PARKER LECTURE LAW BUILDING 8:20 TONIGHT PARKER LECTURE LAW BUILDING 8:30 TONIGHT aS III! VOLUME XXXVIII FIRST WOMEN TO mm phi ta m "IMMORTALIZED" Names of Wells, Douglas, and Crisfield May Go. Down In History as Crusaders. The Phi Assembly last night, in an. unusual occasion, upset-a century-old precedent byadmit ting three co-eds into member ship. The co-eds who, in join ing . the assembly, upset the old rule are as follows : Kathrine P. Wells of Mississippi, Virginia Douglas Of Guilford county and Beatrice Cresfield of Mecklen burg county. Others initiated on this occa sion included Warren F. Olm stead, J. K. Galloway, W. I. Skinner, J. C. Rawles, W. A. Withers, S. G. Morse, M. A. Simons and E. D. Fysal. Speaker Carr announced that the bill for discussion would be postponed until the next meet ing due to the lengthy initiation ceremonies and other business which was pending at this time. In a discussion with Speaker Carr the assembly voted to change the date of the dance from May 10 to Friday evening, May 16, the dance to last from 6 to 9 o'clock. It was decided to make the affair informal and time early in the evening. Sev eral prizes will be offered to the first three couples on the floor not later than 6:15. Tickets will be sold to students desiring them. Music for the, occasion will be f urnished by Jack Wardlaw and his orchestra. Harold McDonald of Candor was a visitor at the meeting. COUNCIL TARES ACTION AGAINST CMCKOFFENSES Jurisdiction To Be Extended To Out-of-Town Cases. At a meeting Monday night of the new student council and J. A. Williams, who handles bad checks of University students, a new rule was passed which re quires students to appear before the student council for the sec ond bad check offense. Hereto fore Williams dealt with both the first and second offenses," but from now on the new rule will bring about more stringent ac tion toward those students who persist in violation, The old rule gave students the right of appeal after suspension whereas the new regulation necessitates the appearance of offenders be fore the council before suspend sion. The student council has also decided to take cognizance of bad checks given by Carolina stu dents in other towns than Chapel Hill. If a student goes to Greensboro, Durham or any other city and gives a bad check, he is required, if the check is reported, to appear before Wih liams for the first offense and for offenses thereafter , before the council. This move has been made to protect- the credit of the University students in dis tant cities, and also to demon strate to merchants that stu dents of the University of North Carolina may be expected to pay checks and to make good all those that are bad. According to Mr. Williams, if a student does not report to him (Continued on last page) Final Plans For Organization North Garolina Federation Of Students Completed Yesterday - o . " ; Union To Be Formed Here Saturday, May 10 ; Colleges Of State Favor Plan And Complete Representation Expected; Carolina's Delegates Appointed. (By K. C. Ramsay) Final arrangements for the organization of the North Carolina Federation of Students were completed yesterday at a meeting of a student body committeed by President Greene to formulate plans. The federation is to be organized here next Saturday, May 10. : . . ' ' The proposed constitution? calls for at least two delegates from each college with an ad ditional delegate for each addi tional five hundred students. Dues to! the federation shall be $6 for the first 500 students rep resented, and $3 for each addi tional 500. Meetings of the fed eration shall be held annually. Lang Reports Favorably John Lang, chairman of the constitution committee, report ed on correspondence with the several colleges. During the past week a committee has been to Wake Forest, State College, Duke, Meredith, Greensboro Col lege, N. C. State and Guilford to discuss the plans with student officials there and they all spoke favorably of the plan. While at the Y conference at Guilford during the past week-end, Lang saw many leaders from the other colleges in the state and they were all interested in the federation. Something over30 delegates have already declared their intentions to be present May 10. Explanatory letters - contain ing a program of the convention and a copy of tjie proposed con stitution were .mailed to the several colleges yesterday. Convention Program The opening business session will be held Saturday morning, May 10, at 9 :30 in Gerrard hall. At this time the proposed con stitution and by-laws i will be discussed, and a committee chos en to prepare the document for adoption at the afternoon ses sion. President of the Carolina student body, Ralph Greene, will preside. Arrangements for luncheon were not definitely arranged at yesterday's meeting, but the entertainment ' committee an nounced that they would be com pleted at once. . The constitution committee will report at the afternoon ses sion, which is to begin in Ger rard hall at 2 :30, and final changes before adoption will be made. Professor Frank Graham will address the body with a speech of welcome at this time. A banquet is scheduled for the Carolina Inn Saturday evening at 6 :30. The officers of the fed eration will be elected at this meeting. The conference will adj ourn after a place for the 1931 meeting Ts selected. President Greene appointed as delegates from the University to the federation5 Ray Farris, Will Yarborough, John Lang, K. C. Ramsay, Mayne Albright and Ed Hamer. These men are chairmen of the several sub-committees which have carried out the plans of organization. Mem bers of the organization com mittee other than the above are Beatty Rector, M. James, H. N. Patterson, Harper Barnes, E. C. Daniel, Mac Covington and Jack Dungan. ' The University Railway, from Chapel ' Hill to University Sta tion, was partially built with itonvict labor. CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1930 Golf Notice The Board of Governors of the golf committee of the Chapel Hill golf club wish to caijl to (jhe attention of all students and non-members that it will be necessary in the future to purchase a tick et from the Book Exchange or Student Supply Store be fore going "on the course. Tickets in tjie future will not be sold on the course, and no one will be allowed to play who has not complied with this rule. SENATE REMAINS MALES Refuses To Follow Flighty Phi, v Whose Membership Embraces Weaker Sex. At the regular meeting of the Dialectic Senate last night, a bill from the Phi was presented reading, "Resolved, That co-eds should be admitted to the foren sic societies at the University. The senators voted to strike the bill from the calendar, refusing even to discuss it. The second resolution which came before the Senate was "Resolved, That Josiah W. Bailey should be the Democratic nominee from North Carolina for the United States senate." After much heated discussion, which eventually developed into an age-old Hoover-Smith contro versy, the resolution was passed. President sBeatty' Rector ad dressed the senate on parliamen tary procedure and explained the duties of the sergeant-at-arms. President Rector also called for a report of the banquet commit tee at the next meeting. Hugh Wilson was voted into the senate and will be initiated with a number of others , at the next initiation ceremony which will be the last one this quarter. A calendar of unusually in teresting legislation is being pre pared for the senate session next Tuesday night. GLEE CLUB GIVES FINAL CONCERT AT WASHINGTON The University glee club wil leave by bus for Washington, D. C, to give the final program of the spring tour. The concert will be held tonight in the Gold Room of the Mayflower hotel It is sponsored by several alum ni of the University who live in Washington. Senior Examinations The comprehensive exami nation for all seniors in the School of Liberal Arts will be held Saturday, May 3 at 9:00 o'clock a. m. All seniors who expect to graduate should communicate with their re spective department heads if they have not already done SO. : : : . SIX FRATS WILL GIVE COLORFUL HOPS TfflS WEEK Over a Hundred Girls Expected On Week-End House Parties. LEFTWICH TO GIVE MUSIC An outstanding group of fra ternity dances will be held this week-end. The dances are be ing sponsored by the Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi, Zeta Psi, Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta Pi, and Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternities. For mal dances will be held in the Bynum gymnasium on Friday and Saturday nights, and a dan sant will be held Saturday af ternoon at the Washington Duke hotel in Durham. r Jelly Lef twich and his band will play for both of the Satur day dances,, while the Florida TT LI T- 1 "! i it nnymm rana, airect irom a winter engagement in Florida at the Tampa Yacht Club, will play for the dance Friday night. Lef twich and his boys played for the University mid-winter dances and proved to be so pop ular that he has been engaged to play for these dances. The latter orchestra, one of the most famous negro orchestras in the country, has a large following due to the quality of music it is reputed to put out. No pains are being spared to decorate the gymnasium for the affair. It will be decorated as a seaside caberet. The orchestra will be dressed as sailors, and will play from the orchestra pit which will be disguised as an old weather-beaten wharf. Around he walls many different kinds of oriental trophies will lend the atmosphere , of tropic splendor. Frazier Glenn and Baron Holmes are doing the decorat ing. Both of these men have established quite a reputation for themselves as decorators. Art Sickles, Sigma Chi; will act as chairman of the dance committee, assisted by Mosely Fbnveille, Phi Delta Theta, Mar ion Follin, Beta Theta Pi, Willis Henderson, Sigma Nu, Dail Hol- derness, Delta Kappa Epsilon, and Charles Lee Smith Zeta Psi. There will be various other means of entertaining the large number of guests that are ex pected. The Sigma Chi frater nity, will entertain for their house guests at their house Sat urday evening with a buffet supper, a twingnt aance wm be given from six to nine Friday night by the Thirteen Club. A large number of girls has been invited to the 'Hill" this week-end, over 100 of them be ing , expected from all over the country, from as far west as Montana ; from as far South as Florida ; and as far north as Toronto, Canada. Without doubt the week-end of dances and house parties will be one of the outstanding social occasions of the entire year. Sigma Nu will have as its house guests Miss Hazel Perkins of Windell, Lib Bryan of Raleigh, Betsy Coke of Richmond, Mary Hickerson, Helen White, Peter Whitehead of Wilson ; 'Francis Shute of Monroe, Lacinda Wat- kins, Anna Mack Redf era of Monroe, Jeanette Ernst of Chap el Hill, Kitty Boddie of Louis burg, Jerry Lee . of Lynchburg, Nancy Watts of Charlotte,. An nette Tucker of Raleigh, Dova Little, Caroline Blanton of Shel by ; Dit Quarles of Charlotte ; (Continued on page two) New York Lawyer 5 -1 r Junius Parker (above), noted New York attorney and former ly chairman of the board of di rectors of the American Tobacco Company, who is this week de livering a series of three lec tures before the University Law School. His general topic is the relation of business and the state. , CHAPEL HILL SET FOR FLOWER SHOW Exhibits To Be Shown Thursday From 12 M. to Midnight; Many Prizes. The women's clubs of the village are busy this week with preparations for Chapel Hill's annual flower show to be staged in the Tin Can Thursday, -May 1. ,The show . will open at noon, and close at midnight, and in dications are that the University and village will be treated to such a display of flowers as is rarely seen. In addition to the flowers there will be exhibitions of colo nial furniture, luncheon anld dinner table decorations, land scapings and garden layouts. . Miss Josephine Sharkey's dancing class will give a per formance of folk danciner at 4 o'clock in the afternoon and, at 8 : 30 in the evening. The Tin Can will be open for potted plants and entries other than cut flowers, and dining table service on Wednesday af ternoon and night. All cut flower exhibits are to be in by 10:30 Thursday morning, at which time the doors will be closed, and will remain closed until 12, while the fudges cast their Votes. Colonel Joseph Hyde Pratt, will deliver the two erarden nrizes just before the dancing begins in the afternoon. Invitations to the show have been sent by the Garden 'Club here to clubs in Raleigh, Dur ham, Greensboro, Danville and other communities. The prizes are made possible by individuals of Chapel Hill and merchants in Chapel Hill, Durham, Carrboro and Greensboro. Buccaneers Are Out The Scientific Number of The Carolina Buccaneer is due to ap pear tonight. This will be the last number to be put out by this vear's staff. The cover has been drawn by Bobbie Mason. Comprehensive Examinations The senior examination in the department of economics and commerce for the spring quarter will be held Saturday, May 3, at 8:30 a. m. in room 202 Bingham hall. i V'-" y i I NUMBER 157 ANTI-TRUST LAWS SECOND SUBJECT PARKERLECTURES Clayton and Sherman Acts No Source of Special Litigation Says New Yorker. The Sherman Anti-Trust Law, the Clayton Act, and the Fed eral Trade Commission Act were discussed here last night by Junius Parker, noted New York lawyer and formerly chairman of the board of directors of the American Tobacco Company, in the second of a series of three lectures before the University law school on the general sub ject of "Business and the State." Discussing the two principal additions of the Clayton Act to the Sherman law; namely, the forbidding of the tying cqv-" enants in sale or lease contracts, and the forbidding of the acqui sition by -one corporation of stock in another if such elimin ates any competition between the two, Mr. Parker expressed the view that the "Clayton Act is well on the way that the Sher man law has taken. "It will not long be a statute in the sense that a statute of limitations is a statute, or that a statute providing for the or ganizing of corporations, or for the execution of wills, or for the administration of the estate of a decedent, or for the collection of revenue is a statute. It will be .at least a part of our Ameri can common law not useless by any means, butto be adminis tered in accordance with the views of the court as to what it ought to forbid, and therefore (Continued on last page) STRING QUARTET WILL PLAY HERE NIGHT OF MAY 10 Event Is One of Two Remaining On Entertainment Com mittee's List. The Cincinnati Chamber Or chestra, a string quartet un der the direction of Wal ter Heermann, has been def initely booked for a concert on May 10 at the Methodist church, dent entertainment committee. Mr. Heerman, the conductor, is well known to the music pub ic as a distinguished concert cellist, and is one of the out standing men of the, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. He is "a member of the faculty of the Cincinnati College of Music and is a prominent figure in the Na tional High School Orchestra Camp at Interlocken, Mich. The Cincinnati Chamber Or-, chestra is a concert offering, of the first rank, giving programs of outstanding value and beau ty. It has been highly praised by critics and the music-loving public wherever it has appeared. The student entertainment committee has been very for tunate in securing this well known orchestra for a concert which will, probably, be the out standing feature on the spring program of entertainment. It will be recalled that the world-famous Flonzali Quartet, which has now disbanded, was exceedingly popular in its ap pearance here last year. The exact hour of the program will be announced at a later date.