4 GRAIL DANCE 9:30-1:00 TIN CAN vc CAROLINA-FLORIDA GAME 2:30 P.M. KENAN STADIUM VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. O, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1932 NUMBER 37 ill t f III I v 7 V BAPTIST STUDENT UNION CONVENES ONCAMPUST0DAY f - . Opening Session of Meeting Is Scheduled Tonight at 7:00. At Baptist Church. The Chapel Hill Baptist church will be host to the Baptist stu dent union beginning tonight and continuing through Sunday. Out-of-town delegates will eat at Swam hall, and will be quar tered in rooms offered by Ithe University, the faculty, and townspeople. The convention is an annual affair and met last year at Dur ham. Between three and four hundred students are expected to attend. The keynote of the entire program, over which Miss Kate Allison, the state presi dent, will nreside. is "If I Be Lifted Up." Opening Session Tonight For this evening the theme of the session, which will last from 7:00 to 9:00 o'clock, is "Visual izing the Task and Opportunity.' This will be followed by an -in formal social gathering at which refreshments will be served. Three sessions will convene Saturday; the first at 9:00 o'clock in the morning, the theme for which meeting will, be "Pro jecting Christian Lives," and the second at 2:00 o'clock in the (Continued on last page) SOCIALISTS WILL END DRIVE WITH MANY ACTIVITIES Party Workers to Conduct Many Rallies and Meetings as Campaign Closes. Local Socialists have outlined a program of intensive activity tor tne last days oi tne cam paign. Debates, speeches, ral lies, and organization meetings will occupy the attention of the STOLL RELEASED FROM UNIVERSITY INFIRMARY George Stoll, Carolina student who was injured Saturday night in Durham, j was discharged from the infirmary yesterday. He finds it necessary to employ a cane while walking as his legs are stitis.irom bruises a"nd the nerves also slightly affected. Stoll left the infirmary at his own request since he was anxi ous to return to his classes. He was struck by a speeding auto mobile driven by a man said to have been drunk. SHERRILL DRAWS UP FINAL SYSTEM FOR AUDIT BOARD Plans Completed for Auditing And Keeping Books of Stu dent Activities. Amendments To State Constitution To Be Voted On At Coming Election - ' O Most Important Proposed Change Is to Alter Document So" That Amendments May Be Added Through Special Votes of Electorate Instead of Waiting for General Elections. , . ' o A president will be elected or re-elected November 8. All the voters are fully aware of this. However, a large percentage of the electorate does not know that proposed amendments to the state constitution, measures of great significance to the citi zens of the commonwealth, are to be accepted or rejected. Legally, amendments are add ed to the constitution by an ex- tion to be called for" the pur pose." . The remaining amendments to be voted on at this election consist of one "to make the term of office of sheriff and coroner four years instead of two"; an other, "to protect insurance for widows and children" ; and a third, "providing for solicitorial. districts." Of these proposals, the one pression of the affirmative will I calling for special election for The Student Audit Board an nounced yesterday through its auditor, R. H. Sherrill, that it has completed the system for handling all financial transac tions of the member organiza tions. These transactions are audited by Sherrill and the books are kept by W. S. Klutz. Last year the student body voted to create a Student Audit Board under whose direction all financial transactions of student activities would be audited The Audit Board is composed of Dean Bradshaw and R. H. Sher rill of the faculty, Francis An derson and Claiborn Carr from the student body, and Haywood Weeks president of the student body, who is chairman of the board. Groups Included in Audit The freshman, sophomore, junior, ana senior classes, tne engineering associations, the law, pharmacy, and woman's as sociation, the student govern ment and debating council, the athletic association, the student union, and 'the Student Enter tainment Committee are the student activities . which collect a" compulsory fee through the of the people. However, figures show that a small percentage of the voters in this state actually consider and vote on projected revisions to the supreme law of their state. - Propose Change in Amending In order to arouse interest in such additions to the state con stitution, a new amendment is proposed this year which will provide for special elections to determine the fate of the consti tutional amendments. This plan will change one sentence in Art icle XIII, section 2 of the con stitution. As that portion reads now, amendments "shall be sub mitted at the next general elec tion to the qualified voters of the whole state." It would be changed to read, "shall be sub mitted either at the next gen eral election or at a special elec- amendments of the future has aroused the most wide-spread discussion. The chief argument of those opposed to its passage is that it will be an unnecessary expense to hold a special elec tion when the business could be transacted at a general election. Refuting this opinion is the statement of the supporters of the measure to the effect that when men are running for office, the interest of the electorate tends to center upon the person alities involved rather than the issues. Consequently, few vote on the amendments, and those few seldom realize the signifi cance of their voting. Candidates Avoid Issues -.The fact that proposed amend ments are often governmental and not political in their fram (Continued ok last page) A. C. McINTOSH HONORED BY LAW SCHOOL FACULTY Professor Atwell Campbell Mcintosh, of the law school fa culty, was yesterday honored by a dinner given in celebration of his birthday by his colleagues in the law schopl. The dinner was given in the banquet hall, of Graham Memorial. Professor Mcintosh received his A. B. de gree in 1881 from Davidson Col lege and his M.A. degree from the same school in 1887 and at a later date received the degree of doctor of laws. RED CROSS WILL MAKE DRIVE FOR MOREMEMBERS Local Campaign Will Begin Next Week With 1,000 New Members Set as Goal. PLANS MADE FOR APPEARANCE OF CHEERIOS TODAY Group Will Meet in Memorial Hall at 1:45 This Afternoon For Final Instructions. STATE TEACHERS MEETING TO HEAR -TALK BY BROWNE Dr. Knight Will Address Meeting Raleigh Tonight on "Iraq in the League of Nations." in FRESHMEN HEAR HOBGOOD ANSWER PARTY CRITICISM Speaker Presents Concrete Examples Of Democratic Program; An swers John Wilkinson. group until Tuesday. The last minute campaign began Wednes- Univerity and which are forced day night when Arnold Wil liams spoke in Graham. Last x night John Jenkins presented the Socialist case in the debate with State, while Ben Proctor and Arnold Williams were in Hillsboro organizing a local club to come under the supervision of trip Audit Board according to the vote of the student body. The publication union is under the auditing system but as yet has not come under the book- WniTic svstem nt the board. and making a campaign speech. Five activities have voluntarily r riday l)r. E. E. Encson will come under the Audit Board. leave on a tour of the eastern tTiphp at-p- th v: M. f! A., the part of the state which will in- Grail, Kappa Sigma fraternity, elude speeches in Wilmington, the German club, and the inter Wilson, and other points along fraternity council. tne route. Satnrdav will, see i two crews in the field. Williams RAYMOND RATON TO TALK and .Proctor will address a meet- . on t tftc.savtnG MONDAY mg of the unemnloved in Dur ham and Jenkins" and Ervid Students interested m first aid Ericson will annear in Pitts- and life-saving will gather Mon boro. day afternoon in Gerrard hall at The final note of tWamnaign 4 :00 o'clock for a conference will be sminriprf i-ti r.hl Hill with Raymond S. Eaton, field renresentative of the American uii cirri, i, 1 1 1 1 1 -t- j-i mcr timuii stration is manned for Monday Red Cross. night at the Pickwick theatre. All students interested in first Several sneakers, comprising the aid and life-saving are cordially local oratorical battery, will be invited to attend the gathering, heard, and it is also expected and junior life-savers, senior that a band will be there to fin- life-savers, and examiners are ish off the drive with the strains urged to" be present to hear the of the International, " speaker. Eaton appearance here is being sponsored oy m President Graham to Talk Pe n" , J. At Kiwanis Convention American Joseph ttyae rraii, i& w President Frank P. . Graham 0f the local chapter. of the University will open the twelfth annual convention of the Carolina Kiwanis district at Columbia, S. C. Dr. Graham will speak at a banquet tonight which Members of the University faculty who are attending the1 north central district of the North Carolina State Teachers association in its meeting in Raleigh today and tomorrow from the school of education are Dean N. W. Walker Professors I. C. Griffin, A. K. King, H. F. Munch, Dr. E. W. Knight, Pro fessor W. J. McKee, Dr. C. E. Preston, Professor J. Minor Gwyn, Professor P. C. Farrar, and Professor Hugo Giduz, and Misses Sallie Marks and Nora Beust. Professor Munch is chairman of the mathematics section of this district and has arranged a program which includes a lec ture by Dr. E. T. Browne, of the University department of math matics, on the subject of "The Incommensurables of Geome try." Dr. Knight will address the social science sectional- meeting tomorrow morning at 9:00 o'clock pn "Iraq In the League of Nations." Miss Beust will speak before the section devoted to children's literature. Pro fessor King is secretary of the history section. The entire staff of the Chapel Hill high school is also attending the meeting. Junior Executive Committee There will be a meeting of the iunior class executive committee will mark the commencement of in Graham Memorial ommuay the three-day activities. night at 7:00 o clock. :, Kyser Sends Wishes The following telegram was received last night by Hay wood Weeks from Kay Kyser, originator of the Carolina Cheerios of a few years ago: "It makes me very happy to hear the Cheerios are to be reorganized. I wilfbe rooting with you in every yell you give, and if there is anything I can do to help, let me know. Good luck and best wishes." Kay Kyser. Hamilton Hobgood, president of the Young Democrats' club, spoke before the tres-nmen as sembly yesterday in behalf .of the Democratic party. He made an answer to the charges made by the Republican speaker, John Wilkinson, earlier in the week and at the same time presented the Democratic program. "This 1 M l program, ne said, consists oi balancing the budget of the United States, revising tariff and taxation, revising the bank ing system, and repealing the Eighteenth Amendment." In answering the charge made by the Republican speaker con cerning certain bills which were passed by the Democratic House of Renresentatives during the last congress, he said that one of them was introduced by a Re- mblican from New England, and the others were supported by two-thirds of the Republicans in the house. In conclusion, he predicted that when we were the age of our mothers and fathers the two maior nolitical- parties in the United States would not be De mocratic and Republican, but Democratic and Socialist. "The Republicans," he said, "will be left out, but not forgotten, be cause of their record in the last four years." Playmakers Arrange For New Productions The Carolina Playmakers have completed arrangements secur ing the production rights to Frederick Lonsdale's Aren't We All. The play, a modern, sophis ticated English comedy, will be produced in January as the third production of the. Playmakers this seasonf The second presen tation will consist of three ori ginal one-act plays in December. Beginning next week, the' local chapter of the Red Cross will make a drive for members throughout Chapel Hill and the University, with 1,000 new mem bers as the goal, according to information received from Jo seph Hyde Pratt, head of the local organization. A house-to-house canvass of the community will be made to secure 750 new members among citizens, and the dormitories and fraternities of the Univer sity will be covered by a number of students to get members and voluntary contributions. Stu dents who are unable to join the Red Cross are urged to' make contributions through the dor mitory and fraternity represent atives. Students in Charge of Drive William C. Medford, president of the 'inter-dormitory council, will conduct the drive in the dor mitories, with one boy in each dormitory 'acting as assistant. The drive in Spencer hall and the two sororities will be carried on by Miss Elizabeth Moore, and fraternities will be covered by Irvin Boyle, president of the in terfraternity council! The drive for members among graduate students is in charge of Horace Peters. Pratt pointed out that it is of real benefit to students of the University to be members of the Red Cross, besides the aid they will give to others. In the past the Red Cross has been able to take care of a student who be came seriously ill at the Univer sity, and 'who would not other wise have been able-to receive proper medical care. 'Besides the members in the community, it is expected tha at 'least 300 new members will be recruited among'students. Approximately 160 members of the newly revived Carolina Cheerios have been present for the last three nights in the meet ings in Memorial hall, practi cing in preparation for the com munity singing and cheering at the Florida game today. Great enthusiasm has been shown by the members as well as numer ous alumni. Meeting at 1:45 O'clock Cheerleaders Hunt and Betts request that , any students desir ing to join the Cheerios meet at Memorial hall this afternoon, at 1 :45 o'clock, at which time, they will be instructed as to the plans for the game. Regular members will also meet at the same time and place. , Megaphones will be given out in Memorial hall and the Cheer ios will proceed to the game in a body. Remaining megaphones will be distributed among other students at the game. Special sections have been re served in the stadium for the Cheerios. It is requestd by the cheerleaders that as many as possible of the Cheerios wear blue coats and white trousers. GERMAN CLUB LEADERS SELECTED YESTERDAY At a meeting of the German club yesterday in Gerrard hall the following officers were elect ed for coming dances : ball man agers, Milton . Barber, chief Shady Lane, Bill Roberts", Tom White, Jim Stikeleather, Hanes Lassiter, Albert Cowper, Alex Webb; Fall German officers: L C. Skinner, leader, Bob Mebane 1st.- assistant, Bill O'Brien, 2nd assistant; Sophomore German Jack May, leader, Frank, Har grave, 1st. assistant, Jim Steele 2nd. assistant; Mid-winter Ger man: Tom White, leader, Jim Peacock, 1st. assistant, John O'Neill, 2nd. assistant; and for the Junior German : John Leak leader, Phil Sasser, 1st. assist ant and Bob Reynolds, 2nd. as sistant. GENERAL ALUMNI ASSEMBLY PLANS ANNUALMEETING Nomination of Officers for Com ing Year Scheduled for Meet ing Here December .5. Friday, December 9, is the date set for the annual General Alumni Assembly to take place in Chapel Hill, according to a bulletin in The Alumni Review, released yesterday. The pro gram for the assembly this year. will be concentrated in an after noon meeting and supper session in Graham Memorial and will include much important business. Alumni clubs arid classes are expected to have delegates to the gathering, which is the most important meeting in the alumni year; In addition to the large amount of business to be trans acted, there will be a report to the alumni by President Frank P. Graham on the condition of the University. Nomination of Officers The nomination of officers for the coming year will take place at this time. Nominations will be made for the following offices, two candidates to be chosen for each position: president, first vice-president, second vice-president, and one of the three alumni representatives on the, Univer sity Athletic Council. Officers of the association for the present year are K. P. Lewis, Durham, president; R. G. Stock ton, Winston-Salem, first vice president; Hugh Dortch, Golds boro, second vice-president; and G. W. Hill, Durham, treasurer. A. I. E. E. Meeting Wednesday . The student branch of the A. I. E. E.. will conduct its regu lar meeting next Wednes day, November . 9. Beginning, then, meetings will take place only once a month. Members are urged to be present at this meeting.