ORIGINAL PLAYS
PIAYMAKERS THEATRE
ORIGINAL PLAYS
PLAYS I AKERS THEATRE
TONIGHT 8:30
TONIGHT 8:30
' . II 111 r : .s ' jfl I ."v V - ( i - r jf ,r-' iff- 1 1 is
II w ft ! I I 1 in . m. X if . S j 4 I t - T f I
mAw Vila ill ww Mr PP1 '
VQL1JB CHAPET. Hn.T. N. rPmAY MAV K tail XTTMRPP 171
PlMS PROPOSED
THAT INSTITUTE
Ml-ANNUALLY
Ccmmittee Appointed!,. Submit
Ideas for JNext Humans h
Relations Congress.
; A committee of students, fac-
pty members, and townspeople
Interested in furthering the
rause of the .Human " Re1in
(institute met in Gerrard hall
Wednesday night for a general
discussion of ways and means of
advancing the institute.
It was generally accepted that
instead of a quadrennial meet
iDg, the institute should meet
annually. The persons present
also agreed that its influence
should s extend not only to stu
dents on the campus, but that a
be worked out by which its m-
fiance and ideas could be pro-
mitigated throughout the state.
Vprinna nrnorama vwrp snor.
crpctpH. Snmp thmiaht t.hp tosV
of spreading information should
fv,0 i, Q
the political parties, but the
majority opposed this plan.
Among the most popular plans
offered was that ot organizing
a definite committee for political
education, advanced by Norman
Lyon. He advocated an organi
zation that would educate the
mass of people in all parts of
the state under no specific party
name. . y
The only thing finally decided
-rao Tinf hprA must bp. some
definite nlan of campaign before
tVMtt vo QrpnTYinlishPf, !
- .. . I
sc. the chairman, Beverly
Moore, annointed a committee of
six to work out a concrete pro-
. . -a in
gram, lnis committee win cun-
sider the problems to be encoun-
twA nnH Hpvisp a man which
they will submit for approval s
,p r,pvf PPtin of the insti-
tute group the week before ex- a repetition ot DreaKiast. ior
aminatioris. ?rs vis!ltin? many see
tJ ... j... u ot,
At tne same time t vvo
v,l V,of V,n inafitntP. r.om-
iivuiiu tiiu i mil Aw- .
tftWOniipr,
iiiitLet; was seiiuxxig uw6i'"v"
r.nniP of "Old Davs in Chapel
Will w TTnr,P Snmmerell Cham-
berl'ain to all the speakers who
attended the recent institute
IRIS COLLECTION
PTTT lYNT TlTftPTiAY
JL KJ JL VAl M.-.
.
W. L. Hunt, graduate ot tne
University who is known
throughout this section of the
state for his knowledge of period. Continuing with a dis
plants and plant growing, is cussion of the country's low
now exhibiting his private col- wage scale, her debt, and the
leetion of irises this week-end.
Instead of frivimr a flower
show of his collection as he has
dnnp it, thP nast. Hunt is exhibit-
inc his nlants at his garden on
North street near Henderson
street. The public is invited to
spp this collection between the
hours of 4 :00 and 6 :00 and 7 :00
and 8:00 todav. tomorrow, Sun-
or,H Mnnv when Hunt
wjll show the flowers.
- Hunt says the irises will ue on
public display rain or shine, lor
11 v hpoiitiful- on
"ivjf xc .
dark and clear days: Included
in the collection are five speci-
iui-o miinTi-ffllked
i! . i i - i t- ,..t.:t nvn
aDOUt DeaUty DUSii wiuui
i hia spplnn.
A 1, P rrovrlon p nhs
A IllilllUd UX &cx-
uum imiXL uy iu no cx.v, iuuue
tp attend this exhibit.
Senior Week Committee
Pat Patterson, president of
the senior class, requests that
the members of the senior week
committee meet with him in the
7ackety Yack office this morn-
ing during chapel period.
Bells for Tower
Word recently received from
Troy, New York, states that the
casting of the set of twelve
bells for the Patterson-Morehead
towpr nt Vi
under tTI "
- I - WJ
x uuiiuiy in iroy.
The bells' will be installed in
campanile which is being
built as a gift of two alumni of
the University, John M. More-
neaa ana Kuf us L. Patterson.
From the twelve-bell chime a
remarkably great number of
one cnanes can be made, the
set tor the University allow
mff ,091,600 chanSes-
GUSTAV PLESSOW
RELATES GERMAN
LIFE SINCE WAR
Pictures Economic Depression
That, May Bring on Political
Upheaval.
A Germany that is in desper-
?e financial straits, with almost
nal of her population under-
"shed was pictured here in
a talk by Dr. Gustav Plessow,
prominent German scholar from
Tubingen university, 'who has
been a visiting professor at the
University.
Dr. Plessow's lecture con
cluded a series that he has been
delivering before graduate stu-
den.ts and seminar groups this
spring on various aspects 01
German life. In his latest talk
he discussed German life since
tne war
mi 1 1 1 m
ine aoie wnicn tnousands ot
Germany's unempaoyea receive
is not enough to live on, Dr
"y
rmnn linmpci brpnVf nst. rnnsiisfa
-r -
01 a glass ot not water ana two
slices of rye bread, dinner is a
glass of hot water and a couple
of boiled potaties, and supper is
inotmnff or tnese conditions
m . . .
WXUCU aie iu wxc muuoniai vCxx
ters where the masses of unem-
pipyea uve.
Economic Depression
Intimating that some political
upheavel may come out of this
tremendous economic oepres
sion. Dr. Plessow declared that
the millions of followers of Hit
ler, the Fascist agitator, are
, i
mostly young peopie wnu nave
gr0wn up undernourished ana
acquainted with hardships ana
novations during the post-war
tariff walls preventing exporta-
tion. Dr. Plessow painted an ex
teremely dismal picture of the
Germany of today.
An interesting fact pointed
0ut by Dr. Plessow is that ex-
kaiser William II is today tne
wealthiest German land owner,
stiH holding the castles and vast
estates he acquired during nis
nersonally thritty reign ab em
peror ot Germany, x.
sow saia tnat aiuiuugii
self has no love ior wmwiu,
siders that Emil Ludwig has
I . -rr.i
done the lormer ivaii
injustices in his biography ot
Via Ust. of the Hohenzonerns
t rtrtnllrine Dr. . irieSSOW
m 'wu .
LaiH "T admire the goodneart
Pnerffy. IIU upxx6xx
I CU"V"") ' " - - .
the American
intuvu"
neonle. and I wish to thank this
! country for the almost excessive
hospitality ithas shown me.
Grail Tickets
Tickets for the Grail dance
will be on sale until iz.uu
today at the Book &xcnu
land Pritchard-Lioyd s.
TWO DANCES SET
FOR THIS EVENING
Phi Kappa Sigma Fraten Ity
And Woman's Association
Sponsor Social Affairs.
The Phi Kappa Sigma frater
nity and the Woman's Associa
tion will start the week-end's
social program tonight when the
groups will give individual
dances between the hours of 9 :00
and 1 :00. Three other organi
zations plan dances for this
week-end.
The Woman's Association af
fair in Spencer hall tonight will
be the spring co-ed ball, the
third dance given by the organi
zation this year. Jack Wardlaw
and his orchestra will furnish
the music.
The Phi Kappa Sigma frater
nity will be host at a dance in
the Carolina Inn tonight. Jelly
Lef twich and his university club
orchestra, of Durham, will fur
nish the music. Leftwich
x
well-known in the state
as a
popular orchestra leader.
Following the dance, the fra
ternity will entertain guests at
a buffet supper. Out of town
girls who have been invited to
the dance include : Mina Fuller,
Carolyn Fuller, Martha Horton,
Pick Welton, Orpha Clements,
Dorothy Newsome, Sara Howgr
ton, Mary Howerton, Ann Lewis,
and Margaret Lewis, Durham;
Kitty Kiker and Bobbie Hunt
Burton, Reidsville ; Alice Grubbs
and Edith Ellington, Greens
boro ; Montrose Patterson, Peg
gy Foreman, Sally Couch, Julia
Orr, and Louisa Wilson, Char
lotte; Lucy Dortch and Emily
Storr, Raleigh ; Margaret Player,
Hendersonville ; Louise Harry,
Salisbury; Irene Presson, Mon
roe; Marjorie Maston, Wilming
ton, Delaware; Rhea Monroe,
Chicago, Illinois; Pat Holder
ness, Tarboro ; and Sara Walser,
Lexington.
ENGLISH EXAMINATION IS
SET FOR THIS AFTERNOON
The examination for the re
moval of conditions on English
composition will be given this
afternoon at 4:00 p. m. in Mur
phey 201. All students who
take the examination will be re
quired to hand in a theme of
one thousand words on a topic
approved by the English depart
ment. Those who plan to take the ex
amination may come to the Eng
lish department office, Saunder3
104, to get a list of approved
topics. Individual notices will
not be sent out this spring.
Aimouecie;-
XA new Sunday policy for the Daily Tar Heel
by which well planned' national and local
features and human interest stories will
be offered. v There will be more illustra-
- i
tions and photographs.
Out Sunday, May 16
History of College Sports
A Review of the Prohibition Question Here
A Record of Three Letter Men
Bruce Barton On Advertising
"What Is Liberty?"
By Nicholas Murray Butler
The Decline of Liberalism at U. N. C.
And Other Big Article's
SENIOR WEEK TO
LAST MAY 18-22
0
Bailey, Henderson, and Graham
Are Listed Among Speakers
For Twilight Sessions.
The full program for senior
week, beginning Monday, May
18, and continuing through Fri
day, May 22, was announced
yesterday by the senior week
committee. The members of the
class are to wear beer suits all
during this time. The Carolina
theatre will entertain the mem
bers of the class with a free
show, the Campus Confection
ery providing peanuts for the
performance, Pritchard - Lloyd's
will serve drinks to the seniors.
Other firms honoring the class
of '31 are: the Hill Bakery with
cakes and pastries, the Durham
Dairy company with buttermilk,
the Paragon Ice Cream com
pany with their product, and the
Waffle Shop with coffee.
Begins Monday
The senior week program will
start Monday morning when
the seniors venture forth in
their white beer suits with a
large maroon '31 sewed on the
back . of the coat. That night
under Davie poplar, Senator
Josiah Bailey will address the
class. The following night Dr.
Archibald Henderson will speak
at the same place. Either Mr.
J. L. Calhoun or Mr. R. M.
Hanes will speak before the
graduating class Wednesday
night. The seniors will hear
Dean Justin Miller, of the Duke
law school, Thursday evening.
At the supper to take place in
the Carolina Inn at 9 :00 Friday
evening, Kemp Lewis, president
of the Alumni Association, and
President Frank P. Graham
will speak.
Epsilon Phi Delta Has
Annual Spring Initiation
Charles Duffy, John Zimmer
man, Don Shoemaker, and Larry
Flynn were taken into the Ep
silon Phi Delta Cosmopolitan
club at the annual spring initia
tion last night.
A committee of five men were
4
also appointed at the meeting to
revise and bring up to date the
constitution of the organization
The committee will report at
the reeular meeting next
Thursday.
Infirmary List
Those confined to the infirm
ary yesterday were Samuel T.
Peace, Mary Dirnberger, Frank
Dunn, and William H. Potter.
Josiah W. Bailey
f - 1
I I
I
A
United States Senator Bailey
will be the main speaker at the
second annual, congress of the
North Carolina Student Federa
tion which meets at Duke tomor
row. DR. A. HENDERSON
TALKS TO ELISHA
MTCffiLL GROUP
Mathematician Declares Uni
verse Is Expanding Because
Gravitational Pull Is Lessen
ng. ,
Dr. Archibald Henderson of
the University mathematics de
partment,-delivered an address
on, "Our Expanding Universe"
before the Elisha Mitchell scien
tific society in ' Phillips hall,
Tuesday evening at 7:30. i
This subject Is one upon
which Dr. Henderson has been
working for many years. He
has, during this time, presented
papers before many leading
scientific societies, among them,
the American association for
the advancement of science, the
American mathematical society,
and the mathematical associa
tion of America.
Dr. Henderson has also pub
lished the results of his work
in the American Mathematical
Monthly, Science, and various
other journals. The latest re
sults of Dr. Henderson's re
search will be printed in the
journal of the Elisha Mitchell
society in an extended mono
graph. Einstein's Theory
In his address Dr. Henderson
began the story of "Our Ex
panding Universe" by telling of
the theory advanced by Einstein
in 1917 that the universe was
not infinite, but limited in ex
tent, and that all matter in the
universe was scattered and of
a very small density. There are
various characteristic features
of this type of a finite universe.
Another famous astronomer,
De Sitter, of the Univeristy of
Leyden, discovered that a sec
ondary type of finite universe
was also supplied by Einstein's
equations possessing various
properites: that the universe
was conceivably and entirely
empty of matter, which meant
that the density of all known
matter was inappreciable. It
meant, secondly, that there were
systematic motions in this type
of universe. I3oth Einstein's
and De Sitter's finite universe
were assumed to be in equili
brium. Dr. Henderson spoke further
about nebulae which- are fre
quently known as spiral uni
verses. Until 1929 none of these
bodies was known to have a
higher velocity than about 1000
miles per second. During the
past two years, nebulae have
been observed having velocities
ranging from 2,400 to 11,000
(Continued ori, next page)
FEDERATION WILL
OPEN MEETING AT
DUKE TOMORROW
Second Annual Conference on
Student Government Will
Take Place in Durham.
Duke university will be the
place of meeting for the second
annual congress of the North
Carolina Student Federation
when delegates from eighteen
institutions of the state will con
vene tomorrow to discuss the
wrays and means of promoting
self government in North Caro
lina colleges.
Speakers for tomorrow's oc
casion include President Frank
Graham, of the University ;
President W. P. Few, of Duke :
Senator Josiah W. Bailey, of
Raleigh; Coach Wallace Wade,
head of athletics at Duke; Dean
Justin Miller, of the Duke law
school; and John Albert Lang,
of the University, and president
of the federation.
Program Pecided
The schedule of events for to
morrow's occasion includes reg
istration at 10 o'clock in the.
Duke student union, at which
time Mayne Albright, of the
University, and Mary Jane
Wharton, of North Carolina Col
lege for Women, will be in
charge.' At 11 o'clock the for
mal convocation will take place
in the Paige auditorium. At
this time President Few will
welcome the delegates and will
be followed by short talks by
bill VIA VWly IWtJiUUV VJL VAiV
Duke student body. Miss Edith
Leach of the Duke woman's as-.
sociation will make a short talk
of welcome.
Following this, the president
of the federation, John Lang,
Will HldftC 1113 cXllllUdl ICLld VJL
the work of the organization.
The congress will then divide
into groups so as to discuss the
phases of student government
until 12:35 when they will ad
journ for lunch.
Afternoon Meeting
Promptly at 1:30 the con
gress will reassemble. The first
thing after lunch will be a dis
cussion of the ways and means
of allying the wTork of the state
federation with the other state
student organizations such as
the North Carolina intercollegi
(Continued on next page)
CAMERON AVENUE
WILL BE PAVED
The regular meeting of the
board of aldermen took place
Wednesday night with the main
object of swearing in the maydr,
the judge of the recorder's
court, and the new aldermen.
The following committees
Were appointed with the mayor
as a member ex-officio of all of
them: M. E. Hogan, finance
committee; P. L. Burch, public
safety ; C. L. Eubanks, public
welfare ; R. D. W. Connor, pub
lic utilities; andJB. S. Thompson
and R. M. Trimble, public
works. In addition to these
committees L. B. Rogerson was
appointed, town accountant.
, The board of aldermen au
thorized the issuency of $ 5000
in bond-anticipation notes for
the paving of Cameron Avenue
eighteen feet wide through the
center from Columbia to Mallett
Street. 1
The board of aldermen in
structed the city manager to see
that all traffic regulations are
enforced diligently in the fut
ure. The Bank of Chapel Hill was
made official depository for the
town by the board.