Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 13, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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ELECTION DANCE LEADERS JUNIC : 2CUTIVE GROUP 7:30 P.M. 210 GRAHAM MEMORIAL 9:00 P.M. GERHARD HALL VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1933 NUMBER 149 PI 1 t rr H iv" i irr riv f I I I 1 flTNfiRAI. MFRTINft tau beta pi to P'"""" TAP MRN TONTOHT TO mm DEBAiii ACnVITDS TODAY Ceremony to Be Staged at Meeting of Engineering Societies. At a joint meeting of the four . a. tv : a? I AncrineWncr viAiia tvnlorhf of rnntesunis iu jjraw lur ocv.- i """6" " v-1"' I rr -o i j tvi -i n m tions and Pairs in Ay- 1 :ou ocioc m xrnuiips nan, iau cock Competition. Beta 'Pi will tap new men. The tapping will conclude a program A general meeting of all com- presented by the societies i a I - petmg deoaters ana teacners jointly. this afternoon at 2:00 ociock A motion picture, "Blasting a will begin the activities of the xam into Position" will be twenty-first annual high school shown, and there will be two AWARDS OF LAW SCHOOL MADE AT AMUALBANQUET Student Editors of "Law Re view" Announced; Research Assistants Appointed. SIGMA DELTA HAS mcCORKle will TTTitrnnm a tttit 1 nn At the annual law school ban quet, last night at the Carolina Inn, the awards of prizes and editorships were announced. ine winners 01 the nrst year week. Acting Dean N. W. Walk- talks. J. D. Watson will speak competition for student board pr of the school of education will nn "General Features of thp of editors of the Law Review preside. Plant," and J. R. Martin will ad- are as follows: Joel Barber Ad Drawings for sections and dress the society on "Hydraulic ams Arthur Allen Block, Ervid pairs for the first preliminaries Experiments Leading to the De- Eric Ericson, Robert McBryde- in tne aeoaung coniesi wiu uc yelopment of the Dam. rieming ones, Keuoen rurman in order. Fourteen such match- Those taDDed will come from James, John Augustus Kleeme-' es between fifty-five high school thfi eiffhth scholasticallv ier Edgar Davis Kuykendall entries will take place tonight of junior ciass and must Jr., Harry Woodrow McGalliard at 7:00 ociock in the audito- &ow qualities of leadership , in - Jacob Carlyle Rutledge, Herbert riums of Bingham, Caldwell, tegrity, and character. Hamilton Taylor, and Emmett Sew East and New West, Saun- Tau Beta Pi is a national hon- Clive Willis, Jr. The new editor- ders, FhiUips, i'eaDoay, iJavie, or r m- . fraternitv. m-chief of the North Carolina ana Manning halls, as well as in The purpose of the organization Law Review is Irvin Elsworth tne nans ui uie ui cu x v- ig to foster a liberal spirit of rD 01 narnsDurg, r a. , eties. University students will ul.u in the engineering The Hill prize, established by -m 1 - 1 act as presidents and secretaries schools q at tne meetings. SERMON STARTS COMMENCEMENT SUNDAY, JUNE 4 Semi-Finals Winning affirmative teams one from each group of four competing tonight, will meet to morrow morning in the Phi As- spmhlv hall. Negative team wisners will be matched in the ... 1 1 Dihall. One team win oe cnos- Graham and Ehrinfrhaus to en from each side to compete in Speak Informally at Grad- the final match tomorrow night uation Exercises. for the Aycock Memorial cup. Tbo oicrhtPATith annual hisrh The Baccalaureate sermon will sthool tennis tournament will be delivered Sunday morning, get under way tomorrow morn- June 4, m Memorial hall, tobe- student body :to conduct speciar Xi aivd continue tnrougnoui tne comintjnceinent exerciises the day, with match play begin- for the class of 1933. No speak- rAng sit 10:00 o'clock. At 10:45 er for the occasion has been se o'elock the state interscholastic lected as yet, but according to track and field championships J. Maryon Saunders, alumni sec wiH be run off, and will also last retary, a definite announcement through the afternoon. ' will be forthcoming shortly. Presentation of the Aycock The Chapel Hill Oratorio so- (Continued on, page two) Iciety will also feature the first George Watts Hill of the Dur ham bar, is an award of fifty dollars to the student editor who makes the best total contribu tion to the Law Review during the year. Frank Parker Spruill, Jr., of Rocky Mount was an nounced as the winner of the Hill prize. Hugh L. Lobdell of Rosedale, Mississippi, was an nounced as the winner of the Winston-Salem award. Research Assistants The following were appointed as research assistants from the OF FRATERNTTl Music Instructor to Play at Flora MacDonald College. Professor T. Smith McCorkle Pi Beta Phi, Chi Phi, and Beta of the department of music will Theta Pi Are Other Leaders give a solo violin recital at Flora In Academic Standings. MacDonald College in Red Soriners Monday nierht. He will Sigma Delta ranked first in be assisted at the Diano by Mrs. the academic standings of the McCorkle. thirty-one fraternity chapters professor McCorkle recently of the University for the winter aDTeared in Hill Music hall in quarter with an average of 1.81, Yds annual campus recital. He has also appeared as soloist with the highest average ever ob- x 1 J 1 x n ji 1 utixieuuya irarerm the University symphony and university, accoruing u a re- was guest artist last month with port released from the regis- the orchestra of the Virginia trar's office yesterday. - Teachers' CoHeee. A recital Following Sigma Delta in the has also been scheduled in Wash- order of their standing m the ington during May. iinTuaT rrvrfT woro 1 rs.oT5i Km 1 rf 1 jfroiessor McuorKie s pro- .5b; Chi Phi, b0; 15eta 'lhetaUram Monday will include Men Pi, 2.61; Chi Omega, 2.62; Zeta delssohn's Concerto in E minor Tau?i 2.65; Tau Epsilon Phi, (ojms 6Jf) Dvorak's Sonatino 4.00 ; and aigma Aipna ipsnon, (0Jms 100 three sketches : 00 Ghosts, Gophers, and The Mea- bcering feystem dow Trk by Cecil Burleigh, The "Standard Score" by Barcarole by MacMillen, Wee which the fraternities are rank- m Q Heart by shilkret, and the ed is determined by dividing the American Concerto by Gusikoff. difference between the academic vrrir a O 1 K -t s3 1 aVV fa4' possible grade (1.00) into ten MuHl TLAlO IU equal parts. "Score" below that of the academic average is der termined by dividing the differ ence between 3.15 and the low est possible grade (6.00) into ten equal parts. By this method Sigma Delta was credited with plus seven. The other fraternities in the up per group received a score of plus, three. The entire fraternity average BE PRODUCED BY STUDENTS TODAY Program Will Be Offered by Stu dents in Professor Koch's Playwriting Course. research under faculty direc tion : Irvin Elsworth Erb, Cecile Louise Piltz, Robert Howard Schnell, and Lucile Marshall El liott. The students were select- (Continued on page two) DROP SHOWN IN WARNINGS FROM LASTJffl)-TERT,I Greatest Number of Deficiencies Shown in English Despite Slight Decrease. Six hundred and eighty-five University students received mid-term warnings on one or more courses for this quarter, according to reports posted in the registrar's office yesterday morning. This figure represents a de crease of 53 from the number on the deficiency list for last quarter, when the names of 738 students were posted at mid quarter. English Leads As in the past quarter, the greatest number of deficiencies were shown in the English de partment, although there was a decrease of 11 in the number of warnings issued on English courses. There were 178 poor grades reported ' yesterday as against 189 for last quarter. French replaced mathematics as the second hardest course. The list carried 107 deficiencies in French and 106 in mathe matics. Figures for the winter were: mathematics, 146; French 130. Chemistry stood fourth from the top in the number of warn ings. There were 99 warnings given on these courses. Span- Eight one-act plays, written, cast, and directed by students in ish th g8 deficiencies, and en xroiessor r . xx. .jxocu piay- rf e rw witK 64. followed advanced from 3.14 for the fall wntm? C0UrS?S' ";D? eri; chemistry. quarter to 2.97 for the winter T " , I T 7 1 The number of warnings in J. ' i i'iu iv ri iriu .r an t r 1 u "J " 7 quarter, while the academic av erage moved up from 3.30 for the fall quarter to 3.15 for the winter session. CAROLINA SQUAD DEBATES GEORGIA TECH HERE TODAY Eddleman and Russell to Take Affirmative, Condemning Jap anese Policy in China. The Georgia Tech debating group will meet the Carolina team this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock in Gerrard hall. The query as suggested by Georgia Tech is stated: Resolved: That Japan's foreign policy be con demned. Carolina, represented by Bill Eddleman and Phillips Kussell, will take the affirmative, condemning the Japanese policy. Eddleman has participated in intercollegiate debating for two years, and Russell, although freshman, is entering his third debate. Boston University will debate kere Fridav mominer on the 1 question of war debts. Red Rankin and "Don Seawell will speak for Carolina. Over the holidays Carolina and Georgia Tech will renew forensic relations in Atlanta. The topic will be the adoption of the British radio system in the United States. John Wilkinson and Don Sea "well were chosen to debate for Carolina at the debate try-outs Monday night for the coming debate against 'Agnes Scott Col lege of Atlanta. The Univer ' sity team will tike the negative f the question, Resolved: Tha the system of Norman Thomas is preferable to the present sys tem. . commencement day with an ora orio in Memorial hall Sunday IT I 11 evening, last year tne ieature was well received. Alumni Day, Monday, June 5, will follow the usual program. The "Judge Winston" meeting in Gerrard hall at 10:30 o'clock will begin the day's schedule and will include the customary remi niscence session with special emphasis given to the re-uniting classes. At 1:00 o'clock there will be the annual Alumni lunch Cornelia Otis Skinner Claims No Credit For "Wives Of Henry VIII" 8:00 o'clock today in the Play- maker theatre. The perform ances will be given before an invited audience of Playmakers and authors. First to be produced this af ternoon is Discontent, a play of industrial strife by J. M. Led- history, which dropped from 160 in the fall to 52 last quarter, decreased still further yester day. The report showed that there were only 40 deficiencies posted on history courses.. Famous Actress Says That Idea for Her Performance Here Was Suggested by Friend; Believes That Theatre Should Give People Something to Think About. (By Joseph Sugarman) "It wasn't my idea. Not at all. I don't claim the slightest credit for it. A friend of mine suggested The Wives of Henry VIII to me." Miss Cornelia Otis Skinner, famed actress who eon in Swain hall, and in the played to an appreciative Chapel late afternoon a band concert is f? a iuesaa scheduled to take place under fairly blew these words at the the Davie poplar. During sup- mwrviewer ou aer puwuer puu pers for re-uniting classes at wmcu w uijr uy 7:00 o'clock, a performance by over loveiy lemures. fhP Hamlin Plavmakers will be A sure line of mascara on the given for those whose classes do eye-lid brought forth the mod- not unite and for parents of sen- est coniession, ; i ren you, iaia iors. The alumni reception and ieei ratner aaring, an American ball will take place in the Tin attempting to do English his- . 1 XI T T 1111 (Continued on last page) tory. And then I know so little about any history anyway. How ever I studied the period for a year and then went to England to test the production. I felt xxie junior executive wumui,- JUNIOR COMMITTEE WILL MEET TONIGHT tee will meet tonight for its most important session of the year. It is absolutely imperative that all members be in 210 Graham Me morial at 7:30 o'clock. Decisions even then as though I were 'but ting in." First Performance Miss Skinner gave her first performance of Henry's harem mausiTiai strne Dy i . ivi. lea- T A T T m A J) JTUJ7J better. The play is directed by DAlLl 1 Aft iliiilL Ann Robertson. Blow Me Down, a comedy of sailor folk, written and directed by W. A. L. Bon- yun, And The Poet Laughed, a modern comedy written and di- VOnOWC OWlilC W WiC , , , i Tr- 1 -11 AfFo.V T Cnl 4 tt.9l ; Tudor setting e-ave the insDira- rectea D? uruetre mnuig, win "tuulw " iuuor seiung gave me inspira- , , . I ru tvto.t?o1. fnn,i,A, rr 11 I IOIIOW. t!j LOW ail JTLCLniUrllUn. a uxtuiaui uiwiioi, lucutuuo XV.I1UX1 . . . .... STAFF BANQUET SET FOR TONIGHT tion for sudh a sketch " is also used as the background legend of the south in two acts Of Past Regimes Invited. for Lady V. Sackville-West's well-known novel The Edward ians. In the volume it is re ferred to as Chevron. The au completes the aiternoon pro gram. The drama is written and directed by Eugenia Rawls, and The annual Tar Heel Grid- ron banquet, patterned after the National Press f!lnh hnnniiph Z : T r , ' , will be given in the banquet thor herself recently lectured at Johnson and his Salon Orches- room of Graham Memorial to- N. C. C. W. in Greensboro. Just as Miss bkmner com- tra. niht at fi?30 oVlock. Amnnc Martha Hatton's dream play,L,A. , . , . pleted the amazing circular ad- ; Tintagtt, directed by PhiHp Mil- tors, managing editors, and busi- ventures of the Wives, Dr. J. P. us ana. ine auinor Wi" ness managers of the past two Harland popped into the dress- evening program at :uu regimes. in rnnm with the news that an 0 clock- Following, are a mod- T . nilT1 va FrpT1pll. aTlf? alumna of Bryn Mawr, Miss ern erican comedy written Jolm Manninff who fte Skinner's school, "just, couldn't ana reca uy - editorial and business depart- wait to meet the diseuse." The (Continued on page three) ments of the Daily Tar Heel relevant to the coming junior- at Knoll castle, the seat of the senior dances will be made and Sackville-Nicolson family, which those members not attending is rich in Tudor tradition. A fhis all-important session will be striking success at this private dropped from the committee. gathering, she later played it " with equal distinction in Ldn- Condition Unchanged dQn and New York Up(m her According to . Watts hospital return to this country she called attaches last night the condi- up her Philadelphia friend to tion of John Scott of the Eng- thank her once again for the lish department is unchanged, idea. To her astonishment, the During the afternoon he had not friend replied, "It really wasn't rested well, but had shown im- all my idea. You see a friend of provement during the night. mine spent some time at Knoll trouper threw up her hands in WELLS ELECTED STUDENT in 1931-32, and the past year's mock despair, crying, "There's COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE staff heads, Charlie Rose, George always somebody from Bryn Wilson, and R. D. MacMillan Mawr, isn't there." Students of the pharmacy will be in attendance. When Dr. Harland departed, yesreraay electee t . i. w A 01sen and Phillips Rus- she chattered on. "Don't think weus student council represen- sg11 of the Enffiish denartment. I'm against Bryn Mawr. I'm tive from the pharmacy school and Spike Saunders, secretary mad about the place. Of course, division m a run-off for presi- of the Alumni Association, will I only went there two years. I aent f suiaent oooy ot the be the principal speakers this wasn't bright enough to get - nuuier dIlu evening. R. W. Madry, head of out." H. McCollum are the remaining the University News Bureau, Miss Skinner has quite posi- canomaies, since s. wmieiey has also heen extended an in tive ideas on what the theatre nas uro irum race- vot" vitation. Til A I t - A- I 1 mg win mice .piace m me omce A program which incIude of the dean irom y:uu to i:uu o'clock. should and should not be. To her mind, the drama should give people something to think about. If the road is dead, she believes that the cinema has slain it by permitting people to become in tellectually slothful when they come to a playhouse. In her peculiar type of entertainment, she feels that success is achieved (Continued on last page) Senior Dance Leaders the official presentation of the badges of office and other activi ties, which will be of an ironical nature, has been planned. Lindy Cate, president of the Members of both the business senior class announced yester- and reportorial staffs who have day that the election of junior- made no arrangements for at senior dance leaders will be con- tendance must see either Tom ducted tonight at 9:00 o'clock Walker or Carl Thompson this in Gerrard hall. afternoon as early as possible. 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1933, edition 1
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