EDITORIAL STAFF - - 2:30 P.M.' GRAHAM MEMORIAL CHEERIO MEETING 8:00 P.M. MEMORIAL HALL VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. O, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1932 NU3IBER 24 STUDENT VOTING IN PRESIDENTIAL P0LLC0NTINUES Campus Daily Joins Thirty-Five Other College Publications in Straw Ballot Forecast. In an effort to determine the political sentiment of Carolina- students The Daily Tar Heel is conducting a straw vote on the presidential candidates. The balloting beeran yesterday and will continue through Saturday. The Daily Tar Heel is join ing thirty-five other collegiate papers in conducting this ria tional student straw president ballot. The results of the local balloting will be tabulated and sent to the national headquarters which is The Daily Princetonian, the daily oi Princeton univer sity. Since the results of this poll will be published in the col legiate press as the true politi cal sentiment of the student body, The Daily Tar Heel is p.sneciallv anxious to cret as AT many students to vote as pos sible. Ballots will be published in to-day's and to-morrow's paper. Students are asked to fill out these ballots checking the name of the candidate they prefer and turn them in at the ballot boxes which are located in the lobby of the "Y" and the first floor of Graham Memorial. TARHEEL' STAFF LLMEET TODAY Various Boards of Paper Will Convene at Different Times In Publication Offices. Four meetings of the different divisions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial staff' have been scheduled for this afternoon, all to take place in the offices of the paper in Graham Mem'orial New men wishing to try out for the publication may do so this afternoon by coming to the office of the paper to attend the meeting of those divisions of the staff they wish to work with. " Reporters will meet at 3:30 o'clock to take up several rou tine matters relating to the pa rt j i per. opon reporters are re quired to attend this meeting. The editorial board will gath er at 2:30 o'clock to confer with the editor while 3:00 o'clock is the hour set for the feature board's conference. City editors and desk men will discuss their work at 4 :00 o'clock. Schwenning Returns From Research Trip Dr. G. T. Schwenning, asso ciate professor of business ad ministration in the University school of commerce and econom ics, who has been in Europe on his leave of absence from the University, arrived in Chape Hill last week. He will not re sume his duties- as instructor until the beginning of the win ter quarter. Dr. Schwenning spent most of his time in Geneva, Switzerland where he collected material for a new book he is writing on dis missal wages. Groves Lectures Tonight Dr. Ernest R. Groves, profes sor of sociology of the Univer sity, will speak tonight in the east narlor of the Methodist church on "The Opportunity o the Modern Parent." KENNEDY TO OPEN CONCERT SERIES Pirst Concert of Series Will Be Given In Hill Music Hall, Sunday, October 23. Nelson O. Kennedy, of the mu sic department, will open his an-c nual series of vesper organ con certs Sunday, October 23, at 4:00 o'clock in Hill music hall. He will present the following program : Concert Overture in B minor, by James H. Rogers ; Cantilena,, by Carl Mckinley; Sketch, by Robert Schumann; Toccata and Fugue in D minor, by J. S. Bach; Meditation-Elegie by Felix Borowski ; and Finale from the first symphony of Louis Vierne. All those interested are in vited to attend these concerts which will be given monthly throughout the college year. TICKETS AWARDED CONTESTWINNERS Pete Ivey Wins First Prize in Platform Writing for "The Phantom President." A number of the University's political and comic genii took careful consideration of the country's needs during the past four days and then entered The Daily Tar HEEL-Carolina thea tre platform contest which end ed yesterday, with the result that Pete Ivey submitted the platform adjudged the best by he contest committee. "If I am elected president, I promise to make bread lines into cake lines, runs on banks will be slowed to a walk, and there will be six legs to every chicken, eight breasts, fourteen gizzards, and no wings and necks," was Ivey's contribution. This contest was sponsored jointly by The Daily Tar Heel and the Carolina theatre in con nection with the showing of "The Phantom President" at the local theatre today. Second prize goes to Carl Thompson who presented the platform, "The erection of club houses for 'forgotten men' and 'unknown soldiers' to meet in" And as a second plank in his platform he proposes, "More beef and less bull." "Windshield wipers for spec tacles on rainy days," receives the third prize. This was pre sented by R. C. Page. Other students winning' prizes were A. J. Barachet, J. Spots wood Smith, and Tom Hicks... The persons whose platforms 9 received one of the first three places, will be awarded three guest tickets to the Carolina theatre, and the next three win ning nlatforms will merit two guest tickets each. These may be received from the editor this afternoon iir the office of the publication at 1:30 o'clock. SOPHOMORES WILL ELECT DANCE LEADERS TONIGHT The election of five dance leaders for the sophomore hop will take place tonight at 7:00 o'clock in Memorial hall. Al nominations for leaders will be made and a written vote taken the five polling the largest num ber of votes receiving the posi tions. Other important busi ness will be attended , to at the meeting. Business Staff to Meet There will be a, meeting of the Buccaneer business staff at -7:00 o'clock tonight in the offices of the publication. LATEST ISSUE OF PLAY-BOOK TELLS OF FOREST DRAMi Playmajcer Publication, National ly Read Magazine on Play- writing, Is Off Press. The September number of the Carolina Play-Book, quarterly periodical of the Carolina Play makers and the state-wide Caro lina dramatic association, is just off , the press. Professor F. H. Koch, director of the Play makers, is editor of the Play- Book; Archibald Henderson and Paul Green are advisory editors Each issue of this magazine contains a play which was writ ten 'in Koch's playwriting class here and has been successfully produced. Lehigh university has ordered a complete file of back numbers of the Play-Book of which the September issue is number 3 of volume 5. Mrs. Sara W. Huntfey, head of the nglish department of Bay Ridge high school, Brooklyn, N. Y., has also just ordered a com plete set of back numbers. The Carolina Play-Book is on file in the largest libraries in the coun try and is also in the library of the British museum in London. The Play-Book has a very im posing subscription list with copies going to twenty-eight states, from California to Mas sachusetts and also abroad to England, Hawaii, British West Indies, and to Germany. The chief feature of this num ber of the Play-Book is the ar ticle "A Log-Cabin Theatre," in which Koch writes of the pro gress made by Genevieve Wood son in developing the innate artistry of the back-country people of North Carolina. Miss Woodson is the founder and di rector of the Log-Cabin theatre at Ebenezeer Neighborhood in the densely forested section of Wake county, twenty-five miles east of Chapel Hill. A sum mary of this article appeared re cently in The Christian Science Monitor. Drive For Contributions To Loan Fund Keeps Many In University -o Mrs. Jesse Kenan Wise and Fund With Large Gifts; Dean Bradshaw's Organizing Influence Has Distributed Funds on Campus. 0 Although fifty years elapsed before eighteen student loan funds were established at the University, that meagre number was- increased by thirty-two from the spring of 1931 to the spring of the present year.( This astounding rise in funds for needy University students is the most significant review of the results of the Emergency Stu dent Loan Fund drive instituted last January. . From about $60,000 Jast May the fund has grown to the pres ent figure of $109,000. Among the several contributions, which served to swell the total of funds to be used for needy stu dents, are a donation of $10,000 from an anonymous contributor and a gift from Mrs. Jesse Kenan Wise of Wilmington, in the form of securities having a par value of $47,000. - At present, only the income from this gift, estimated by President Graham at about $2,000 annually, is available. When stock market conditions Warrant the liquidation of the securities, the principal will also be placed at the disposal of the loan fund. LIBRARY RECEIVES BIBLIOGRAPHICAL WORKSOF NOTE $30,000 Grant Permits Purchase Which Will Make Library Outstanding in South. . Through the aid of a grant of $30,000 made by the General Education board last spring, the University library has made im portant additions to its collec tion of bibliographical works. The newly acquired works in clude card indices and catalogues of the leading libraries in this country and in,f oreign countries. Works' of this type - are consid ered essential for scholarly re search. The library expects, through the benefits derived from the grant it received, to build up the fundamental tools for a graduate school in the field of bibliography which will be surpassed by few universities in the nation. . The library bibliographical material before this grant was the most extensive in the south, and it furnishes an excellent foundation for a collection of the kind which has been added. De spite this fact, however, the re search work in the south has been greatly handicaped by the lack of bibliographical resources. Among the materials which have already been purchased are included monumental sets of catalogues which will be useful in locating rare books in other principal libraries and in ar ranging for loans with other li braries. New purchases this year will be divided into five classes: printed cards of libraries in America, catalogues of the na tional libraries of other nations, such as the British Museum, period indices, and subject bibli ographies. Wilmington Club to Meet The Wilmington club, which met last week, will have its sec ond, meeting tonight in 209 Gra ham Memorial at 7:00 o'clock. Anonymous Contributor Increase Public announcement of these contributions was originally made at Commencement last year. Since that time miscel laneous donations totaling $280 have been received. A remarkable sidelight on the loan fund campaign is the col lection of $26,000 in debts to the fund contracted by former students. Through the efforts of Charles T. Woollen, business manager of the University; Miss Doris Humphreys, of the busi ness office ; University auditor, Livingston Rogerson; and Dean Francis Bradshaw and his staff, more money was collected from the outstanding debts of the fund last year than ever before. Behind the entire movement has been the dynamic person ality of President Graham, who devoted the major portion oi his time last spring to touring the eastern part of the country in the loan fund's behalf . More over, it has been the organizing influence of Dean Bradshaw that has distributed the funds on the campus. Several hundred men have been able to continue their education with the aid of money which has been given the fund. CO-ED DANCE PLAN NEAR COMPLETION Women Students Asked to Get Bids Today and Tomorrow in MY" and Graham .Memorial" Lounge. The Woman's Association of the University is rapidly ad vancing plans for its jf all dance which will be given tomorrow night between 9:00 and 1:00 o'clock in the Tin Can. Efforts are now being made to secure an orchestra but no def inite arrangements had been made yesterday. The affair is one. of the an nual events of the University's social season. Co-eds are asked to secure their bids in the reception room of Graham Memorial fr6m 9:30 to 1 :00 o'clock today and tomor row and also between 2:00 and 5:00 tomorrow afternoon. PHI INITIATES NINE MEN AT MEETING Bill Concerning Change in New Football Rules Tabled Until Next Week's Gathering. The Phi assembly initiated nine new men as representatives at its regular meeting last night. They were: D. W. Mozier, Engle wood, N. J. ; S. A. Douglas, Greensboro ; Simmons Patterson, New Bern: Wifi iam Houston, Goldsboro; John F. Butler, Washington, D. C. ; Winthrop Durf ee, Hadlyne, Conn. ; T. S. Rubin, Cola, S. C. ; E. V. Holly, New Rochelle, N. Y. ; and Guion Lee, Grantsboro, N. C. After the initiation ceremony was completed, the assembly started discussion on the bill concerning the new football rules. Leonard Hutchison, S. A. Douglas, and Emmett Willis spoke in favor of abolishing the new changes in the rules, and Red Rankin and Roy McMillan defended the rules. The bill was tabled for discus sion at the next meeting along with two other resolutions. They are: "Resolved: That the Phi Assembly go on record as en dorsing the recent consolidation of the state-owned institutions of higher learning into a greater University of North Carolina," and "Resolved: That property of churches should be taxed the same as any other property and that the sons of ministers should be compelled to pay tuition at the University." PROMINENT CHILDREN WORKERS VISIT HERE Misses Ann Whitney of New York, director of the American Child Health association; Mil dred English, assistant superin tendent of Raleigh schools ; Ann Holford, supervisor of -Wake county schools ; and Nellie Brog den, supervisor of Guilford coun ty schools, are guests today at the cottage of Misses Sallie Marks and Nora Beust, both of the school of education. Miss Whitney will meet in formally with a group of parents at 8:00 o'clock at the Carolina Inn to discuss child health. MISS BEUST COMPILES , LIST OF CHILD'S BOOKS Miss Nora Beust of the school of library science has compiled a list of 100 Best Books for the Child's, Own Library for the Journal of the National Educa tion Association. This list was compiled at the request of Mrs. Joy E. Morgan, editor of the Journal, and will appear in a future issue of the magazine. UNIVERSITY WILL COOPERATE WITH YALE INRESEARCH D. J. Brawley Hired to Study Lead Storage Cells for Use in . U. S. Navy Submarines. According to a co-operative agreement with the naval re search laboratory of the Navy department at Washington, the University of North Carolina in conjunction with Yale uni versity has been selected to carry out studies relating to lead storage cells and their use in submarines.' All undersea move ment of submarines is effected from power from storage bat teries and most submarine dis asters are due to explosions from battery gases. To attempt to remove the causes of these ex plosions is the main aim of the work. Part of the theoretical study, which is of importance in the fundamental knowledge 'of the ' lead storage cells in general is being carried out in co-operation with Yale university. The University will confine its work to solubility studies on lead per oxide and lead sulphate in sul phuric acid solutions. Full Time Assistant The agreement enables the University to employ a full time assistant to carry on most of the (Contvhued on last page) FORUM SPONSORS INFORMAL DANCE Graham Memorial Banquet Hall Is Scene of First Dance of Proposed Series. . The first of a series of infor mal dances will be given tonight in the banquet hall of Graham Memorial between 7:00 and 8:00 o'clock. This dance will be un der the direction of the Union Forum. Jack Wardlaw and his band will furnish the music for the occasion. Everyone on the campus is welcome and no ad mission will be charged. ' If the dances prove to be popu lar with the students they will become a weekly event, being sponsored each week by a dif ferent organization on the cam pus. Special entertainment fea tures are being planned in con nection with the dances. The idea of these weekly in formal dances originated with the Union Forum last spring, but this is the first opportunity for testing out the idea. The purpose of the idea is to better acquaint the students with one another and bring about a closer unity among the student body. Redheads Will Meet Friday To Organize All red-headed students in the University that might be inter ested in forming a redhead club are urged tobe present at a meeting scheduled for Gerrard hall Friday at 7 :00 o'clock. The movement is being backed by Red Rankin. As there are a great number of redheads regis tered in the University this year such a club is a great oppor tunity for a general "get-together" for boys and girls whose heads are adorned with titian locks. There was a club of redheads formed at the University last year and received such fame as to be mentioned in College Hu mor as a collegiate oddity.