'ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN' v MONDAY NIGHT 8:30 MEMORIAL . HALL zz "n VESPER CONCERT NELSON O. KENNEDY HILL' MUSIC HALL 4:00 r I til i 2 i I I 111 i I -""fi ... M"WWMMW1 VOLUME XL WORK OF LOCAl PERSONS CHOSEN BY PLAYMAKERS Mrs. Bailey's "Strike Song" Will Be Offered as Next Perform ance December 10, 11, and 12. The Carolina Playmakers an nounced yesterday that the next production of that organization -will be Strike Song, a three-ract play of southern mill people by two local playwrights, former .students nu the play writing classes, Loretto Carroll Bailey and James Osier Bailey. Try-outs for this production -will be held- at the Playmakers theatre beginning at 4:30 on Tuesday afternoon, and will continue at 7:30 the same eve ning. The play will be produced December 10, 11, 12. . At the same time plans are being made for immediate-! ex perimental production of ' the plays that have been written- in the playwriting class this term. There will be six or eight plays on this program, and the three best of these will be chosen by a committee of judges for pro fessional production on the reg ular program next term. Harry Davis, assistant di rector of the Playmakers, will supervise these productions and they will be given a more finish ed presentation than has been possible heretofore in the ex perimental staging. Regular try-outs for these plays will be held at a date to 4 be announced within a few days. , - . Research Work Is Encouraged In Canadian Universities, Says Dean o . 0 7- J. C. McLennan of Toronto University Believes Students' Ideas on Matters of 'International Importance Should Be Treated As Seriously as Maturer Suggestions. o The influence of the Canadian university in the political and social forces of the . Dominion was outlined by Dean J. C. Mc Lennan, dean of graduate studies at Toronto university, in an ex clusive interview with a Daily Tar Heel reporter Friday after noon. "Most of Canada's great est statesmen and leaders are university graduates," McLen nan stated, "and the rise to pow er of the man who received his training in our educational in stitutions has been notable with in the last decade. The present Prime Minister of Canada and the present Prime Minister of the province of Ontario are both college graduates. So were their predecessors." Special Research Work Research work of students and special scholars interested in such issues is especially encour aged, McLennan said. Inspira tion is provided by numerous lit erary, governmental, and his torical societies, which appeal more to the man who seeks his education in the classroom than the one who devotes his time to research and laboratory work, the more concrete avenues of endeavor. Citing the recent dis armament petition movement which grew out of the student hodies of several great Canadian universities McLennan said, "These movements are more the result of trained leadership and careful preparation, than hasty conclusion and undergraduate enthusiasm. The student's views n matters of international im portance are treated in all seri ousness and he is advised and instructed the right path. Most of these movements grow ut of the societies, which hold ress Is Guest Elisabeth Risdon and Mrs., Howe Ac quainted When on Stage In New York. Elisabeth Risdon, the -star of Elizabeth, the; Queen, Maxwell Anderson's play, which will be presented in the Carolina Play makers. theatre here tomorrow night by the New York Theatre Guilc arrived here last night and will be the guest for sev eral days of Dr. : and Mrs. George Howe at Treetops. She is accompanied by her husband, Brandon Evans. Mrs. Howe and Miss Risdon have been friends since the former played in New York productions, under the stage name of Margaret Vale. . Local Red Cross Gets Student Aidi The annual roll call for mem bers of the Red Cross is from Armistice Day to Thanksgiving, the goal for Chapel Hill is 1,000 members exclusive of members from the student body. After consultation with the president of the student union, the president of the inter-dormitory council, and the president of inter-fraternity coucil, it was decided to appoint representa tives in each of the dormitories and fraternities to invite the members to join the Red Cross. These representatives have been appointed and supplied with membership cards and buttons. Other students may leave their subscriptions at the headquar ters or atEubanks Drug Store. a prominent place, in the life of Uje undergraduate." Canadian System Asked as to whether the Can adian university resembled more the English tjian the American dean J. c. Mclennan system, McLennan stated that the Dominion system was pat terned more af terjhat employed in the states. "The same type of activities, faculties, and re search systems are utilized in Canada," he said, "even to co education, which has been in Canadian universities for more than forty years." . Professors Wives Recover Mrs. M. T. Van Hecke and Mrs. E. R. Mosher have just been al lowed to leave the Duke hospit al, where for the last two weeks they have been receiving treat ment for injuries "sustained in an automobile accident. Al though tliey have not fully re covered from the effects of their accident, they are steadily recuperating. WW i p I . l T- ' I ft. 's- f : ' I MMM 1 -. .. CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1931 Cotton Demand May Increase If Experiments Prove Successful o Results of Research by Two University Professors Bring Hope That the Enormous Surplus of "Cotton May Be Eco- nomically Turned Into Valuable Cellulose. o During- the past few years, theN use of cotton as a fabric for making clothes has de clined and the southern farm er who knows how to grow little else has found a small market for his crop and such as there was brought practically no in come. With the farmer primar ily in mind, Dr. A. K. Cameron, professor of chemistry, and Nicholas Dockery, a student in the University, have been experi menting to develop a new use for cotton. It has been found that the cotton plant contains 55 to 60 cellulose, a substance which has wide and varied uses and that this fact may provide a better source of income for the cotton-growing farmer. Cellulose in Cotton For the past two years the ex perimenters have concentrated their efforts on examining the types of Cellulose in the cotton plant and finding under what conditions the plant contains most. The cotton has been raised on Dockery's plantation near Rockingham which is conven iently close to the University. From the time the cotton plant has been1 grdwing two months until it is ready to gather, samples are taken almost week ly and analyzed for their content of moisture, ash, fats, resin, and cellulose. It has been found that fortunately,-as the valuable cel lulose and fats increase, the useless ash and moisture de- T I 1 J J I crease, it is aiso interesting co note that the entire cotton plant with the exception of the root can be utilized in this process. Uses of Cellulose Although the seed contains no cellulose for any use, the lint pulp is over 95 cellulose, and the stalk and boll contain be tween 40 and 50, while the seed is mostly fats and oils, very valuable by-products. The cot ton cellulose is unexcelled for S. H. HOBBS SAYS STATES IN SOUTH RANK VERY LOW Rural Economics Professor Speaks Before Informal Gath ering in Lobby of Union Building Friday Evening. Dr. S. H. Hobbs, professor of social-rural economics, spoke Friday evening to ah informal group in Graham Memorial, upon the position of North Caro lina among the states and dis cussed the series of articles that apeared in trie American Mer cury upon the worst states in the union. E. H. Mencken, who was the author of these articles, revealed that Mississippi ranked the lowest. N. C. Ranks 43rd North Carolina maintained an average as the forty-third state in wealth, culture and ed ucation, health, and public or der. Those that ranked at the top in the respective tables were: wealth, California; cul ture and education, Massachu setts ; health, Minnesota ; and public order, Maine. With only a single exception Mississippi ranked the lowest. South Caro lina was last and Mississippi next to last in health. The southern states occupy he lowest ranking positions. use in making rayon, artificial silks and wool; it also makes a high grade of paper -As it is not yet certain for what pur poses the cotton cellulose is best adapted, the experiments in the future are to include attempts to determine the best use. of it. The general method Dockery uses to remove the cellulose from the plant is by applying a strong solution of sodium hydroxide on the whole plant. The cellulose is removed and bleached by chlorine. The appearance of this substance is very similar to cot ton, but its fibers are shorter and tougher. It is found in almost all plant life, but cotton un doubtedly contains more than any other plant. Help to the Farmer These two men are devoting their time to these experiments to help the southern farmer make the most profit on his cot ton. They are not only study ing the uses of the cellulose but are trying to develop the most in expensive method of extracting this substance with the best re sults. As the seejd has practical ly no value for its content v of cellulose, but contains much oil, the seed will be separated from the rest of the plant and the oils removed. Whether it would be more satisfactory to gin the cot ton plant or remove the fats after the plant has been treated for the cellulose is as yet .un certain. The ginning would re quire special machinery but the amount of oil might be enough as to warrant the extra expense. The progress made so far has been veryf avorable and the two men believe that in the near fu ture there will be a great demand for cotton because of its cellu lose base. The American Cot ton Growers Association at New Orleans' has shown its confidence in these two men by contributing $1,500 to be used for supplies and apparatus. FOUNTAIN ASSAILS SHORT BALLOT AT JUNIOR GATHERING Coach Collins Urges Class to Become Better Acquainted With Workings of Football Team. About two hundred and fifty members of the class of '33 at tended the junior smoker in Swain hall Friday evening. Lieutenant-Governor Richard T. Fountain, and Coach Chuck Col lins were the speakers, of the evening. Collins, the first speaker, talked to the class about the Davidson game, urging the class as a student body to get closer to the football squad, attend some of their practices, and really see . what they did and what they were like. He con tinued that he thought the junior class of any institution was always the laziest group for psychological reasons. The third year, he said, looked upon as a repetition of what the student has been through the first two years. In order to avoid wish ing at the end of the senior year that one might have another chance in college, he advised members of this class to get to work at once. (Continues on last page) Special Program Nelson O. Kennedy Will Commemor ate First Armistice Day in Organ Recital. Nelson O. Kennedy, head of the department of organ in the music department of the Uni versity, will present the regular monthly vesper concert in the Hill Music auditorium this af ternoon at 4 :00. He has pre pared a program which com memorates the first Armistice day by the utilization of George J. Nevin's In Memoriam. The recital opens with John Hyatt Brewer's Indian Summer Sketch, followed by Mendels sohn's Sonata, No. 2; Rondo, by Rinck-Dickinson ; R. G. Cole's Song of Gratitude; Nevin's In Memoriam; and concludes with J. Lemmens' Fanfare in D. McBain Touches On Climate, Traditions Dean Howard McBain, one of the two delegates sent by Col umbia university to the confer ence of the - Association of American Universities, which met here, would give no state ment on the present trends of education. Dean McBain said that this was one of the most beautiful universities he had ever had the pleasure to see, and that the students in it ought to be proud of their traditions. He also said that a New Yorker, like himself could appreciate the .temperate climate which the University is so fortunate to I possess. . Hutchins Urges Plan Allowing Course Credits By Examination o 1 Youthful University of Chicago President Is Confident That His New Educational System Will Enable Students to Complete Courses Much Sooner. -o- In the. opinion of , President Robert M. Hutchins, of the Uni versity of Chicago, a plan simi lar to the one in use at Chicago could be used here. "I do not wish to dictate policies to the faculty of the University of . PRESIDENT ROBT. M. HUTCHINS North Carolina," he told the Daily Tar Heel reporter, "but a plan whereby a student so qualified could take examina tions on a course and obtain credit, would be a great benefit to the more capable students." President Hutchins went on to say that a plan as drastic as the one in use at the University of Chicago would not be neces sary. He advocated keeping the grade system but allowing any student who thought he was capable of passing an examina tion on a subject without tak ing the course to obtain full credit by doing so. The Hutchins plan which is in use at the University of Chicago is a plan whereby any student upon recommendation by his instructor may take an SOW"5 .vv.-:..-.v.v.....VviVi' --i i 1 i fA Win tn r r. n n i-ivffjj- -i - - r rrtrtfc. ta nr J NUMBER 49 FROSH NOMINEES WILL BE CHOSEN MONDAYMORNING Balloting for First Year Officers Will Be Conducted in. Graham Memorial All Day Wednesday. Nominations for four fresh man class officers are to be made tomorrow morning in chapel. By ruling of student council nomi nation speeches are not to exceed two minutes in length. Sopho mores who have chapel tomor row will not be expected to at tend. Candidates will Speak Tuesday morning's chapel will be given over to speeches by the several nominees for offices of president, vice-president, secre tary, and treasurer. The regu lar elections are scheduled to take place in Graham Memorial building on Wednesday, with the polls remaining open from 9:00 to 5:00. This is the first cam pus election ever to be staged in the new union building, but it is the student council's plan to hold all following elections here. According to present plans, ballot boxes are to be placed in the northern end of the , first floor. In case no nominee re ceives a majority of votes cast for his particular office, a run off election between the two lead ing candidates will decide the winner. If such a run-off is necessary, the time and date will be announced later. examination on any subject. In this way it is possible for a stu dent to advance as rapidly as his inborn ability and hard work will permit. .This has been a decided step in the field of edu cation and the intellectual world is watching it with interest. His Rapid Rise The rise of Dr. Hutchins to the presidency of one of Ameri ca's largest universities at the age of thirty-two reads like the story of one of Alger's heroes. In 1923, then only twenty-four years old, he was appointed sec retary of Yale university, in which position he remained un til 1927 when he became dean of the Yale law school. In 1929 he became the president of the University of Chicago. President Hutchins believes that his plan will be a success, although it has only been in ef fect for two months. He says that any intelligent student should be able to finish a two year academic course in a quar course could be done in a year, ter, and that a full four-year Another significant feature of the Hutchins plan is that it does away with the graduate school. The graduate student takes his examinations for his degree whenever he thinks himself qualified to do so. President Hutchins said that time only would tell whether his plan would be a success or failure. Editorial Board The editorial board of the Daily Tar Heel will convene this afternoon at 5:30. There will be no regular meeting of the city editors or reportorial staff today.