Pase Foot. RESENTAUQN OF BPtAUNEPOPtTPiAlT MADEjnjRSDAY Picture of Late Dean Presented University by Engineering Students' Subscriptions. The presentation of the por trait of the late Dean Gustave Maurice Braune to the Univer sity took place Thursday night in Phillips hall with President Frank Porter Graham and Dean' H. G. Baity among the speakers. The portrait, painted by William Steene, an artist of Chapel Hill, was contributed through sub scriptions by students of the Engineering school. -Andrews Presides The presiding officer of the evening was John Andrews, president of the student chap ter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. President Graham, who accepted the paint ing for the University with a short address, stressed the point that Dean Braune was a build er and great educator. Dean H. G. Baity, accepting the portrait for the engineering school, delivered an address in which he spoke of the human qualities and inspiration of Dean Braune. He showed how the members of the class were in spired to be successful in their professions, through his teach ings. He related the gather ing of Dean Braune's appearance at the school from the north, and , how quickly he endeared himself with the students. The engineering school, separated from the school of applied sci ence, was made a success by his work, and the present s'tand of the school was attributed to Dean Braune's efforts. Pays -Tribute Tributes for the great edu cator came from T. M. Riddick, who spoke for the student body. He expressed the affection of the students for Dean Braune, and he showed his character as a good teacher and citizen by his outstanding personality. Pro fessor E. G. Hoefer then spoke for the engineering faculty. , N. P. Hayes, a former student of Dean Braune and at present a civil engineer of Greensboro, spoke of the personal relations and contact with him, lauding him most highly. Hayes was one of the first students of Braune's to graduate from the University. W. M. Piatt then addressed the group as a repre sentative of the engineering profession and was followed by Professor J. B. Bullitt, repre senting the generahf acuity. IDOL HEADS MARSHALS ' FOR SUMMER SESSION Arrangements, for the sum mer school social activities were made with' the appointments of the dance marshals announced yesterday. John Idol was made head marshal, , and the assist ants, Walter Jones, Shady Lane, Albert Cox, Jr., Don Jackson, and Bobby Mason. Bill String fellow and Freddy Koch were made directors of the summer school orchestra. ; Dances will take place every Friday and -Saturday beginning June. The affairs will take place in Bynum gymnasium. Senior Invitations About twenty persons have not received their senior in vitations yet and these bids will be distributed in the lob by of the Y. M. C. A. this morning between the hours of 10:30 and 12:00, the commit tee announced yesterday. There are only a small num ber of these invitations left and the committee is giving this last opportunity for those who have ordered the invita tions to get them. CALENDAR & 4 Straw vote. "Y" lobby 9:00-5:00. Playmaker production. Theatre S:30. BOOK MARKET TO SPONSOREXfflBIT Will Display Kutani Porcelain Ware Brought to Country By Japanese Student. The Book Market is sponsor ing an exhibit of Kutani por celain brought to this country by Jasicu Fukusato, Japanese student at the University. The manufacture of Kutani dates back to the close of the seven teenth century when the great feudal chief of Kaja took the industry under his patronage. Since that time this type of porcelain has only been made in Kaja, the old name of the state which now forms a part of the mainland of Japan. Fukusato was born there and has often watched the potters at their wheels. The work is done in a very primitive manner and the slogan for their creations might well be "untouched by inhuman machines." Decorative subjects are por trayed on the ware, by colorful enamels, mainly green, yellow, and soft Prussian blue. Some time ago a potter called Hachir- vemon introduced a new style of decoration. He used a ground color of a peculiar shade of rus set red and on this he traced his designs in gold. The pieces now on exhibition were imported by Fukusato at considerable expense because of the high import tariff on this kind of goods in the United States. Mary Dirnberger of the. Book Market in the Y. M. C. A. building cordially invites all who' are interested in seeing articles of really fine grade of work manship to examine the exhibi tion during the next week when the porcelain will be on display. DATE IS SET FOR CONDITION TEST Several seniors in the Uni versity who have composition conditions attached to any grades will have an opportunity to take an examination for the removal of the conditions at 4:00 o'clock Thursday of this coming week. These seniors who have the conditions will not be able to graduate from the University unless the conditions are remov ed. - Other students who will not be allowed to take the ex amination at this time must wait until next year. Those planning to take the examination have been request ed to 'get in touch with Profes spr Raymond Adams in Saun ders 102 at 10:30 nextf week. Seniors who took the examina tion May 6 may get their papers and go over them for the second examination. PHARMACY LIBRARY RECEIVES NEW BOOK The pharmacy school library has announced the addition of the publication Cosmetics and Your Skin, published by the Med ical Lay Press, 1930, and writ ten, by Herman Goodman, B.S. M.D., of New York. Dr. Goodman gives a brief but detailed outline of the his tory of cosmetics, the industry of cosmetics, the aims and limita tions of cosmetics, and the fre quent cosmetic follies. "It is1 our contention," states Dr. Goodman, in reference to the use of make-up, "that cosmetics should be limited to the skin in health, to the hygiene of the skin, the preservation of healthy skin." THE DAILY New Social Order Fprces Change In Liberal Arts College, Claims Editor 0 James Crenshaw Believes Need for Individual Cooperative Ex periences in Education Will Make Degree Mean More Than Title of Nobility, Embodying Degree of Culture. , (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a series of four articles on outstanding current developments in the field of higher education, written especially for The Daily Tar Heel by the editor of College News Serv ice.) By James Crenshaw When higher educational in stitutions first got under way in the United States, college train ing was something toward which the young, newly emanci pated democrat could strive. Gradually, education became a game, with representatives of all classes striving for a degree- granted culture, diluted by a cer tain amount of pragmatic train ing. The educational systems were built to satisfy the require ments of a competitive society. As college and university stu dent bodies grew into unwieldy, Ijeterogeneous populations of degree-seekers, it was every man for himself within cer tain standardized boundaries. In the liberal ants colleges, parti cularly, students worked against time, against each other, and against their professors in a turbulent scramble to win them selves an "education" by collect ing credits, like so many cigar coupons. Changes Recent Nothing very definite was done about the situation until quite recently, when the pres sure of a new co-operative social order forced experimental de partures that are now being further stimulated by the cur rent economic unrest. Naturally, the problem of re organization centered around the liberal arts college, which many educators admitted was failing to accomplish its dual purpose: that of preparing the future professional student for specialization, and that of pro viding all students with some thing indefinable called culture and "background." The need for individual co operative experience in educa tion, however, has been felt, and a degre must eventually come to mean something more than a mere title of nobility, embodying in itself the elements of culture. We have, therefore, a new con ception of education one which is essentially sociological, be cause its reformation is based upon the precept ithat learning is Father Of Student Dies Of Heart Attack Hal D. Rand, father of Hubert H. Rand, freshman in the Uni versity school of commerce, died suddenly in Mary Elizabeth hos pital in Raleigh at 7 :30 o'clock Thursday night. Heart disease was the direct cause of his death, although he had been in poor health for about two years and was sixty-seven years of age. Rand was a native of Wake county, having lived there all his life. He was one of the found ers of the town of Garner, where he was a farmer and merchant for forty-five years. He or ganized the Garner Banking and Trust company, and was presi dent of that instiution for seven teen consecutive years. He was a charter member of the Garner council of the Junior order, and served as county commissioner for Wake county for six years, and for four years of the time as chairman of the board. LIBRARY BOOKS MUST BE RETURNED BY MAY 28 The library has made the re quest that all books now held by students be returned by May 28. If renewed at this time they may be kept for three more days. TAR HEEL a prerequisite to fuller living and hence the key to a more complete understanding of the fundamental necessity for co operation. Thus we are at the present moment witnessing a very de finite movement which will end with the breaking up of the im personal, mass-formed liberal arts college. This was presaged within the past few weeks when advisers of the. University' of Wisconsin experimental college proposed the eventual division of large liberal arts schools into "fifteen or twenty" small col leges. Harvard Shows Way Harvard, however, already has shown the wTay, and Yale is following. Instead of being dumped into a melting pot of conflicting interests,, the incom ing freshman is assigned to a re sidential college group, where he not only has the social ad vantages of a small college but is aided and advised by tutors, who can give him individual at tention. There are tendencies in this direction noticeable in other in stitutions (throughout the coun try In Southern California the idea is embodied in the develop ment of the Claremont Colleges group, while elsewhere adminis trators are devising new re sidence plans as the first step to ward decentralization. Some are going so far as to demand that fraternity and sorority groups close their houses and enter dor mitories. On some campi, how ever, Greek organizations are solving the problem in their own way by hiring tutorial advisers to guide their scholastic efforts. Meanwhile, a need for a new type of liberal arts training is being voiced by those in the pro fessional schools, as illustrated by the plea of Dean Joseph W. Baker of Columbia's school of engineering, who would have his students trained to a realiza tion that "there are greater problems to be solved by en gineers than merely (technical ones." Future captains of industry, he says, must be sociologists, as well as technicians. ,They should, therefore, be. taught their les sons in "co-operation" long be fore ithey enter their respective fields of professional activity. R. B. House Speaks In Assembly Program R. B. House spoke briefly in assembly yesterday on the fin ances of University students. "Students did not cause the de pression," he said, "and it will probably be over before they will have reached a stage in business in which they will be able to help remedy the situation." He stated that the University is doing all in its power to keep students in school and to enable others to attend, adding that in addition to the University's ef fort the students must try to help themselves as much as pos sible. , He closed by requesting them to. do this. Jean McAllister Given Fellowship in Medicine Jean McAllister of Greensboro, who completed her first two years of medical school at the University last year, has been awarded the Pi Beta Phi soror ity fellowship in medicine. Only a fewtof these awards are avail able, and it was made to Miss McAllister for her unusual abil ity and remarkable personality. She is now completing her third year of medicine at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania. She is a member of the local chapter of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Uorld New? Bulletin rm Minister Refuses to Go to New Jersey Dean H. Dobson-Peacock, as sociate of John Hughes Curtis in the negotiations for the re turn of the Lindbergh baby which Curtis confessed he faked, said today the offer of New Jer sey police to pay his way to Hopewell for questioning would not influence him in his decision not to make the requested trip. Colonel Lindbergh was per sonally directing the search for the kidnapers yesterday, a day which was the fifth anniversary of his triumph over the Atlantic. Bitter Fight Over Tariff A bitter tariff fight over oil, coal, copper and lumber yester day gripped the Senate and the vital tax bill in a paralyzing vice which threatened an extended session of Congress. Aycock Honored Scores of North Carolinians together with many members of Congress and of the National Education Association and the United States education bureau gathered in the Famous Stat uary hall in the Capitol build ing at Washington yesterday for the unveiling of a statue to the late Governor Charles B. Ay cock who led North Carolina from a morass of ignorance. A gift was made to the state by the nation in Washington yesterday when a George Wash ington bicentennial bust, was presented to Governor O. Max Gardner. North Carolina First For the first time in Ameri can cotton spinning history Mas sachusetts relinquished the su premacy in the number of cot ton spindles. North Carolina was shown to have 16,658 more spindles in place April 30 than the former leaders. Idle Dollars to Work A move was begun yesterday to put hundreds of, millions of dollars to work by a powerful committee of industrialists un der the chairmanship of Owen D. Young. The committee was formed to make the Federal Re serve's policy of credit expan sion effective as a means' of stimulating a recovery in prices. Russell Succeeds Wilson s As Playmaker Trustee Phillips Russell of the English department was elected to mem bership in the board of trustees of the Carolina Playmakers at a meeting which took place in President Graham's office this week. Russell succeeds Dr. L. H. Wilson who has resigned from the University faculty to go to the University of Chicago. The Playmakers; have decided to resume, next year, the pre sentation of plays in the Forest theatre in Battle Park. DURHAM MEN'S SHOP 111 W. Main St . Durham ScLV- Linen Mess Jack . mX ets are being worn in increasing numbers by smart dressers for summer formal dress . . . used in place of the regular tuxedo coat, all accessories and trousers as usual. Tailored to measure of imported Irish linen by Schloss Bros, at $10.50. FRANK 588 Fifth Ave, between 47th and 48th Sts NEW YORK 11111 Dry Cleaners Saturday, Hay 21, 1932 FINAL PLANS FOR ALUMNI DAY NOW BEING COMPLETED John J. Parker Chosen as Com mencement Marshal; Class Of '82 to Hold Reunion. Final plans for alumni day and class reunions are being made, and present indications point to 'the fact that one of the most successful alumni gather ings ever held will take place on alumni day, June 6. The change it commencement from Tuesday morning to Monday evening will make it possible for more alumni to attend with a minimum loss of time from their homes, and will all class secretaries urging the presence of all members of their class, a record alumni crowd is antici pated. Alumni headquarters will be in Graham Memorial, and iormitory rooms will be assigned there to all who desire them. Class of '82 Honored The class of 1882 is the fiftv year, and consequently the hon or class this year. The mem bers of this .class will occupy seats of honor at the alumni luncheon. Classes of '87, '88, '89, '90 will have their reunions as a gen eration class, as these classes were all at the University at the same time. The classes of '06. '07, '08, '09 will also meet as a generation class, and will have their reunion at a banquet in Graham Memorial. Twenty-nine alumni from the 1907 class have signified their intentions of being present and the commencement marshal, John J. Parker, was chosen from this class, which is the twenty five year class. The classes of 1925, '26, '27, '28 are planning tentatively to hold their joint reunion in the form of a picnic supper. The class of '32, tlje "baby class" has lot announced any definite plans. After years of selective breed ing, sheep without tails have been developed. Which shows what may be accomplished by keeping a definite end in view. Florence Herald. NOW-2 Extra Exposures at No Extra Cost Load with Kodak Verichrome Film THE snapshots that you take with Verichrome show people just as you know them. Relaxed and friendly, instead of stiffly posed and squinting at the sun. Verichrome doesn't require bright light. It gets good pictures in sun or shade; better pictures with any camera. Verichrome sizes 24 x 3 i and 2x4 now comes in eight-exposure rolls. Two extra exposures ajl 00 extra cost. Stock up here. Developing and Printing We Lend Kodaks Alfred Williams & Co. Inc. ilk fife. TOOTtOCAtt DC Footwear that meets the college man's point of view-smartly styled soundly constructed and economically priced. May 23 and 24