VANDERBILT vs. CAROLINA
2:30 P.M.
KENAN STADIUM
VANDERBILT vs. CAROLINA
2:30 P.M.
KENAN STADIUM
k mm UL maui wiaa
TTME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. O, SATTODAyoCTOBER 1, 1932 NUMBERS
Y. M. C. A. Cabinets I
Plan Work For Year
SOCIALISTS HEAR
ARNOLD WILLIAMS
SPEAK ON RELIEF
Xocal Socialists Hold Meeting to
Discuss Work of Party for
Coming Elections.
Arnold Williams of the Eng
lish department, discussed the
effect of the economic situation
on socialism at the Socialist
meeting Thursday. Harold Glas
gow, formerly of West Virginia ;
Alton Lawrence, state secretary
of the Socialist party and a stu
dent at the University; and N.
Jeffrey congratulated the assem
bly on their fine work in aiding
the party in its victory Wednes
day, Williams, the mainstay of the
local Socialist party, sketched
vividly the unemployment situa
tion, and the part that socialism
and the Socialist party played in
alleviating much of the distress
and misery caused by unemploy
ment. He describe, briefly, the
history of the Socialist party's
constructive work, and voiced
confident beliefs of the -party's
imminent success.
Battle for Ballot Rights
Lawrence reviewed the hard
fought battle for equal ballot
rights, and mentioned that the
success of the party, in having
its candidates' names printed on
the ballot, was only the , first
step in the crystallization of the
victory which would come No
vember 8.
Glasgow and Jeffrey both
agreed that North Carolina. was
f ripe . for a Socialistic organiza
tion, and Mr. Jeffrey further
(Continued on last page)
Dormitory Students
Will Select Officers
The series of smokers which
have taken place in Graham
Memorial during the past week
will be resumed Monday night
when the residents of Aycock
will elect officers for- the coming
year." Tuesday the men from
Lewis will gather at a similar
meeting followed by those from
Everett on Wednesday, the
series being concluded with a
meeting of the occupants of
Sterling- on Thursday. Besides
the formal elections of officers
the meetings in the past have
consisted of various speeches by
prominent campus men, and also
of ping-pong and shuffle-board
tournaments.
WOMAN'S RUSHING
SEASON WILL OPEN
WITHIN TEN DAYS
Sororities to Maintain Silence Until
October 10 When Season
Will Start.
Freshmen And Fraternity Men Have
Many Amusing Eushmi Experiences
-" . O . ', .
Bonehead Errors Are Not Only Made by Bewildered Rushees But
Also by Many Dignified Greek-Letter Men Who Are
Trying to Impress the Greener Frosh.
o
a
RONALD TAMBLYN
SPEARS ON LIFE
UNDERCONTROL
Presbyterian Minister Says That
' Duty of Education Is to
Control Power.
The first phase of co-ed rush
ing, the two weeks period of
silence between sorority and
non-sorority girls, will come to
i ji r i l, 1 A A
a close monaay, uttuuei j.v.
that time the rushing season for
women will be officially opened.
Active rushing will consume
onlv six davs. which will be fol-
- 1, r
lowed by another short period
of silence that will continue
from midnight the following
Saturday to Monday, October
17. On that date, rushees will
receive their bids from Mrs.
Stacy's office in South building.
A system of preferential bidding
is used.
During the week between
periods of silence, the rushing
activities will include teas,
bridge, and theatre parties.
Fatigued freshmen have spent
the past week continuing the
march to Carolina's twenty-eight
fraternity houses to hear the
high pressure sales talk of
hoarse-voiced Greek letter men.
At the same time, they have
sought to make themselves ac
r.entahle bv nulling" as few
"Doners" as possible. Despite
such earnest efforts for reserve
on the part of both frosh and
upperclassmen, faux pas .and
other unintentional humorous in
cidents have figured in the rushing.
A Generous Bidder
One lodffe renorts that
young high school graduate en
tered their house, suitcase under
his arm, and announced that he
had chosen that house for per
t. school residence. "But
you'll-have to have a bid first,"
the members tactfully informed
him. "O.K.," he said, "I can bid
as high as the next man.''
The week's best method of de
clining an invitation to visit
again was produced by one
bright rushee who obscurely
plead that he had to stay home
to shoo the roosters off his
mother-in-law's grave.
Dame Rumour reports this
one on the fraternities. A very
f allra1 ve member of a local
chapter of a large national spent
several minutes trying to pledge
one of last year's pledges
Then there is the lad who, on
reading of the sophomore orders'
tapping, was all set to haul Pi
Kappa Alpha up before the coun
cil for violating rushing rules.
reia ineia nu
His running-mate was the one
who wanted to know where the
"Beta Theta Nu" house was and
whether Kappa Beta Phi had
anv relation to Phi Beta Kappa.
Another lad in the same locale
proudly reported one night that
TiqH met. "a swell erirl who
was a Chi Phi."
And the embarrassing and in
evitable instance during endless
name swapping. "So your name
is Schultz," inquires the conver
sationally inclined f rater. Boy,
T TfTiftw one fast little
A meeting of all the officers in
the freshman, sophomore, and
senior cabinets of the local Y.
!M. C. A. convened yesterday
morning during chapel period.
It was planned to make this
meeting a regular Friday morn
ing affair during the student as
sembly period, At that time the
programs and policies of the
different cabinets were dis
cussed, and plans were, laid for
the Monday night programs m
particular.
CHADBOURN
FACULTY ADVISER
OF 1AWREVW
Law Magazine Will Enter Elev
enth Year of Publication
In December!
J. H. Chadbourn, instructor
in the University law school has
been appointed faculty editor of
the North Carolina Law Review,
and will have charge of the first
issue of the publication, which is
to be released in December.
TTiia TvrocirlmTba nf the various! PViorlhrmrn as editor of the
giuupo wv, -. , Law Review, succeeds .Prof essor
man Friendship Council ; Claude
Freeman, sophomore cabinet;
and Bill McKee, senior cabinet.
WARDLAW PLAYS
FOR GRAIL DANCE
IN GYM TONIGHT
Limited Number of Tickets Will Be
Sold in Order to Keep Floor
From Being Overcrowded.
Tonight at 9 :00 o'clock the
-fi n-ioil rlanPA nf SP VPfl.r Will
VA y - - I Hi -A X CVli VJ-
dame in Butte, Montana by thatbe gjven jn JBynum gymnasium.
name." "Uh, huh," replied the The usual admission price of
freshman, "that was my sister one dollar will be charged.
Mamie." Tickets are on-sale at Pritchard
Unconsciously, the neophytes Lloyd's and the Book Exchange,
furnish as TYinch amusement as j AT,ur Q limited number will
xuiu"" " - 1 ailU JHJ t liiunv-
the weary fraternity men strive be gold to prevent too crowded a
to snow tnem. m spite ux dance floor. .
tired and bored conversations Thege dances are sponsored
and the heated "hot-boxing," , . fh h i vear by
rusher and rushee have found f , n ,fi f th Grail averag-
sweet relief at each other's ex
pense.
TWENTY-TWO STUDENTS
TAKE LIBRARY SCIENCE
Connor Sees Political Conditions
In'Enland And France During Trip
0
Two Nations Look Toward America for End of Depression and
Return of Prosperity, Says Head of History uepan
ment on Return From Stay in Europe.
o
Ronald Tamblyn, .formerly, of
Greensboro and present minis
ter of the local Presbyterian
church, was" the main speaker of
yesterday's assembly program
Dean Bradshaw presided over
the program with R. B. House
leading the singing and Rev. A.
S. Lawrence, of the Episcopal
church, conducting the devo
tional. Tamblyn chose as his subject
"Life Under Control." "The
maior task of education is to
teach people to control their in
ner selves." he stated. "Une oi
the dangers of life is in letting
our nower eret out of control.
trt control the
power of machinery; and if he
lets it cet out of control, an
amount of damage
can be done.
"Man should put back in so
ciety more than he gets out."
TTp ritd "Bernard Shaw as an
examr,l of this. "A man of
irreat character is one who can
nnntrnl Lia irvner Sfilf. If a man
VUUU Vi A.A.1KJ AAAAAW -w
is able to control not only his
outward self but also his inner
self, he has succeeded in life."
Rushing Ends October 8
Fraternity rushing ends Sat
urdav. Or.tober 8. at midnight,
according tn an announcement
hv Trvin "Rnvlp. resident of the
J - w J -7 fr -
intprfrnfpm itv council. Boyle
called this to the attention of
all frntpmitips due to a misun-
derstanding of the limits of the
season which occurred .after the
Thursday night meeting.
Twenty-two students are en
rolled in the school of ibrary
science this fall. The geograph
ical distribution of the sixteen
full-time students, and the six
part-time students, is as follows :
North Carolina, 16: Tennes
see, 2 ; Alabama, 1 ; Maryland, 1 ;
Oklahoma, 1 ; Indiana, 1.
Of these twenty-two students,
three are men.
Sixteen members of the class
of 1932 are now actively engaged
wnrV Two are m
public libraries work, three in
schools, five in colleges, four in
universities, and one is secre
tary-reviser of the school.
The school of library science
of the University of North Caro
lina was provisionally accredited
as a graduate library school by
the Board of Education for Li-
brarianship of the American As
sociation of Librarians at its
meeting April 27, 1932.
HARPER BARNES HEADS
ROOM SERVICE GROUP
The twenty-four dormitory
service room agents mef with
P. L. Burch, superintendent of
buildings, Edwin Lanier, self
help secretary, and Bill Medford
from the dean of students oi
fiA Thursday night to organize
the Dormitory Service Room
Association and to discuss the
rules and regulations for tne
operation of the service - rooms
during the current year.
TTamer Barnes was elected
president, David McCachren,
vice president, and J. H. Shu-
ford, secretary.
The Service Room Association
plans to meet on the first Mon
day night of each month at 7 :00
o'clock in the Graham Memorial
to discuss mutual problems.
Dr. R. D. W. Connor, head of
the University history depart
ment, returned this summer
from Europe, where he spent
almost a year in travel and re
search on the Kenan Founda
tion. In observing social and
political conditions in the" Old
World, he discovered a strong in
terest in current events m
America. Prohibition and the
tariff were particularly discussed
by European nations.
He remained in the British
Tel no frnm September of last
war to this past March, during
vhich time he took an automoone
trin through Scotland and visit
ed many of the usual points of
interest such as Canterbury ana
Stratford-on-Avon. The greater
nart of-this period, however,
grant in the
nuiwoui , i
British Museum in search of his
torical data concerning litera-
the American Revolu
-
tibn.
Political Conditions
Happening to be in England
during the general elections at
the time that the Labor govern
ment was superseded by the
new National faction, Professor
Connor had ample time to ob
serve the British political situa
tion. He heard a speech by
Ramsey MacDonald which chief-
lv involved economic problems.
A much-discussed question, at
that time was the proposal to
levy a higher tariff, from which
mifrht accrue revenue helpful to
the financial condition of the
country. A favorite argument
,,A V.- ifa n-rrvnnnentS. SaiQ
USCU t" '
Connor, was that it would im
,t. "E,nfrlnrl'5 balance OI
III HWr IJllt AC ilM.
trade by raising a tariff barrier
against the United States.
Although Connor admitted
that the English system of hdld-
the Order of the Grail, averag
ing three each quarter, or nine
a year. Tha dance will be super:
vised by the newly formed dance
committee which has charge of
all the dances on the Hill.
Jack Wardlaw, former popr
nlar band leader here, with his
new band will furnish the music
Freshmen are not permitted to
attend the Grail dances during
ins elections and managing cam- their first year at the University.
roiorntl WAS VerV efficient, he de- Because of the Vanderbilt
"'b"" " . . I . ... , , ,
clared that he did not feel it game today, it is expected mat a
would be any more desirable number of out-of-town girls will
than that of America. There attend the dance.
i 1, 'Urt usual nam.
. . i 1, 4 GRAHAM MEMORIAL HAS
paign "nooey , uucu. vrTr.wT THTTRSDAY
1 .M 1(11 I 11. I I, Iv3vl O UUX VV. aav
JUVVKVA w J.
T?nhprt H. Wettach. who has
held the post of faculty editor
of the publication for nine years,
having begun in September 1923.
When Wettach was appointed
editor in 1923 he followed M. T.
Van Hecke, now7 the dean of the
law school, who edited the maga
zine during the first year of its
publication.
The North Carolina Law Re-
..I I -J . 1 4-t.
vieiv, wmcn enters its eievexiui
year of publication with the ap
pearance of the December issue,
is published quarterly through
out the year. It contains articles
by the law faculty here and at
other law schools, contributions
from the faculty of the other
departments of the University
on subjects relating to law, com
ments and articles by law stu
dents, and contributions by
judges and lawyers in this and
other states.
The student editor of the Law
Review for this year is William
J. Adams, Jr., son of Judge
Adams of the North Carolina
supreme court, and he succeeds
Travis Brown of Charlotte".
BASNIGHT URGES
WOMEN TO VOTK
FOR REPIJBLICANS
Speakers at Organization Meet
ing Here Flay Roosevelt and
Defend Hoover.
violence in breaking up political Thursday night was the bus-
1 i - nwmn4-VlTr TlTlVl . . . . -m r
meetings no l in zyiuyawj iest night that tiranam iviemor-
lAaaa" aifl HfinTlnr. He i t J T7
Lucii ivawu, nai nas expentiiiceu. jiivcijr j.
was highly impressed with the was in use by one organization
rapid increase ot crime m ing- Qr another.
. - i i j. - .
land"; the criminal element, Those organizations conduct-
which had limited itself to the . ti were . The 0rder of
Limehouse district, seemed to be the Grail. Alpha Phi Theta,
stepping out more into the open scouting fraternity ; . the Social
by using automobiles in plying .gt club and the Dormitory
ineir iraue, uww"6" Council.
em i or a riue nau nut jet
peared as Americans know it.
Scotch Hit by Prohibition
"The Scotch attribute their
unemployment to American
Prohibition," stated Connor.
And it was in Scotland, he said,
that he noticed the only ine
briates seen on his tour. There
has been a definite decline of the
popularity of alcoholic liquors
and especially beer due to tne
high taxes levied on them Dy tne
n.rni.nmoni One hrewery alone i --" on- nfj,n ta -pVio
ost 750,000 pounds by tne up- elementarv department of the
.nvr1 film in taT rateS. I T 1 f A,mn4-in-n MiaO "PllTia-
VYA1U Id"" " s I SCIIUUl UX CUUUlllUU, j.ijLiuu
rrya. TTfonch also are evidently
Vwitn TTailev an d Miss Rosalie
iVinrr tn TTnfle Sam to end the -t f fh librarv staff, and
lwwivxiife v i y 1
rJ hrinsr back pros- Miss Nnm "Renst. teacher in the
neritv. believes Froiessor on- uhrary school, completed a tour
i no rnm i ntr eicvuuu at prance, f 1 iria.nu. kjL-wLiciiivi,
W i. . A W O 1 7 O '
4.::nlnA -nritn interpst. but more L. New VorV P.itv in twenty-
LlCipvCV rum j auu 1 F ' .
that that, hundreds of thousands five days this summer, leaving
a V VfTAll. A M -h J" 1 1 2-
of quarts ot cnampagne aiB.wk here August ana rexurmng in
ing and ready for export to tne time for registration September
TTnited States it Jonn caney- 20.
porn ever revives. Miss Marks has been collect-
" : in? elementary text books used
One uonnnea iu uuxj in the schoois 0f various coun
Phillip Russell's class had its
regular Thursday night meeting
in one of the upstairs rooms ; the
law school's luncheon was also
priven. Manly dormitory conven
ed for one of the series of smok
ers being given tor tne various
dormitories, elected officers and
ran off tournaments in ping
pong and shuffle-board.
MEMBERS OF FACULTY
MAKE TOUR IN EUROPE
tt M Parker was the only tries, and she brought back a
, , . n- tt:. Worcrck nnmhpr of those used m
stndpnt connnea to uie umvw- - , ,
vPStOTlav. France, England, and Scotiand.
The Young Mens' Republican
club met in Gerrard hall Thurs
day night for the purpose of get
ting more thoroughly organized
and to map out plans by which
they can increase the Republi
can vote in the coming election.
S". H. Basnight, Orange county
chairman of the party and key
note speaker, was introduced by
John A. Wilkinson, president of
the local organization.
In his speech, Basnight em
phasized the importance of hav
ing the women of this state vote
the Republican ticket and asked
strident to write home to
arouse the interest of mothers
arid sisters. He also asked
volunteers to visit among the
rural district of Orange county
and "stump" the country school
houses in their partie's behalf.
In offering his aid to the local
group, Basnight said that al
though he was kept very busy, he
would arrange to give himself
whole-heartedly to any problem
that might face the young men.
Butler Pledges Support
Following Basnight's talk, .
Mossitt Butler of Clinton, ne-
Iphew of Marion Butler, and a
newcomer to the University, was
welcomed into the party. Butler
pledged his support to the party
by saying that he would willing
ly carry on any work given him.
Forney Rankin, who during
the summer was engaged in or-'
ganizmg similiar parxies
throughout the state, exhorted
the group to be more active. He
(Continued on last page)