STATE BASBIJf GAME
4:00 O'CLOCK
EMEItSQN FIELD.
EXPERIMENTAL TRY-OUTS
4:30 O'CLOCK
PLAYMAKERS THEATRE
VOLUME XLII
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1934
NUMBER 176
EI
SPRING SCHEDULE
0FEXAWATI0NS
GIVEN YESTERDAY
Examinations for 11:00 O'clock
Classes Will Begin Series
Monday Morning, June 4.
swaus jvi?eting W051EN DmTMS STUDENT LEAGUE
IT nnwri 'lArintr I , . . ...,- .
ti a ii . in apptiuri minting iin.ti.
TlMJ
Organizations in Audit System
au meet ai i :uy u ciock. 1 x. r; a wrt.iDo o,;., c 1,,0,1 fv
VsUil l,CSl JDS! W Cvil AJf OilU Tf K4-. I VofcpVlica ucooiyii twuwuiuwt vr.
There will be a meeting of w College ream (jaiiea un ronignt in uraer 10 lJiscover
the old and new officers of all
J t ' a -mm-
me organizations wnicn are
members of the student audit
Jy Greensboro Faculty.
Opinion on Resolution.
The scheduled debate between The meeting of the Foreign
the Di senate and the Speaker's Policy league which was sched-
TESTS TO END THURSDAY system at 4:00 o'clock this af-Llub of the Woman-s College of uled for tonight has been post-
rnT Vi W.m A uranam xyiemo- the University which was to poned until the first part of next
The examination scheme for rial ityas announced yesterday have held in the senate week, according to an announce-
Casts of Experimentals
To Be Filled Today
Try-outs for Four Plays Will Be
Held at 4:30 O'clock.
the spring quarter was released by R. H. Sherrill, auditor.
yesterday from the registrar's. It is essential that both
the
chamber last night was unex- ment made yesterday by Agnew
pectedly called off as a result of Bahnson, chairman of the execu-
sffra I n,A A 4X: 4.4. 3 41, :
I uiu tiiiLi- jitsw uniters l l. i,t-. 1 1 1 1 una i . i! i i.
. ,. ... . , j. . -tt- a communication receivea irom tive committee.
r, "V. SSLfl"? Greensboro yterdr afternoon. The.meetta has been moved Iut wi . fi.n di.
Try-outs for the 20th bill of
experimental plays will be held
in the Playmakers theatre this
afternoon at 4:30 o'clock.
Seven plays have already been
cast, but four more are open for
try-outs. Seven men and five
women are needed to fill the
casts. The parts range from
bits to leads in tragedy, comedy,
and melodrama. Anyone inter-
DANIELS REVIEWS
AMERICAN POLICY
IN LA1MSTATES
Ambassador Gives Attitude of
Aloofness as Cause of Un
satisfactory Relations.
TRACES MEXICAN REFORM
!f n.-rAnvr tt-nnn A Tlitntnlii.. I 11 1-44 ' n t 1
T Tr-V T reqmrea ior Da- After the senate and a sizable up in order to aUow the league ";nV a" thors at the Plav- ,
June 7, and wm beheld ,n the ing. purposes. Reports for tile num6ep of interested persons to contact more colleges and uni-
a y Mam prsident 0et. vergities with ref to
jariy mwu ,. wui pe given to tne oia omcers l;aw v.. v,Qi . fv.Q T-ccr.iniVn I . . .
Tests for courses in onffinppr- of oh nvcrK 5hprril1 s - f ""s v,x4 hearsal before the plays are
rests lor courses Sherrill Leived a letter stating that -the which was prepared by the Urn- w"nrlll aJa wi-
"Nations must mix to pros
per," stated Josephus Daniels,
United States ambassador to
Mexico, in an address in Memo
rial hall yesterday sponsored by
the University Foreign Policy
mg, including engineering will also explain to he new men wWrnlipWWmWWtiflT.Ui!hr rm,ih armm two weeks T-- tr T
mathematics, are scheduled in how the audit system functions. ;'7T" I lZ :::: tt nesaa M zy ana dU
, m .1 - " - - I J-JL'-1 UCCU 4JA U1V4V4V-11 IAJ J411C . Wl agU H1M1 ICgOlU l v w "v-
accounting will be announced TK AkI K AHliA li X
hv the instructors of the various
accounting courses. YW AT. WORK
MUSICIANS OFFER
CONCERT AT DURE
. The loiiowmg scheauie gives
the order ot academic courses Declares Readjustment of Unem
meeting inclusively Monday to ployed to Be Duty of Society,
naay or monoay to oaturaay, At Conf erence in Kansas.
and for classes convening Mon
day, Wednesday, and Friday. Stating that the government
Chapel Hill last night because of States' attitude toward the dis
the approaching examinations, I armament conference to, be held
which will begin Saturday. in Geneva, Switzerland, May 29.
Senators Russell and Coffield, This resolution, which is in
had very little to say regarding President of the United States Hj?Wf
Wo.nW rota Pnolla on Via WtAnr ftf State, has .nsempie maite qeww -
only remarks were,
nothing to say," while
i n-vc its iw uuiyuisc aj i4v wavj.
Coffield these high officials the opinions
pearance on Duke Campus.
"Nations can no more live to
themselves today than individ
uals can," said Mr. Daniels, re
viewing how the United States
tried to live to herself during
the first part of this century.
Provincialism and nationalism ,
are the causes of the recent de
pression, according to the Mexi
can ambassador.
Nations can't sell to people
unless they buy from them,"
said the speaker, telling how the
saiH "T was nm't rlisnrmmnt.pfl I rvf .V10 s.nrlpnt hfldv of the Unl
,. m i i l-i t .4.i 1 I " M " 4-4- I - . - -
courses meeting ruesuay ana coma proviae proper vocational , T fhnt. wp WArA fft Wrmfv nf Nrth Carolina
rnursaay, or ;iuesday, inurs- guidance ic-r one oi its wooers fee deprived of the privilege of
iay, and Saturday are eitner as- ior tne equivalent OI tne amount ui h( tpam f rom Wo-
i j i i i . i jni ; i 4 : 4 : i j : I
signea pn vne scneaui ur win requireu to iiiani uani a suiuici
"be announced by the instructors ten days, Dr. M. R. Trabue, di-
after consultation with the Uni- rector of the Bureau of Educa-
versity registrar. tional Research of the Univer-
All 11:00 o'clock classes ex- sity, yesterday addressed the
ept history 3 will hold exami- JNational uonterence oi bociai
nations; Monday morning, June Work in Kansas City.
man-s College."
Favor Decision Debates
The calling off of the debate
necessitated a change of pro-
Presenting the 97th concert United States has tried to act
since its founding in 1931, the on the theory of trading at home
as fiarniina Snlnn PTispmble nlaved to give every citizen a chance to
well as the combined yiewsof L & jomt program with the Uni. get rich.
versity Glee club in Duke Uni- Talks on Mexico
versity last night. Speaking on conditions in Mex-
TbP mnsiral tirooram was aiv- 1C0 at the request Of the or-
en under the auspices of the f0 lnef Mr. Daniels
Duke University Y. M. C. A. and ceQ xnf aeveiopment oi ae-
mocracy m tne nations to tne
icies
colleges and universities
throughout the south.
Sent to 36 Schools
The netition was sent to a
trrout) of 36 other schools for
- mt
rnm an. Vi n oonoQ nn r I Qf-Hrn immir1l nfpl V ITTVTl its be
64m, i,4i "iiuiv- uoowu vviuwMvxx 4 t i i r if v, 1 tUY 111 tllC llittlUllS MJ
bill: Re- ing drawn up. Replies have-6 "c , t isouth and outlined theirs!
a uwtuooivu ii 4 v- vx. 4- L inan;,nfB 0TAn0nMi w s""1" ouumeu tncir policies
solved, that all University de- been received already from the Pus entertainments sponsored by P
4, at 9 :00 o'clock. Monday af- Dr, Trabue, whose address bates should be decision contests, greater part of these schools, "le "Mexico and T.atin America
a ' 4 n .nn 1 1 n I 4141 3 urn "U , , J T3 I . . . I . , n j I TVin no-i tiroe tViQ oonnnH on.
xernoon at :ov v ciock. an sec- was enutieu j. ecmnqueo m xvc- Tni was debated under and m almost every case tne out- xiicwui, owxiv - , nq r,.f .j.. -p
. .. I p . - - . CI 1 ' I VVUMJ VA1U V M AiV Tf UI4 llli WJ.
lions of history 3 meeting at adjusting the Unemployed to the senate's plan of floor organi- look is exceptionally bright. Al- pearance. ..of the Carolina Sal9n nationai affairs has been born on
11 -00 rkVlnpV nnrl a.t. "12i00 Tnfiiist.vv." baspd his? conclusions I ensemble at Duke University, h, .... JM . , . .
.j...v,w v "i -,t v - liawuu wiin ocnawio vuvuigwu wiuugu ..-v-wv - i tnis continent, saia tne amuas-
o'clock, an z:uu o ciock classes, upon nis recent experiences as an(i Russell being floor leaders might -be exerted Dy: tnose ac uieaentatiun ux tne , - trarine- thp foreien noli-
- 1 1 n T 1 fl " 11 1 " J 4- 1 .. I . i 1 1 I -i , J 4-1. nTnmnn'n f'-il I O 1 7
and an sections oi nistory organizer oi tne aajustinent sei- for the afiirmative and negative, groups wmcn nave already oeen tia in tne yyuumuB cies of Woodrow Wilson and
vice in New York and his con- respectively. Under their lead- contacted, the league feels that IJuke was so well-received tnat Frankim d. Roosevelt.
nection witn a similar oureau m ership the debate moved rapidly no stone should be leit unturn- me men s campus abiteu tu neax gouth American - states jid
Minnesota. ; ' tn a climax which resulted in a ed in increasing: the effectiveness the musicians. Directed by Thor
Blames Social Order favorable vote of 12-9. of its action. Johnson, senior m the musical advocated by Wiison- because
Continuing his. discussion of Speaking for the affirmative It is more than probable that scnooi and iounaer oi tne ur- nations dont jike to be regard-
unemployment, the speaker were Senators JUddleman, Ken-J the University group win oe tne cnestra, tne odiun eil&ci;imc ed as little brothers, according
(Continued on page two)
meeting at 12 :00 o'clock will be
examined.
All 12:00 o'clock classes ex
cept history 2 and 3 will have
term quizzes Tuesday morning,
June 5, at 9 :00 o'clock. Tuesday
(Continued on page two)
BARNES INDUCTED
BY UNION BOARD
Hetiring and New Boards of
Directors Plan New Wings
To Graham Memorial.
The joint annual meeting of
the old and new boards of direc
tors of Graham Memorial was
lield Monday night in the ban
quet room of Graham-Memorial
at which the new director of
the Union, Harper Barnes, was
officially installed, to take effect
August 1. J
In the absence of Virgil
"Weathers, the new chairman of
the board, Barnes officiated. It
-was decided by the board not to
install furniture in the rooms of
Graham Memorial that are used
for private enterprises.
To Organize Programs
Predominant in the meeting
'was the discussion of future
plans for the building. Plans
Tvere discussed for the finishing
of the two wings that are yet
to be built. It was also decided
by the board that a plan for the
unification of campus programs
should he centralized in the
building, with .the director act
ing as chairman and assigning
dates for various musical, dra
matic and athletic programs, in
order to prevent conflicts.
It was decided that members
of both the old and the new
boards of directors that are re
maining in Chapel Hill this sum
mer should have charge of the
Graham Memorial administra
tion during the summer months
stated that any social order drick, Kahn, and Hunt. For the
which permits its industrial sys- negative the speakers were Sen-
m to throw laborers out of ators Russell, Weaver, Coffield,
work in order to increase the and Sarratt.
operator's profits should be held
comnletelv responsible for the
j v
consequences.
As a suggestion for what
should be done to prevent unem
ployment and the accompanying
injustice, Trabue said that the
state should keep its workers up-
to-date by readjusting them to
the changes in industry and by
establishing a state organization
which would guarantee greater
social justice to its laboring
class.
Discussing the technique of
central force in collecting the played three groups of selections.
joint resolutions of all those
schools acting in conjunction
(Continued on page two)
uman Skulls Stare Hollow-Eyed
At Visitors To Weird Collection
Skull Cast Collection of Dr. J. B. Bullitt Begun Many Years Ago
When He Was a Boy; Now Contains Many Skulls of
Rare Value in Study of Prehistoric Times.
o
Miller Directs Songs
Professor H. Grady Miller of
the music department conducted
the singing of the Glee club
which rendered four sets of se
lections.
Hubert Liverman, pianist,
played his own rendition of Men
delssohn's "Concerto in D
Minor," opus 40, and was accom-
SPEAKERS NAMED
FOR GRADUATION
.... . -
Harry L. Hopkins and Henry M.
Landis Will Deliver Com
mencement Addresses.
Monstrous and diminutive, of
intelligent and of stupid appear
ance, anthropoid and human
skulls stare in hollow-eyed in
spiration of awe from the
shelves of Dr. J. B. Bullitt's skull
cast collection. Here is renre-
vocational readjustment, Trabue sented as far as is known, each
said. "The requirements of the
job and the qualifications of the
workers must be expressed in
exactly the same scales and!
units, 'because the usual job
analvsis is made in terms of
great step in the development of
man, from the time of the Java
"ape-man" to the different races
of the world today.
Probably the oldest relics of
which Dr. Bullitt has a cast is
what is to be done rather than that of pithecanthropus, or the
in the characteristics oi tne per
sons who do these things well." known This creature cannot be
The speaker also advised a called ape as his brain capacity
modernizing of the classifica- is shown by the skull-cap to have
tions used by present vocational been very mucn greater than any
adjusters to designate the vari- primate except man himself,
ous occupations and the char- Yet he ranks so far below iater
acteristics required by each, say- man that many hesitate to class
ing that the thousands of job him in the genus homo
titles that have been so long in the Missing Link x
use are in many cases confusing jug'mg by his very scant re-
or absolutely meaningless. mains and bv the appearances
of later types, Pithecanthropus
resembles closely the imagina
G. Wallace Smith, associate tive portraits ot the "missing
professor in the school of engi- link": bushy beetling, brows; a
neering, will go to the Uniyer- head with hardly a forehead,
sity of Michigan this summer suddenly receding above the
where he will resume, work on heavily ridged brows; long, yel
his master degree in civil engi- low teeth; a massive, under
neering. slung jaw jutting out from the
Smith to Pursue Degree
Harry L. Hopkins, FERA ad-
panied by the orchestra in a spe-1 ministrator from Washington,
flof fo... o oi Jcial subsidiary part arranged byiand Henry M. Edmonds, Presby-
most "cut away" chin. Imagine J onnson' conductor.
also a small, round eye, a hairy The orchestra played Over-
face and body, and a generally ture in D" by Gretry, "L'Arle-
dull and unintelligent aspect sienne Suite number two by
and you.probably have a picture Bizet, "Dornroeschen Waltz
of the most ancient known form from Tschaikowsky's Sleeping
of humanity, reckoned to have Beauty," "Procession of Cauca-
w , - -
noW, and "Guitar Spieler" by
Schytte.
The Glee club sang selections
by Wagner, Bach, Gretchinoff,
Mauder, and a group of Russianl
folk songs. v
GRAHAM MEMORIAL ROOM
IS BEING REDECORATED
lived from one-half to one mil- sian Chiefs," by , Ippolitow-Iva-
1: l..Vxr
non years ago.
The next cast on the shelf is;
of a skull-cap half -buried in a
hard formation.' This is of Sin- j
anthropus, the latest very impor
tant of .anthropologists, which,
as the name implies, was discov
ered in China. At the time of
Dr. Bullitt's acquisition of the
cast the uncovering of the skull
had not been completed, for
which reason a representation
of the rock of the strata in
which it lay appeared in the
cast itself. Sinanthropus had
about 15 greater brain capac
ity than Pithecanthropus, and
must have been comparatively
intelligent, as the existence sur
rounding implements, ashes,
and cinders point to the fact
that he had enough reason to
use them.
After a few less significant
heads came the skull of a Nean-
derthal man. a type tnat mi-
(Continued on last page)
Painters are at work on the
north lobby of Graham Memorial
redecorating it in order that it
may be made into a card, smok
ing, and general lounge room.
Furniture for the room has
already arrived, and it is expect
ed that the new room will be
ready for use in the immediate
future. '
Commencement Committee
The commencement week com
mittee will meet with Tom Nis
bet, chairman, during chapel
period this morning in the Y. M.
C. A. lobby.
terian minister from Birming
ham, will be the principal speak
ers at the 139th commencement
of the University. Hopkins will
deliver the graduation address
and Edmonds will be the bacca
laureate speaker.
Hopkins, who is the best
known now in his role of the pro
fessional relief -giver, is a figure
of considerable importance in
Washington, according to the
magazine, Time, which recently
carried an article about him in
which was reported a recent sen
ator's statement that if Roose
velt ever became a deity Hopkins
would be his prophet.
Dr. Henry Morris Edmonds
is the pastor of the Independent
Presbyterian church of Birm
ingham, where he has served
since 1915. Besides being a
trustee of Cumberland Univer
sity, he is a member of the Birm
ingham Rotary club, the Masons,
Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Kap
pa Phi.
Co-ed Tea Today
The Woman's association of
the University will have a tea
this afternoon from 4:30 to 6:00
o'clock in Spencer hall.