FEDERATION MEETINGS
1:00,3:00, 6:30 ;
GRAHAM MEMORIAL '
CAROLINA vs. VIRGINIA
4:00 P.M.
EMERSON FIELD
VOLUME XLI
CHAPEL HILL, N. O, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1933
NUMBER 160
Juaiors Agree To Cooperate
With Seniors In Dance Affair
Vote Overwhelmingly To Re
scind Former Stand And
Uphold Lown Contract.
GATE'S PLAN ACCEPTED
Decide To Let Seniors Sell Suf
ficient Extra Bids To
Offset Deficit.
DAVIS ELECTED EDITOR
OF CAROLINA ENGINEER
At a well-conducted meeting
last night in Gerrard hall the
junior class with Vergil Weath
ers presiding voted overwhelm
ingly to rescind the stand taken
Monday night and to uphold
their part in the annual junior
senior dance set next week-end.
The juniors agreed to co
operate whole-heartedly with
the seniors in the affair and ac
cepted a proposal set forth be
fore them by President Lindy
Cate of the seniors with several
adjustment;
Seniors To Sell Bids
Cate's plan stipulated a sale
of the remaining bids by both
classes at $1.50 each, the pro
ceeds to be divided equally be
tween the two. At the sugges
tion of Ed Kahn, however, the
juniors passed the motion to the
following effect: that the sen
iors be allowed to sell sufficient
extra bids at $1.50 to offset any
deficit that class may accumul
ate. When this needed amount
is raised through the sale, all
bids still remaining are to be
destroyed and the sale closed.
W. E. Davis was elected edi
tor of the Carolina Engineer t
engineering publication, yester
day by students of the engineer
ing school. H. F. Stewart was
chosen business manager. Da
vis formerly served on the staff
of the Daily Tar Heel.
C. M. Garrison was elected
chairman of the University
chapter of the A: L E. E. at the
Tuesday meeting of the organi
zation.
SOUTH ATLANTIC
MUSIC CONTEST
STARTS TONIGHT
Contests Are Scheduled for Voice,
Violin, Piano, and Organ in
Hill Music Halt
WEEK-END EVENTS
HEADED BY FULL
DANCE
SCHEDULE
Phi Kappa Sigma, Kappa Alpha,
Tau Epsilon Phi, Grail and
Co-eds Stage Dances.
A full social schedule is in
store for the campus during
this week-end, as six different
organizations have made final
plans for dances and house
parties. Seven dances, includ
ing the regular co-ed, Grail,
and Di and Phi dances, will be
given
Phi Kappa Sigma and Kappa
Alpha fraternities will enter
tain jointly with a set of dances
1 in the Carolina Inn. Each of
UNIVERSITY WELL
REPRESENTED AT
SCIENCE MEETING
Sixty-Eight Papers to Be Delivered
By Department Members of
Various Schools.
The contest for student musi
cians sponsored by the South
Atlantic district of the . Nation
al federation of music clubs will
open in Hill Music hall tonight
at 8:30 o'clock.
Contests -are scheduled for
voice, violin, piano, and organ.
Contestants between the ages
of 14 and 28 , will enter, in the j
student musician and young
artist classifications. The latter
classification requires that the
entrant be prepared to render
an entire program of standard
concert selections from mem
ory. The list of contestants
will consist mainly of the names
of those who were winners in
the state contests in Florida,
Georgia, South Carolina, and
North Carolina.
Competitions for entrants in
the student musician classifica
tion will continue tomorrow
morning beginning at' 9 :00
o'clock. Mrs. C. C. Lucas, fed
eration director of contests for
the South Atlantic district, will
be in charge.
State School Delegates Attend
Fourth Annual Student Congress
KENNEDY TO CONCLUDE
VESPER ORGAN SERIES
The University is well repre
sented at the meeting of the
North Carolina Academy of
Science, which convenes at Dav
idson today and tomorrow, in
conjunction with the North
Carolina section of the American
Chemical society.
Those attending from Chapel
Hill are: Dr. J. B. Bullitt, Pro
fessor and Mrs. H. N. : Totten,
Professor Collier Cobb, Profes
sor J. N. Couch, Mary Linda
Vardelle, Professor Gerald R.
MacCarthy, Professor W. F.
Prouty, J. A. Alexander, E. N.
Kjellesvig, -H. V. Park, S. G.
Roth, Professor E. T. Browne,
Professor L. L. Garner, Profes
sor Archibald Henderson, Pro
fessor E. W. McChesney, Proces
sor H. D. Crockford, Professor
R. H. Munch, Professor R. W.
Bost, T. J. Harbison, J. S. Dendy
and Miss Irene Bolick.
Sixty-eight papers from the
departments of physics, mathe
matics, chemistry, botany, zool
ogy, and geology in the colleges
of the state will be presented.
Professor. Nelson O. Ken
nedy, organ instructor in the
music department, will present
the concluding recital in his
series of vesper concerts in
Hill Music hall Sunday after
noon at 4:00 o'clock.
I More Than 50 Representatives
Will Arrive Here This Morn
ing for Conference.
LUNCH TO OPEN BIEETING
President Graham Will Deliver
Opening Address; Goerch
To Speak at Dinner.
ORDER OF GRAIL
ELECTS LEADERS
AT ANNUAL FETE
McMillan, Nisbet, Groover, and
Patterson Become Officers of
Honor Organization.
Large Staff Used At Swain
To Serve Voracious Students
fVipoA fratArrnt.ips will alsn hp
The juniors' action concluded hogts at a house party t,o which
a eek of intense class cqnf us-a numbr cf attractive young
icm resulting from various mis-;ladies haye inyitecL
interpretations on the part oi
both. Thorough co-operation is
now expected by dance officials.
Monday's Bills Illegal .
Resolutions passed at Monday
(Continued on last page)
FROSH WILL USE
NEW MATH TEXT
Kevised Edition of Introductory
Mathematics Released a
Few Weeks Ago.
Introductory Mathematics,
the freshman mathematics text
for the past few years, has been
revised and published in a cloth
bound volume. The new book,
written by Dr. E. T. Browne
and Dr. J. W. Lasley of the
University mathematics de
partment, was released by McGraw-Hill
Book company a few
weeks ago.
The authors state that the
book is written in much simpler
style than the former edition.
Parts of the book have been al
tered and certain problems
changed or deleted. Professor
J. B. Linker of the mathematics
department proof-read the edi
tion. Not only is the binding an
improvement over the former
mimeographed edition, but the
texture of the paper is better.
Logarithm tables are included,
Providing a new convenience.
The book will retail at $2.75.
Limestone College of Gaffney
has adopted this book for use
ext term, and other schools are
expected to use it within a short
time.
Discounting Food Not Measurable in Pounds, as Eggs, Milk, or
Flour, Patrons of University Commons Consume About
100 Tons, or 200,000 Pounds, Yearly.
. o - - - v.
May Festival Today
The annual May day festivi
ty in honor of the high school
ay queen will take place this
afternoon on the lawn of Chapel
jti high school. Virginia Burch
iil be honored as Queen of May.
ore than 250 school children
wiH participate in the May fete.
dances by this group will take
place tonight and tomorrow af
ternoon in the Inn, and Jelly
Leftwich's orchestra will fur
nish the music.
T. E. P. Dance
Tau Epsilon Phi will give
two dances in connection with
a house party which they are
planning. The first of these
will come tomorrow at the
house and the second tomorrow
night at the Carolina Inn.
Archie Davis' orchestra will
play for the dance tomorrow.
The annual co-ed dances will
take place tonight in Bynum
gymnasium with Archie Davis
orchestra furnishing the music.
An unusual feature of this
dance will be the two figures
one led by the out-going of
ficers and the other by the new
officers.
The Order of the Grail will
give a dance honoring its new
members tomorrow night, 9:00
to 12:00 o'clock, in the gym
nasium, Jelly Leftwich's orches
tra playing. This will be the
last Grail dance of the quarter.
New members will be honored
at the affair.
The Di senate and the Phi as
semblv will give their annual
w 0--
entertainment in the form of a
tea dance in the gym 6:30 to
9 :00 o'clock. Archie Davis or
chestra will furnish the music.
Phi Kappa Sigma
Girls attending the Phi Kap
pa Sigma house party are:
Louise Critcher of Boone, Sally
Couch of Charlotte, Elizabeth
Boylin of Charlotte, Kate Spru
ill of Rockv Mount, Eugenia
Rawls of Macon, Ga., Mary
Gregory of Rocky Mount, Ann
Moore of Charlotte, Jean Stauf-
f er of Norristown, Charlotte
McAleer of Philadelphia, Louisa
Wilson of Charlotte, Harriet
Cobb of Durham, Ann Robert
son of Raleigh, Jean Burd of
TfrJiio Pa.. Frances Medlin
(Continued on page two)
Working on a yearly budget
of $120,000, Swain Hall feeds
each year between 500 and 750
men and employs between 60
and 80 students. It has been
managed by Obie Harmon since
January 2, 1920. '
Of the kind of food that-can
be measured in pounds, which
does not include many large
items like eggs, milk, or flour,
which comes by the barrel,
Swain Hall is using about 100
tons, or zuu,uuu pounds, per
year.
Over a hundred thousand
pounds of ice are used, about
200,000 napkins, 15,000 pounds
of washing powder and other
soaps, and around 4,000 pounds
of salt.
Humpty-Dumpty and Family
Swain Hall will use this year
approximately 230,000 eggs,
that is, around 19,000 dozen.
i j
Thirsty students tms year
will consume about 20,000 gal
lons of milk, (unless 3.2 throws
the figures off too much) and
about 1,200 gallons of ice cream
and punch. ,
Flour will amount to 240 bar
rels. Chickens to 12,000 pounds,
I Mayor Welcomes Students to Greensboro I
l :
i
and turkeys to 9,000 pounds.
180 gallons of oysters will lose
all chance of producing pearls
by sliding down Carolina gul
lets. Nearly a ton of onions
will "pull at the tear ducts" of
Tar Heel men, and 240 bags of
Irish potatoes will keep the
weight up.
Eighty Gallons of Relish
Vegetable relish will be con
sumed to the extent of 80 gal
lons, and strawberries to the
extent of thirteen and a half
cases. Sugar runs up to over
400 bags, and syrup to around
400 gallons.
Drink hearty! with 5,700
pounds of coffee, 425 pounds 6f
tea, and 300 pounds of cocoa
Just how much liquid that
amounts to when milk and wat
er is added is well, enough for
quite a few throats.
Those Sunday morning hot
cakes require four cases of pan
cake flour. Over 120 cases of
grapefruit, 30 cases of lemons
and over a hundred cases of
oranges make up the necessary
citrus fruits. And about 40
gallons of olives put the finish
ing touch to the diet.
Over 50 delegates from col-
Professor Kennedy's program leges in North Carolina will ar-
will consist entirely of works rive in Chapel Hill this morning
by foreign composers and will for attendance at the fourth an
include transcriptions of instru- nual congress of the North Caro
mental works of Tschaikowsky lina Federation of Students.
and Wagner. Among the colleges sending
representatives are some who do
not yet belong to the federation
but who wish to join the organ
ization. Delegates from non
members of the federation will
not be counted as official, but
they will have a voice in the dis
cussions and will be able to con
tribute their ideas to the dis
cussion groups.
Send Delegates
At the annual banquet of the Schools which have already
Order of the Grail last night in announced that they will send
Graham Memorial K. 1). Mc- one or more representatives to
Millan was elected president the congress are the University,
for the coming year, replacing Duke University, Salem College
Bobbie Mason, this year's presi- at Winston-Salem; Presbyterian
dent. Other officers elected Junior College, Maxton; Ashe
were Tom Nisbet, ' secretary, viue Normal School, Asheville;
and Simmons Patterson, assist- Catawba College, Salisbury; Da
ant treasurer, vidson College. Davidson: East
Walter Groover, assistant Carolina Teacher's College,
treasurer for the past year, au- Greenville; Elon College, Elon;
tomatically replaced C. C. Ham- Greensboro College, Greensboro;
let as treasurer. Nisbet sue- Louisbursr College. Louisburg;
ceeds Claiborn Carr as secre- Meredith College, Raleigh; N.
tary. All incoming officers were C. State College, Raleigh ; Wake
elected unanimously. Forest College, Wake Forest;
Speakers and Woman's College of the
Dean Francis F. Bradshaw Greater University at Greens-
and Dr. W. S. Bernard were
PAYMENTS DELAY
ANNUAL PRINTING
to
boro. Other colleges not heard
peakers of the evening. Dean from are expected to be repre-
jjl auoua w , il ilvwji jr Ai.j.t-imjL
of the Grail stated that the Or
der had made great progress
in accomplishing its initial aim
of social unity on the campus.
Consequently, he declared, the
organization might assume an Editor
added objective, which he would
suggest to be a "restoration, re
intensification, and revivifica
tion of the honor system." Dean
Bradshaw qualified his state
ment, saying that he believed in
the present honor system but
considered that much could be
done to strengthen it.
States Purpose Is
Pave Way for Better Is
sues in Future,
To the Student Body
Of the University:
As Mayor of Greensboro it
gives me great pleasure to ex
tend to the students of the
University a cordial invitation
and welcome to attend the an
nual game between the Uni
versity of North Carolina and
the University of Virginia.
This game has long been a
classic in southern athletics
and Greensboro is very happy
to play host to this battle
which never fails to draw a
large crowd and to attract
great interest.
, The people of Greensboro
have always been most en
thusiastic in their support of
the University and being close
to her have always main
tained the most friendly and
pleasant relations both with
the University and Chapel
Hill. Both culturally and ath
letically Greensboro has con
tributed much to the Univer
sity and has never failed to
take a lively interest in her
welfare.
I sincerely hope that this
fine contact will long continue
and hope that Greensboro will
have the pleasure of welcom
ing not only the two teams
but a good crowd of Carolina
supporters to help out the
Carolina fans over here.
Very truly yours,
PAUL C. LINDLEY,
Mayor.
Being held up by the failure
of students and organizations
to pay for their space, the 1932-
OO TT 7. -J.. . T7' 7. -.Ill -nn-. i-r
the latter part of this month,
Editor Nutt Parsley announces.
Parsley states the primary
Dr. W. S. Bernard, an organ- aim of the forthcoming annual
izer of the Grail, pointed first as being to prepare the way for
to some matters that the Order better issues in the future. New
might apply its strength in the systems have been innovated
betterment of the campus. Con- which will make possible more
tinuing, Dr. Bernard spoke on outstanding books in the future,
the mam characteristic of the but which must be developed
organization, unselfishness. Jover a neriod of time. The edi-
The new members were tors have been handicapped in
guests of honor at the banquet preparing the present issue by
lack of cooperation from a
SEMINARY GROUP TO
ADDRESS Y MONDAY!
number of students and organ
izations and by efforts to reduce
expenditures. Because of a
Publicatiojn Union regulation,
no picture may be printed in
the yearbook until the required
space has been bought.
The editor commends the
staff for their work upon the
book, especially the large num
ber of freshmen who were staff
The last regular meeting of
three Y cabinets will be con
ducted Monday, May 8. At this
time the members of the dele
gation from the Virginia Theo
logical Seminary will address
the groups.
The delegation consists of
Reverend A. C. Zabriskie, pro- members this year.
lessor oi History in me semin
ary, Henry Johnson, former as
sistant to Dean Bradshaw, and
TV T T " mi Z I I 1 I VMY a a a
uoc nines, xney wiii aiso con- ne girls student organiza-
duct an informal discussion at tion of the Woman's College
the Parish House Saturday from College Place church at
night on "Vocation," and will Greensboro will be guest of the
discuss "Vital Religion" at the Wesley Student Association
Student Forum Sunday night, of the local Methodist church
Reverend Zabriskie will deliver Sunday evening at 6:45 o'clock
the sermon at the Chapel of the and will present the evening's
Cross at the regular services on program. :" University students
Sunday. are invited to be present.
Girls to Visit Church