack Dungan was chosen pre sident of the polity forum in an organization meeting Tuesday night on. the second floor of Saunders building. Lyle Sitter son was elected secretary of the group. ' ; The meeting, which was called by Beverly Moore, temporary chairman, was attended by thirfy-fiye students. The purpose of this forum is to interest per sons on the campus in national politics, and it is the plan of the organization to bring many not ed statesmen to the campus. Foreign relations will also be one of the topics of discussion by the forum. In this connection Professor Calvin Hoover, of Duke University has been asked to address the next meeting of the group Thursday, December 11. ; So far as can be ascertained, the'organization on this campus is the only one of its kind in the south. There are but few others existing in the entire United States. ' Professor Calvin Hoover, who is to address the next session of the forum, will speak on the sub ject of "Russia." Mr. Hoover has for the past fifteen months been living in this country and is well acquainted with condi tions there. " It is the plan of the president to bring such men as 'Norman Thomas, Senators Borah and Reed, Secretary of Navy Adams, and Rabindrath Tagore to speak to the organization. Freshman Smoker The first freshman smoker of the year will take place to nfght in Swain hall at nine o'clock. Eats and smokes will be served. As yet. no speaker has been secured, but Pat Pat terson, president of the senior class, who will preside over the smoker, states that one will be obtained in time for the occasion. Music will be furnished by the Carolina Buccaneers. LOCAL DELEGATES ATTEND NATIONA 1A FRATERNM" LIEET John Cooper and Jack Ward Ac tive in Proceedings of Inter fraternity CounciL At a meeting of the National Inter-fraternity Conference held during the Thanksgiving holi days in New York City, John , Phil Cooper, of the Sigma Nu fraternity and Jack Ward, of the Kappa Alpha fraternity, were . the representatives from this campus. Both of these delegates were placed on several of he committees of the convention. 150 schools sent representatives to the meeting. ; Pat Nelson of the University of South Carolina, and repre sentative of the S. A. E. chapter at that institution, was elected president of the -convention. Bill McKinze, Phi Gamma Delta, f rorn Brown University, was chosen secretary, and John Phil Cooper, Sigma Nu of the Univer sity of-North Carolina, was voted chairman of the executive committee. , - Jack Ward, ;. of the ' Kappa Alpha fraternity, the second de legate sent from this campus, was placed on the scholarship committee, and Cooper, received another position by being placed on the committee on morals. This convention was attended by men from schools all over the country, who met for the purpose of 1 discussing .some jot the prob lems which confront the differ ent fraternities. The abolition of "Hell-Week," system of rush ing, relations among fraternities on the different campi, and other such difficulties were discussed by the representatives. Cooper, as one of the speakers on the program, made a talk on the subject of "Where fraterni ties' duties should yield to those of the university, and vice versa." A bill was also present ed by the Sigma Nu represen ( Continued on last page) GREENE SPEAKS ONGOTONMENT Radio Speech Over WPTF Wed nesday Explains Student Government The student government of the University of North Carolina has been an individual growth, and it has developed a personal ity of its own," said Red Greene, president of the student union in a radio address yesterday Greene went further to say that it depends largely upon the state o student opinion and stu dent interests.- He. told of the work of the Student' Council, its function, and its value. His ob ject was to show the state high schools the value of student gov ernment in order that they might thoroughly understand it, should they establish such government in their schools. In summing up his remarks he explained that at Carolina there is no system espionage. When some ; act of misconduct is committed, the students will spontaneously act upon it and the form of action i is to submit it to the Student Council, which is the controlling body of the student government. John A. Lang, president of the North Carolina Federation of Students followed Greene's talk by explaining how the council was attempting to instill good sportsmanship among the stu dents, for the Carolina-Duke game. ' . " ' -