.Fraternity ...GoTOcM:To..Gomttrol Greek Social Activities HDITORIALS: H Bouquets 1 J Booing W EATHER: Fair and tcarmer -Ttf ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- Z 525 VOLUME XLVIII Btttinest: 988? f Circulation: 9S86 CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1940 Editorial: 4356) New.: 4351 1 Nljht: 6906 NUMBER 102 Protest Of eiit To DougMon News Briefs By United Press HELSINKI, Feb. 7 -Finnish high command announces slaughter of 1, 800 Russians in fighting north of Lake Ladoga; send appeal to civilians to round up Russian "Suicide Squad" parachutists. I . WESTERN FRONT Quiet day ffith minor artillery fire. LONDON Government prepares fpr new crisis in Anglo-Irish relations liter execution of two Irish Republi can armed terrorists. DUBLIN Angry Irish demonstra tors elevate to martyrdom two young I rish Republicans executed by the E British; possibility develops that de Vfalera may be driven from premier- THE HAGUE Special police guard ssigned to delegates of 10 nations Holding League of Nations Social ise onomic conference here after Dutch Mazi party accuses them of plotting ),o inflict economic, and political penal ties on Germany. TOKYO Grave strain on Japa- fese-American relations emphasized Lfi parliament when foreign minister feys attitude of, government,, toward Lggestion that Americans be with- rawn from Japanese controlled areas China is too delicate for comment. MOSCOW Government protests French government against police id Monday on Soviet trade office in . a . . . t j iris ioiiowea Dy aeienuon 01 kus- n officials and searches of their mes. WASHINGTON Senate foreign relations committee clears decks for financial aid to war-invaded Finland and China while house defeats two proposals aimed at breaking off diplo matic "relations with Russia. WASHINGTON Congressional economy bloc, with Vice-President Garner among its leaders, suffers mil lion dollar set-back as senate brings $1,139,693,528 independent offices bill to brink of passage. WASHINGTON William Dudley Pelley, suave goateed leader of the silver shirts, calmly informs Dies com mittee that "three sets of G-men" in vestigated him last year and "sort of seemed to approve of my organiza tion." NEW YORK Seventeen members of Christian front plead not guilty' after federal grand jury indicts them (Continued on page 2, column 6) , Weisiger To Speak On Careers Tonight At Graham Memorial Program Is First In Vocational Guidance Series i "Vocations for Today," Graham Memorial's series to provide students with a study of a choice of jobs in later life, will be inaugurated tonight at 7:30 in the main lounge of the student union, when Kendall Weisi ger, vice president and director of personnel of Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph company, will speak on "How Should I Select a Career?" Weisiger will make his address and then answer any questions which the audience might have concerning their choice of a vocation. The speaker has had considerable experience in person nel directorship both within the Southern Bell company and while in the army. A graduate of VPI, he supervised, as chairman of the com mittee on classification of personnel ii the army, the installation of per ( , (Continued on page 2, column 6) E Ml lie NY A Cut s Graham Endorses ASU Drive Against Proposed Reductions Keynoted by an inspirational en dorsement of the ASU drive by Presi dent Frank P. Graham, a mass meet ing of 80 University students last night in Gerrard hall sent a resolution to Representative R. L. Doughton, chair man of the house Ways and Means committee, protesting the proposed re duction of NYA appropriations in Con- gress. President Graham deplored the plight of the 290 NYA students who would be compelled to drop out of school, should the entire project be abolished. Pointing out-that 94 of the self-help students would leave the University upon the passage of the 29 per cent cut, Dr. Graham described the specifications which NYA em ployees had to meet. "All students re- rp.virny nirl frtvm fha Mo inn o 1 Vmili Administ.ratinn must mposnro m- tn vigorous character and scholastic re quirements. They must have a "C" average, and be in the upper 50 per cent of their high school graduating class. Twelve out of the 29 who made Phi Beta Kappa last year were NYA students." In the course of the meeting a tele gram from a mass ASU meeting being held at Women's College in Greens boro.was received with approximately 1,000 signatures on the petition. The telegram sent to congress from the campus meeting was signed by every one of the students present. Dean R. B. House pointed out that the University is dependent upon the NYA for the valuable work they per form. He stated, "The University is not in position to reallocate this work to other University employees, be cause of a lack of funds. Therefore any cut in appropriations would be disastrous to both the University and NYA boys." Among the campus leaders who spoke at the three hour mass meeting were Lee Wiggins, chairman of the national American Student union, and Phil Ellis, member of the Debate coun cil. Wiggins explained that the pro posed NYA cuts had a close connec tion to all slices on social agencies. Stressing the need for student inter est in important problems, the ASU head expressed the need for proper methods and techniques for voicing protests to the congressmen. Ellis, Continued on page A, column 6) Collections Staff Will all members of the collections staff of the Daily Tar Heel please report to the business office today at 2 o'clock. Kendall Weisiger . . vocational guide . . . CSS3CS-J.iJ.i-. l-.i. ... ii... , , t-r--T, - MOVE MARKS STEP TOWARD COMPLETE SELFVERNMENT Ficklen Explains Provisions Of Four-Point Plan Marking a step toward complete student self-government, the Interf ra ternity council last night unanimous ly agreed to support an administration approved plan to throw the responsi bility for social activities within the Greek houses on the fraternity presi dents. Passage of the plan ended a two week period in which coeds were not allowed to visit fraternity houses. In a four-point document drawn up by a special committee appointed to study the fraternity problem, stipula tions are made for entertaining women students in the houses, for obtaining permission from the council for all; houseparties and dances, for maintain-) ing a council list of approved chaper- L ons, and for stressing the responsibility the fraternity presidents are taking up on themselves in accepting the pro posals. VIOLATIONS Studie Ficklen, president of the coun cil, explained that violations of the regulations would be treated, by the presidents as a group, and that indi-i vidual cases would be turned over to j the Woman's council in the case of coeds and the Student council regard ing men. The Interfraternity council will take all action regarding the Greek house which violates the rules. Each; president is on his honor to report cases - which occur within his house. Women students, under the new set up, can be entertained only in the so cial rooms, halls, porches, and dining halls on the first floor of Greek houses. No alcoholic beverages may be served in the presence of coeds who are guests in a fraternity. - HOURS Fraternity houses wil be open to women students from 1 o'clock Monday through Friday afternoons, and from 10 o'clock Saturday and Sunday morn ings, until 15 minutes prior to the time at which they are required by the University to be in their rooms. Coeds may visit fraternity houses after dances only on the occasion of an or ganized reception party approved by the Interfraternity council that is ade quately chaperoned. Application for approval of after-dance parties must be submitted to the chairman of the council on the regular form provided for that purpose three days in ad vance of the party. APPLICATIONS An application and written report must be handed in to the council be (Continued on page 4, column 2) Town Cuts Garbage Collecting Costs With New Invention New and improved trucking service will reduce by one-fourth the cost of garbage collection in Chapel Hill, J. L. Caldwell, town manager, said yester day. A new dumper, designed by Mr. Caldwell and J. S. Boone, members of the1 village fire department, has re duced the man power required to han dle the truck and collection from eight to six. The new body, which the inventors plan to patent, is arranged with pul leys, which operate a small hopper at the rear of the truck. The hopper can be lowered near the ground and re fuse may be dumped into the hopper without causing the collectors unneces sary strain. After refuse is placed in the hopper, pulleys draw the hopper over the en closed body and dump the material into an automatic opening into the steel enclosed body. A steel sheet is planned to push and pack the refuse The new truck, because it can carry a heavier load with less effort, saves labor, motor fuel and time, the in ventors claim. Exact amount of sav ing cannot be determined yet since the new service has been operating only a few days, but experiments so far indi cate a saving of at least 25 per cent. roeedmur - . & King, Queen, Subjects I X ' - - - ,J f - fA U SSL - s T- " - ' 'J "' " -- X $ s- r .a k. .... - ...,. ..:-:vWji..iiiii.i 11 1 1. 1 iinuwii imw mmmmmm mmiu ..i.iuiiniw )i.iili.i.LiiiliiMHlw.JMmL'ijM". ,HlHh )yMS(i$iiy--: . . I I mm mm mm u i tfii ' iimimm i n ii i iin iMiniiMiTiiiniYnniiiiniiiiMii iiiiiiir-'iaiMiTrfflWr - - - - - - ' sw.K.-.:-. .... Caught in an informal pose, Their Queen Marjorie Johnston make merry Below, the queen awards prizes for ball. Reading left to right in the lower as "Indian Thumber," John Henry Hampton Caldwell as "The Martins Waltz," and Ed Heghinian as "Tales William Meade Prince as "Dixie" and Miss Johnston. STREETS DAMAGED GREATLY BY SNOW Town Loses $2,000 v In Recent Freeze Damages amounting to over $2,000 to asphalt and tar streets during the recent below zero weather were re ported yesterday by John L. Caldwell, town manager. Asphalt streets, laid in 1937, were cracked and crumbled. In many places, the town manager found the prepara tion had been ground to dust. Rose mary and Church streets will have to be replaced to a great extent. Pritch ard and North streets and Tenney Circle will be patched. Streets surfaced in 1937 were given j emulsified tar treatment, the tar be ing mixed with about 35 per cent water at high temperature. The town man ager said that the streets were not blocked after the first crushed stone was placed and that motorists running over the streets caused the heavier stone to be thrown to the sides, leav ing the stone layers thin. In many places he found that water had seeped under the sides and had (Continued on page U, column S) Woman's Association Will Meet Today The Woman's association . will hold an important meeting this afternoon at 5 o'clock in Gerrard hall. The fraternity plan will be an nounced and discussed. Gray-headed Melville Corbett has stated that the meeting will be compulsory. TTD. telw f fx 1 Highnesses King Sherman Smith and at the annual Student-Faculty day. the best costumes at the "Song Title picture the winners are: Ralph Bowman Lewis as "Trees," Ben Turner and May and the Coys," Lola Offer as "Vienna from Vienna Woods," and Mr. and Mrs. "Long, Long Ago" respectively, and Playmakers Select Katherine Mallory For New Production The search for a girl to play the lead in "Kiss the Boys Goodbye," which will be the fourth Playmaker produfetion this year, almost equalled the quest for an actress to play Scar lett O'Hara in "Gone With the Wind." Miss Catherine Mallory of Savannah, Ga., has finally been selected to play the heroine in Clare Boothe's parody on the casting of "Gone With the Wind." John 1 Parker will direct the show which is to be presented On February 28 and 29 and March 1 and 2. The cast is made up of 13 charac ters in addition to Miss Mallory. JoeJ Salek will play the part of Lloyd Lloy (Continued on page 4, column 4) I Becker Climbs Among Nation Band Engaged For Inter- Dorms Has Been Broadcast ing Over NBC Regularly Bubbles Becker and his orchestra, which will play for the Inter-Dorm name for himself and aggregation way back in 1938, and since then has come a long way toward taking a place in the front rank of the nation's popu lar young bands. In that far distant era he began broadcasting regularly over the Na tional Broadcasting system and soon was filling engagements at many of the leading resorts and night clubs all over the country. Bubbles has played for dances at dance this Friday night, made quite a (Continued on page 2, column 6) F1D)(D(UL BILL SUBMITTED TO INAUGURATE CAMPUS PRIMARIES i Student Legislature To Discuss Measure At Meeting Monday Declaring that they feel a need for a general clean-up- in campus politics, Chuck Kline and Bob McLemore have drawir up a new act to revise the sys tem of campus; elections. The bill is now in the hands of the ways and means committee of the student legislature, The ways and means- committee of the student legislature- wiD meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock in 207 Graham Memorial, Agenda for the special session Monday night will be considered and will be introduced at a special meet ing of the assembly Monday night when it convenes to take up the new consti tution bill. "This plan, if adopted by the legis lature, would do away with much of the evil now existing, in the choice- of candidates by small groups which are decidedly non-democratic," Kline and McLemore stated yesterday. PRIMARY "It calls for a primary at which every member of the student body will have an opportunity to nominate his choice for any office that directly concerns him. Our bill does not call for the abolition of parties, but rather it will do away with the mock democracy of fixed conventions and steering com mittee nominations. -We fell -that the party is a necessary instrument of de mocracy but not when the party is in (Continued on page 2,' column U) H0RT0N TO PLAY HERE IN COMEDY TOMORROW NIGHT Actor Deserts Screen To Resume Career On Stage Although most of his followers have forgotten that he was originally, and for several years, an important stage actor, Edward Everett Horton, who will appear -in "Springtime For Henry" at the University tomorrow night, is returning , to the old stand after deserting it for a successful movie career. During the entire current season he will devote himself to a nation-wide tour in Benn W. Levy's Broadway hit. He will come to Chapel Hill under the auspices of the Carolina Playmakers to play in Memorial hall at 8:30. Unlike most of the other stars, Mr. Horton had his first experience in the renovated barns last summer. The well-known comedian said that his ex perience resulted from a longing to try a fall or two on a real stage once again. "Hollywood was- swell," he said. "It enabled me to buy three omes in as many parts of the country (Continued on page U, column 5) Toward Top 's Dance Bands University Band To Present First Broadcast Tonight The University band wfll give its initial radio broadcast tonight at 8:30 over station WPTF. -The program will be transmitted through the facil ities of the local studio. The concert will be made up of the following four numbers: "Miami March" by Fillmore, "Overture Hon groise" by Joseph Skornicka, "Scenes from the Sierras" by David Bennett, and the second movement of the "Nor dic Symphony" by Howard Hansen, ar ranged for concert band by Joseph Maddy.