The Periodical Boon University Library wzvzl Hill, 21. c. DR. CHARLES BEARD . WEIL LECTURES GERRARD HALL 8:00 P. M. : DR. HIH- MENG MANCHURIAN PROBLEM GERRARD HALL 7:00 P. M. VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1933 NUMBER 110 TiD IjT- J I I II CHIH MENG WILL DELIVER ADDRESS UPON MANCHURIA Lecture and Discussion Will Be In Gerrard Hall Tonight At 7:00 O'clock. H. M. Jones To Speak Founder of "Bull's Head" Will Talk At Weekly Meeting at 4:30. The opening address of a series of lectures and forum discussions on the Sino-Japanese difficulties will be delivered to night at 7 :00 o'clock in Gerrard liall by Dr. Chih Meng, assoc iate director of the China In stitute, in America, of which Dr. Paul Monroe of Columbia University is director. The ad dress, a discussion of "The Man churian Problem," will precede hp first Weil lecture at 8:00 o'clock in the same hall. Dr. Meng will lead forum dis Hussions for individual history .and government classes tomor row morning until 12 :00 o'clock; At 12:00 o'clock he will speak and conduct a forum for several combined classes and for as many of the public as attend in Bingham hall auditorium. Dr. Meng is accompanied by his -wife, who is available for for ums with the women of Chapel Hill. Active Public Life Dr. Meng is actively engaged in public affairs and belongs to the progressive wing in China's new political growth. For a number of years he has been a Iteen student of Japanese affairs irhich in any . way relate to China. Out of this background Tae comes to the University as an able student of the topic he is to discuss. Recognized as one of the lead ing contemporary authorities, Dr. Meng is appearing under the (Continued on page two) SECOND CONCERT TO BE PRESENTED Harold Dyer Will Conduct Sym phony Orchestra Sunday Af ternoon in Music Hall. Professor Howard Mumf ord Jones, former member of the 7 University English department, will be the speaker at the week ly Bull's Head meeting this af ternoon at 4:30 o'clock: Professor Jones, holder of a Gugenheim scholarship, has been teaching in Michigan since leaving the University. He has written poetry and is the au thor of America and French Culture and co-author of The Romanesque Lyric. He has also contributed to Scribner's. While a member of the fac ulty here Professor Jones found ed the Bull's Head bookshop. DRAMA GROUP TO PRESENT COMEDY DURING WI$EK-END Playmakers Will Produce For mer Student's Work, "Sad Words to Gay Music." STUDENTS DESIRE RONALD TAMBLYN AS LOCAL PASTOR Petition Circulated on Campus Re quests Call for Substitute Pres byterian Minister. The University symphony or chestra, conducted by Professor Harold S. Dyer, will present its second concert of this season :Sunday afternoon, February 26, in Hill music hall at 4 :00 o'clock. The symphony orchestra fol lows a custom of presenting one concert on the campus each quar ter. The first concert was given in December and another will be presented in May. The or ganization numbers fifty musi cians from the music school, fac ulty, and residents of Chapel Hill. Sunday's program will fea ture a concerto for violin by Bruch played by Professor T. Smith McCorkle, concertmeister of the orchestra. Other selec tions on the program will in clude Massenet's ballet La Source, an arrangement for or chestra of Wagner's Walthers Prieslied from Die Meistersing er and V.alse Triste by Jean Sibelius. Continuing their policy of oc casionally producing an original play by some University student or graduate, the Playmakers will present Sad Words to Gay Music, by Alvin Kerr, in the. Playmaker theatre Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of this week. Kerr's Play is built around I finitely more the character of an American girl who goes to London to visit the mother of her fiance, a young Englishman whom she has met in New York. The young heroine's irrepressible spirits prove very distressing in the English household, and the worst suspicions of her intend ed mother-in-law are confirmed when she runs away and mar ries an old friend of the family. Intriguing Home-Life The home-life of this very un usual couple furnishes excellent comedy during the last two acts. The middle-aged husband de cides to regain his youth by con tinually throwing parties, danc ing on every possible occasion to the loudest and snappiest music, inventing a bar that pops out at the touch of a button, wear ing violently colored pajamas, and, to cap the climax, coming down with a severe case of the mumps. A movement sponsored pri marily by Presbyterian students in the University has been launched on the campus with the aim of having the local Presbyterian call Reverend Ron ald Tamblyn to the pulpit of the church, it was learned yester day. Reverend Tamblyn has filled the pulpit of the church during the illness and since the death of the late Dr. W. P. Moss, and has gained popularity with both students and church members. The movement has taken the form of a petition to the con gregation of the church and sponsors are actively canvass ing the campus to secure the names of eight hundred or more students who are well enough acquainted with the work of i Tamblyn to back the movement. Capability Cited The petition states that dur ing his short residence in Chapel Hill, Tamblyn has shown himself to be "a capable, tact ful, devoted and thorough leader and scholar in both religious and intellectual life"; and that the presence of a man of his capa city in the community will be beneficial than the presence of several less ex perienced men. Reverend Tamblyn, a grad uate of Harvard Seminary, came to Chapel Hill from Greensboro. He is considered one of the most liberal ministers in the south.- BOTANY DIVISION SECURES VOLUMES ON WILD FLOWERS Set of Paintings by Mary Vaux Wal cott Is Composed of Most Com plete Selection of Flowers. The botany department has just received a five volume set of wild flower paintings by Mary Vaux Walcott entitled North American Wild Flowers. This collection was bought by the library through the Biblio graphical Aids fund, and repre sents the most complete selec tion of North American flowers in existence. Mrs. Walcott has spent- her life in painting and describing these various types of flowers Many oi tnem were done on geological trips with her hus band, Dr, Charles Walcott, for mer secretary of the Smithson ian institute. The western flow ers were frequently painted un der very trying conditions. Of ten, on a mountain side or high pass a fire was necessary to warm her stiffened fingers and body. During a period of ten years she spent from three to four months a season-in study ing in the Canadian Rockies. . A secret process, which brings out the white very distinctly, has been used in printing this collection!" New Walk Planned Members of Faculty and Student Body Not Decided on Location. Ten prominent members of the University faculty and stu dent body met yesterday after noon in front of Graham Mem orial, deliberated for over a half of an hour, and failed to reach a decision on a new walk to be laid between Graham Memorial and the gate facing the post office. Members of the grounds com mittee, making the survey, stat ed yesterday that no action on the new walk would be taken until student preference had been ascertained through a se lected group of representative students. SALON ENSEMBLE TO FURNISH MUSIC FOR PLAYMAKERS Thor Johnson's Ensemble Will Play Overture and Entre-Act Music Thursday and Saturday. SEVENTEEN MEN TAKEN INTO NEW HONORARY ORDER Alpha Chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma Initiates Eight Profes sors and Nine Students. Monogram Club to Meet - The Monogram club will meet in its regular quarterly session tonight at .7 :15 o'clock in room 214 Graham Memorial,1 accord ing to an announcement by the president. The proposed initia tion for new members of the club will be a topic for discussion. Greek Weiner Purveyor Is Cosmopolite And Wanderer o George Colment, Who Operates Chapel Hill's Odoriferous Hot Dog Stand, Is Accomplished Linguist and Has Figured In Rare Adventures. ' o From olive groves to sizzling j face in a manner to remind one weiners. That's the history of of a soldier who has been around A. I. E. E. Meets Tonight A regular meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers is scheduled for to night at 7:45 o'clock in 206 Phil ips hall. The principal speak er of the evening will be J. P. McConnell, a University alum nus and plant engineer of the Burlington mills. His subject will be some phase of electrical engineering. The public is .in cited to attend. The Carolina Salon ensemble, conducted by Thor Martin Johnson, will play at the Play makers theatre Thursday and Saturday evenings in connection with the current bill of the dra matic group featuring Sad Words to Gay Music, a Broad way farce written by a former member of the Playmakers. The ensemble will present an overture and will play between the acts. This is the sixth cam pus appearance of the group this quarter. The most recent pre sentation was in connection with the Playmaker production of George Bernard Shaw's play You Never Can Tell which open ed the Shaw-Henderson festival here. The ensemble has sche duled several other appearances before the end of the quarter among which will be a chapel program given before the fresh men assembly. George Colment purveyor of hot dogs in the little odoriferous shack adjoining the Carolina theatre. But George has not always had the satisfaction of the mid night appetites of Hill residents uppermost in his mind. In his youth, years ago on the sunny slopes of the Attic hills that George always mentions with a yearning look in his eye, the de sire for romance, for adventure burned in his soul. Noted Traveler Modern psychologists would call George's bewilderment weltschmerz, but to George it was only the call of something new over the horizon that drew him on. Leaving his native home, this modern Odysseus started on a travel tour that car ried him to nearly every country in Europe and northern Africa. Linguistic difficulties have never been George's problems. Not only can he speak and write seven languages Greek, Eng lish, Italian, French, Spanish, Turkish, and some dialects of the Romany tongue but, and what is more interesting and more striKing, ne can sing in each one of these. George has a fondness for France and Par- isiennes, and to show that he really treasured his memories of Marianne in his mind, he offer ed to sing a couple of bars of Le Marsellaise. Tall and dark, and with wrinkles wreathing his stern the world and seen and suffered much, George would never be suspected of any amatory con quests. But Mrs. Colment and there appeared to be a twinkle in her eye at the time- stated that George has an es pecial fondness for young Turk ish and French misses. George smiled deprecatingly, as though to say that this was of the far distant past. But an active imagination could easily picture George as a lineal descendant of either Ali Babba, Abou Ben Ad hem, King Solomon, or the man in the iron mask. Involved in Penn Gunplay George figured quite promin ently last year in the Ashby Penn shooting. In fact he was the casus belli of that shooting affray, and was nothing, loath to recount his own part in the af fair. "But that will never hap pen again," said George. "Look." And behind the coun ter, the polished muzzle of wicked looking shotgun was vis ible. George means business. "And look," and he flourished a pearl-handled revolver, which he claimed he intended to carry around with him wherever he went. "And it's loaded," hissed George closely. Apparently al George needs to do in the future is to hiss closely to any intruder .During the war, ueorge ran three restaurants at Newport News, Va., and while he catered there to some "tough charac - (Continued on page two) DR. BEARD WILL COMMENCE WEIL LECTURES TODAY 4 President Graham Will Preside Over Talk at 8:00 O'clock In Gerrard Hall. seventeen university men, eight members of the faculty and nine students, were initiat ed into the North Carolina Al pha chapter of the Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary com merce fraternity, yesterday. Following the initiation a ban quet was held in Graham Mem orial. John W. Jenkins of the University of Georgia, Grand Secretary and, Treasury of the fraternity was in charge of the initiation ceremony. The members of the faculty initiated yesterday were: Dean D. D. Carroll and Professors G. T. Schwenning, E. E. Peacock, R. J. M. Hobbs, R. H. Sherrill, J. B. Woosley, H. D. Wolf, and W. F. Ferger. The students taken in were: A. O. Carroway, R. D. Covington, R. D. Davis, C. C. Hamlet, O. J. Moore, An thony Oliverio, Carroll Rogers, Jack Thompson, and Virginia Yancey. The charter for the Alpha chapter was granted following the petitioning by a small group of the faculty and students. The constitution of the organization provides that not more than one fifteenth of the junior class nor more than one tenth the senior (Continued on page two) SONG COMMITTEE TO MEET TODAY FOR DISCUSSIONS Members Will Gather in 2 Hill Music Hall During Assembly Period This Morning. Speaking on the "Father's Conception of National Inter est," Dr. Charles A. Beard, dis tinguished American historian and economist, will deliver the first of the annual series of Weil Lectures tonight at 8:00 o'clock in Gerrard hall with President Graham presiding. The series will consist of three lectures on the general subject," "What Is National Interest," the first of which comes tonight and the other two on Wednesday and Thursday evenings of this same week. fc The theme of Dr. Beard's lectures will be to give a clear conception of what is the na tional interest which must be maintained by independent na tions while they are participat ing in international cooperative moves. The particular subjects of the other two talks will be "The Development of the Con ception Land and Sea," on Wednesday evening, and "To ward a New Definition of Na tional Interest," on Thursday evening. , " Dr. Beard, who, with Mrs. Beard, has been visiting in Chapel Hill for several weeks, is one of -the most outstanding men in the fields of history and social science in America today. He comes to the University to con tinue this annual series of lec tures and has had a long line of distinguished predecessors at the task, including former Pre- (Continued on page two) JENNINGS SPEAKS AT CHAPEL HERE Episcopal College Work Secre tary Discusses Putting Zest Into Our Lifes. The University song com mittee, appointed last fall to consider the selection of a new University anthem, will meet during assembly period this morning in 2 Hill music hall to discuss further plans for secur ing a song. Started last October by the Grail, the movement has gained no results as yet, although songs have been considered. The committee to gather this morning' is composed of : fac ulty members : J. Maryon Saun ders, University alumni secre tary: C. T. Woollen, business manager of the University ; Pro fessors T. Smith McCorkle and H. S. Dyer of the music depart ment; and R. B. House, execu tive secretary of the University ; student members : Haywood Weeks, Claiborn Carr, Claude Sawyer, Wofford Humphries, Thor Johnson, and Bobbie Mason. Coleman Jennings, college work secretary for the Episco pal church in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia, yesterday addressed the freshmen and sophomores during assembly period with a short but interesting talk in which he analyzed the two trends which tend to put zest in life. The problem which confronts us all, according to Jennings, is: "How are we to get zest out of life?" He said that there are two trails to that end ; one being a downward trail, and the other an upward trail. "Following the crowd, snobbishness, and filling our lives so full that we have no time for the really, worthwhile things in life," were cited by Jennings as examples. Jennings stated that religion was the best of the upward trends. Many people put relig ion in the "believe it or not" class, according to Jennings, but belief in the fact that there is a being above us certainly cannot-be put in that class. Devotionals Today Voluntary devotional services will be resumed this morning at 10:30 o'clock in Memorial hall with J. D. Winslow conducting the short scripture reading and prayer. Walter Patterson will open and close the program with meditative selections on the or gan. , ; .