Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 16, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Periodic 1 Boon University Library Chapel Hill. H-C 1 v . TiD OPEN FORUM LECTURE 8:00 P.M. GERRARD HALL VARSITY BASKETBALL 8:30 P.M. TIN CAN TONIGHT "VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1933 NUMBER 106 ail JiR Ml ARTIST LECTURES ON ETCHING AND ENGRAVING HERE DI APPROVES LOW RENT TO ASSIST SELF-HELP A bill stipulating that Gra ham dormitory should be rented to self-help students at reduced rates until such a time when the John Taylor Arms Completes University shalineed it tor ten Engraving Process to Illus- ants paying the regular rates trate Talk Tuesday. was overwhelmingly passed by the Dialectic Senate Tuesday John Taylor Arms, prominent "night. ) American etcher, presented a Three amendments to the con comprehensive lecture Tuesday stitution proposed at a previous night m Hill Music auditorium meeting were not voted on be on "The Making of an Etching. cause 0f absence of the proposer. The program was brought here Action, on the pending bills will by Mrs. Kathenne Pendleton te taken next week Arririgton of Warrenton. Arms, who is the president of the Society of American Etchers, formed the complete process of making an etching. He drew his work on a Conner plate and printed the piece, for his audi ence. Arms was forced to work hurriedly in order to complete his work, since the ordinary time employed in etching-making by great artists is often sev eral weeks. His finished pro CfflH MENG WILL LEAD DISCUSSIONS HERE NEXT WEEK Prominent Chinese Will Offer Series of Lectures on Sino Japanese Problems. Dr. Chih Meng, associate di rector of the China Institute in duct, Tiowever, was a beautiful America, who will conduct a i -creation of three hours work series of lectures and forum dis and was enthusiastically ap- cussiohs on Sino-Japanese prob- IDlauded at the conclusion of the hems at the University beginning program. February 21, is recognized as The noted etcher was able to one of the leading present-day give a brief description of the authorities on Chinese problems. different kinds of engraving Dr. Mener is beino: brought to during a slight intermission in the" University by the local Y. the process. , He explained the m. C. A. through the China In- vanous differences between reg- stitute. the Duroose of which is ular linear etchings, dry points, to promote educational and cul- mezzotints, and aquatints, and tural relations between China displayed examples of each type and the United States." " of art. . ..... ..... ... Dr. J. P. Harland of -the archaeology department intro duced the lecturer. DEPUTATION TEAM WILL VISIT DUNN Nine Y. M. C. A. Men Will Leave This Afternoon to Conduct Program Over Week-end.' A Y. M. C. A. deputation team of nine members will leave, for Dunn at 4:00 o'clock today on its initial trip of the year. Ed win Lanier, who is leader of the group, has charge of the pro gram to be presented during the week-end. Members of the team will be supper guests at Dunn tonight, where they will meet the Hi-Y clubs of the town and vicinity. Three different school assemb lies will be addressed tomorrow morning and the P.-T. A. and Mother's meeting at the Dunn grammar school will hear the University students tomorrow afternoon. Blucher Ehringhaus will ad dress a father and. son banquet tomorrow night. The team has also prepared other brief speech es for the banquet. The team will be entertained Saturday afternoon at a social. R. B. House, executive secretary of the University, will speak at a special service of the Method ist church Sunday as a part of the deputation program. ; Guest Tickets Awarded SECRETARIES OF ALUMNI CLUBST0 MEET IN DURHAM The: Meng family came origin ally from Shantung, the birth place of Meng-Tze (Mencius) , 372-289 B.C., the foremost of China's political philosophers. Dr. Meng's' igrandf ather and father were government officials, and their positions took them to Manchuria, where he lived for a number of years. Visited Student Centers When the Nationalist party unified the country m 1927, Meng travelled extensively in f!hirm! visitinc the different stu- Alumni secretaries in district .i- first- three of the American Alumni hand study of the social condi Council will attend a conference . . , 1928 h was invited by at the Washington Duke Hotel, the student federations of Eu Durham, February 24-25. J- rope to visit the different stu- iviaryon aaunaers, aiumm secre- d ht centers and lecture on the 1 A T T .. . - A . I xary oi tne university is airec- conditions in China and the as- J I 1 1 T 1 I Guest tickets to the Carolina theatre were awarded to the fol lowing members of the Daily Tar Heel staff for meritorious, work during the past week: Lane Fulenwider, D. M. Hum phrey, Walter Hargett, W. C. Durfee, James Craighill, T. H. Walker, Donoh Hanks, and W. R. Eddleman. These tickets are awarded each week through the courtesy of E. C. Smith. ORIGINAL DRAMAS TO BE PRESENTED Playmakers to Produce Fifteen New Plays in .Experimental Theatre February 28. Fifteen experimental produc tions will be offered this quar- ter by the Carolina Playmakers, it was announced yesterday. The plays, written by students in the University and produced under student direction, will be pre sented at the Playmakers thea tre February 28 and March 1. Try-outs for cast of the plays will be conducted in the Play makers thearte tomorrow after noon at 4 :00 o'clock. The plays to be presented are Malche, an Irish folk tragedy by Marion Tatum; Sleep Before Death, by Burdett Kindig ; Eto wah, a romance of the old south by Eugenia Rawls; Griddle Cakes, by Bill Bunyan; The Sons, by F. S. J. Mcintosh ; Five Times, a comedy by O. Martha Hatton; Tom Coy's Daughter, a folk play by Marguerite McGin- nis ; Design for Justice, a trage dy by Elmer Oettinger; His Heroine, a modern comedy by Everett Jess; Justice Sung by Fools, a negro tragedy by Harry Coble ; Discontent, by J. M. Led better; I'm Sorry Dead, by George Brown ; The Joke, Polish tragedy of army life by Ed Conrad ; A Little Boat to In dia, a' modern comedy by Foster Fitzsimons ; and Second Edition by Robert Barnett. There will be a meeting at 7:30 o'clock in 206 Phillips hall of all students and townspeople interested in amateur radio op eration of an experimental na- Four ture. Sherwood Githens, a grad uate student in physics, will de- iver an illustrated lecture on 'Wave-forms characteristic of vacuum tube oscillators." The lecture will contain results of re- Alumni Officers of Six States Will Convene for Discus sions February 24-25. Dr. Chase Has Had Wide Experience As President Of Three Universities tor of this division which com prises six southern states. Among subjects to be discuss- pirations of the Nationalist movement. Meng is author of the book Former Head of University Knows Private New England School, Small Specialized Institution, Southern, Mid-Western, And Now Metropolitan University. x o In his twenty busy years of .largely of native North Caro- pedagogy, Dr. Harry Woodburn j linians, a group whose problems Chase, recently chosen to head and concepts were in the main huge New York University, has j shaped by the dominant indus been affiliated with a number of ; try of the state, agriculture. orl i n -fnirm o 1 1 ir of fVin nr iron firm , . . -j - , AChina Speaks on the Conflict dlC CHUilllli. iCDUlUS, iUUlU. magazines, mailing lists, work with classes and reunions, work Between China and Japan, which was published by the in April T7-iTh lAnnl iilnhfi firnTiiin CT AT I ruuuo, xxr.6 cf:; 1932. Meng has lectured exten- a i x. a sively in this country, recent dents for alumni-hood, and the ... . . . . - , - i I ;n lectures having been given at the induction of graduates wto fe aJUuuuuuauuu0. n MassachuSetts. and at Dwire to Be Toastmaster meetings of the Foreign Policy nenry k. uwire, airecwr ui public relations and alumni af Association. fairs at Duke University, will Number In Infirmary act as toastmaster at an inform al dinner in the Duke union, Fri day night, February 24. Presi dent W. P. Few of Duke will speak. Concerts on the Duke carillon and pipe organ will be given for conference visitors be fore and after the evening pro gram. Saturday will include the dis cussion meeting and a message from the American council by Miss Clara Byrd of the Woman's College. A campus inspection trip to Chapel Hill will take Place Saturday afternoon. Last year the conference took Place at Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida. Alabama, Geor gia, North and South Carolina, Florida, and Virginia are states in the third district. , , Shows Sharp Increase The infirmary list climbed up tn twdntv-spven vesterday. ah WA.W - ' , increase of six over the last re port. The majority of the in mates are confined for colds or sore throats. TVmao .ftTifinpd were: Frank Anders, Branch Craig, Jr., L. C Tebeau. Edith Wladkowsky, E n r.;nQ. W H. Lvon. John is iiuaiu) Chapman, D. J. Bradley, V. W Webb Woodrow Wooteh, F. G Wolke, L. M. Cromartie, Frank Bass. Robert T " Bolton, John Innes, E. W. Con rad. Henry Wright, C. E. Hoi w- T Mitchell. A. C. Mc- Cade. G. A. Caldwell, Jr., J. E Cooke, ;George C. Steele, Y. L Hollons, and Gr L. Iillery. Acee to Lead Devotional The morning devotional ser vice in Memorial hall, will be conducted by John Acee today at 10:30 o'clock. Selections by Walter Patterson, organist, will conclude the service. GITHENS WILL DELIVER LECTURE TO RADIO FANS PRESIDENT-ELECT ESCAPES FIRE OF WOULD-BE KILLER Members of Roosevelt's Party at City Reception in Miami Wounded. President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt was fired at five times shortly after 10:30 o'clock last search in the physics department. niSht b a political fanatic while Immediatelv following the lee- speaking at a city reception tor ture there will be code practice for anyone interested. MISS CHAPPELL WILL LEAD OPEN FORUM TONIGHT Well-Known Student of Indus trial Struggles to Speak on Breaking Breadlines." him in Bay Front Park . in Miami, Florida. None of the shots wounded him, but Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago, in Roosevelt's car, was reported to be seriously injured by the shots which took effect in his back. The president-elect was per fectly composed after the firing, waving his hand at the crowd of twenty-five thousand who had gathered for the city's wel come for him. Others Injured Mrs. Cermak, William Sinit of Dr. Winifred L. Chappell, secretary of the Methodist fed eration for social service, who has been an investigator of many the state department, and May- of the most important industrial or R. B. Gautier of Miami were struggles in the United States, also injured by the shots. will speak here tonight on the This is said to be the first sixth Open Forum discussion, attempt on the life of a presi Her topic is "Breaking the dent-elect in the history of the Breadlines. Miss Chappell has nation. become well known as co-editor . The would-be assassin was ar- with Professor Harry F. Ward rested immediately after the of the Social Service Bulletin. shooting and is now held in the Prior to 1922, Miss Chappell Dade county jail. was an instructor of social sci- -With the report of the shoot ence at the Chicago Training inS came tne announcement that School ;forMissions,:Jn tthis Roosevelt;s northern trip has work she made a close study of Deen indefinitely postponed. the effect of industrial condi tions upon the social, moral, and religious life of the skilled and unskilled workers of Chicago. For some time she was chairman of the Labor Committee of the Woman Church Federation of Chicago. In 1926 she made a study of the historical strike of the Passaic textile workers for the Christian Centum. Later she made a detailed study of the The North Carolina chapter New York garment industry for of the American Guild of organ- institutions which appear to be typical of American educational Centers. From the president's In 1930 he accepted the offer of the president of the Univer sity of Illinois. At this school office at the University, oldest! he experienced another change state , institution in the country, he went to the University of II- inois, typical of the large mid- western colleges which have de veloped in the last sixty years. Rounding out the cycle," it is at present a privately endowed school which claims him as chief administrator. Dr. Chase may be said to have been associated in his career with virtually all the varied ex tant types of higher educational organizations. Obtaining his A.B. degree, at Dartmouth, he was there acquainted with the personality of an aristocratic private New England school. Clark University, where he se cured his doctorate, has" long been an example of the small in stitution which thrives on spe cialization. Southern Tradition Here While in Chapel Hill, as pro fessor and president, Dr. Chase encountered the southern educa tional tradition, vastly different in method and approach from the systems to which he had been previously exposed. During his term of chief executive, the student . body was comprised in educational atmosphere. Nine ty per cent of the Illinois stu dents were from urban homes. and forty per cent were from outside the state. Dr. Chase has stated that he considered the school equipped with conditions most favorable to the develop ment of the American state uni versity. Illinois Has Grown Located at Champaing-Urb- ana, the university has grown to gigantic proportions since its founding in 1867 under the pro visions of the Morrill Land Act. In addition to the 12.000 stu dents enrolled in the two Illinois towns, several branches of the university have been establish ed in Chicago. The total land owned, including the main cam pus at Urbana, experimental farms, and small tracts in Chi cago, totals 2,276 acres. In contrast to the conditions at Illinois, New York Univer sity is a school practically de void of a campus. An example of the city college whose units are greatly decentralized when compared with the compactness (Continued on Last page) ORGANISTS WILL MEET AT RESORT FORCVENTION Nelson O. Kennedy, University Musician and Dean of Organ Guild, Will Attend. the World Tomorrow. Long Experience as Speaker Miss Chappell has had a long and varied experience on the speaking platform and with for- ists will meet in Pinehurst Sat urday afternoon, February 25, in the first mid-winter convention of the organization. Professor Nelson O. Kennedy, um groups, bhe has written for University instructor in music many church and lay publica- and dean of the North Carolina tions, contributed a chapter to a guild, will attend as representa book for church youth, Social tive from this section. Adventure, and edited An The meet has been , arranged American Pilgrimage, excerpts by Frederick S. Smith, sub-dean of letters written by Grace nf fhp crufld. in an attemnf. to Scribner. establish a nrecedent of two Miss Chappell's participation meetings each year. " . ' aw in tne lecture series nere will The o-m'ld convened in ChaDel bring to the dscussion the in- Hill last spring and will meet formed attitude of an alert, sym- here again in March. In connec- pathetic woman who has seen tion with, this year's meet the much of the injustice of irregu- group will sponsor a contest for lated American industry and has student organists of the state. devoted her life to the fight for organ redtal arranged in justice in the economic field, as connection with the Pinehurst well as the political field. pof wi11 h(X nrpspntPf1 hv Pro- fessor Leslie P. Spelman, direc tor of music at Meredith College. Dr. Stanbury Will Preach Here Sunday Dr. H. Augustine Smith of Bos- Dr. W. A. Stanbury, pastor of ton University will address the Memorial Methodist the Duke church in Durham and former pastor of the Methodist church the convention. .The purpose of the mid-winter convention is to emphasize in Chapel Hill, will preach in social activities in the associa- Chapel Hill Sunday morning. Dr. Stanbury teaches a course on "Worship" in the Duke School of Religion, has been one of the leading ministers in the North Carolina conference of 1 t A -1 1 the Metnoaist cnurcn, ana is tion of American organists. Delegates are expected from all over the state. Buccaneer Staff to Meet The business staff of the Caro lina Buccaneer will convene this president of the board of Chris- evening at 7:00 o'clock in the tian education in the North offices of the publication. Carolina conference and there- Members of the business and fore has a particular interest in editorial staffs of the Buccaneer the work of the church among who have not paid banquet fees the students at Chapel Hill. are expected to do' so at once.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 16, 1933, edition 1
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