" . DANCE COMMITTEE 10:00 O'CLOCK GRAHAM MEMORIAL AO VOLUME XLII CHAPEL HILL, N. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1934 NUMBER 133 UNIVERSITY CLUB 7:00 O'CLOCK GRAHAM MEMORIAL 17 IP) ST PORFRT WINxTliN' f. pat gaskins is nnnnr mnnnr ...vuwDi.DiArr TU SrMll lUUAi AS BUC NOMINEE AT BULL'S HEAD Unanimously sdected fficiai iuiamee ior liuc n.auor. Prominent Durham Lawyer and Author Will Address Sleeting at Bull's Head Bookshop on His New Biography of Robert E. Lee. ' TALK WILL BEGIN AT 4:30 Pat Gaskins was unanimously selected by the staff of the Buc caneer last night as its choice for editor of the publication for next year. This staff nomination does not SISSLE ENGAGED FOR FROLICS SET Negro Orchestra to Furnish Music for Group of Dances Here April 27 and 28; Seven i Fraternities Sponsor Series. Annual Festival And Tournament Of Dramatic Group Opens Today Freshmen to Meet Officials of the May Frolics announced yesterday that Nobel Sissle and his orchestra has been signed for their annual dance set scheduled this year FIRST PRODUCTION at o.nft vri.nriz first-x ear Men to Keconsiaer Other Contests Begin at 2:30 and , Question of Class Dance. 7?3fl OYTork at Theatre. Reconsidering the iresnman The 11th annual Dramatic dance question, freshman will Festival will be inaugurated at I meet at 10:30 o'clock tomorrow make his election final as the Judge Robert W. Winston will campus will have an opportuni- K Ax)rij 27 and 28 - 1 1 1 t 1 - I -7 J J i - J I address tne weeKiy meexing in y sw vute ior - eauor in two the Bull's Head bookshop this weeks. afternoon at 4:30 o'clock on At tnis meeting 01 tne 5uc- his latest biography "Robert E. caneer staff it was also decided Lee" to hold the banquet in the near Judge Winston is the author future, and next Wednesday was set as a tentative date. All members of the staff and their friends are invited to- attend. Editor Pete Ivey also an nounced that the deadline for his all members who do not hand in work will be automatically drop ped from the staff . of several books and many mag azine articles dealing with varied subjects. He will be remembered as the Founder's Day orator when he spoke on "Aycock. the Peoole's Genius." He has al- work handed in for Wra been verv actively inter- final issue is Tuesday, and " mt " V - ested in the University, his brother and himself being the first students to arrive at the H01 at the reopening of the Uni versity after the Civil War. "Freshman at Sixty" - He is the author of "A Fresh man at Sixty," an article pub lished in Scribners for Decem ber, 1924, in which he tells of his experiences as a freshman at the age of v60 when he again re registered at the University, taking extensive and concentrat- N.C. GARDEN CLUB WILL MEET HERE Seven social fraternities, in cluding Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi, Zeta Psi, Delta Kappa Ep silon, Sigma Alpha . Epsilon, Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Nu, sponsor this set yearly. The week-end of the May Frolics usually includes ban quets and tea dances by the sophomore orders, the Mino taurs, the Order of the Shieks, and the "13" club. Last year the set started with a tea dance given by the "13" club, followed by a dinner dance in the Carolina Inn and a form al dance in the Tin Can. The series continued with a lunch eon dance in the ' Washington Dukehotel in Durham the next afternoon. In the evening, a tea dance was held in the Tin Can, and a UNIVERSITY CLUB TO MEET TONIGHT FORWUSSIONS Vacancies Not Filled at Last Sleeting Will Be Discussed and New Men Suggested; Group Has Entertained Dartmouth And Yale Men. z:00 o clock this atternoon in the Playmakers theatre with the presentation of an original play, "You're Going to Lose Your Gal," written by James Bunn, Wakelon school, Zebulon. morning in Gerrard hall in regular assembly session. The convocation was sched uled to be held in Memorial hall but due to, conflicts with the North Carolina Dramatic asso- Convention Scheduled for April 13 and 14; Chapel Hill Divi sion WiU Entertain Visiting formal dance at night concluded Members. the series. "" 1 This dance set is considered The annual meeting of the one of the highlights of the so- ed courses in history, biography North Carolina Garden club is cial season. Kay Kyser f urnish- and English. In his address tomorrow after noon Judge Winston will deal with the biography of Lee and some scheduled to take place here ed the music for the dances last Friday and Saturday, April 13 year. and . 14. coincident with the dates of the 1934 dogwood 1934 Campus Elections To Be Conducted Festival. Several hundred club Hoflnonflnv AnrJl 1R Ar,oUn state of the allied subjects m eluding myths about the famous members throughout the general that have been created are expected to attend. Wwvirod Tiio cnpoVw will Executive Board jfanM r-h nn m. There will be an executive I W. L. Goldston. to-Address Sigma Graduate to Speak The final contest in Dlay nro- ciation the meeting place has duction of the county high I been changed to Gerrard hall. schools and junior community clubs takes place at 2 :30 o'clock. Xwo Dttke Coeds mt "1 j 1 I ine piays 10 oe presenrea are OKov An Tmnnlso' "Lighted Candles" by Margaret UDey Mimpuise 5iana and louisa jjuis, spring There was great excitement Hope; "A Window to the South" in the lower quadrangle yester by Marion Reely, Junior Com- day afternoon, whe two Duke mumty piayers 01 uurnamj vi- cods here for the afternoon, onn maKer 01 uremona Dy marched determinedly to the Francis Coppee, translated by third floor of of the dormSf J. K. J erome, Tabor high school ; with the avowed intention of and "Dawn" by Percival Wilde, ;nWf, consternation ruiea tne roost as the two stoical femmes ran the length of the hall to the de sired room. Heads peered from doors, startled howls were heard the shower room door was slam ed hurriedly, shutting off the cloud of steam that had ema nated from its innards. Down in the car which had transported our fair ladies from Durham waited the two whose rooms were being-pilfered. They had laughingly givenkeys to their rooms, stating that if the girls had the nerve to go up, they could take anything they found. " And they took plenty. To the of a salvo of preliminaries held this morning between St. Pauls, Welcome, East Flat Rock, and Paw Creek will also compete in this contest. ! Beginning at 7:30 o'clock in the evening, the final contest in play production will take place. The Durham Community play ers will offer "Sweet and Twen ty" by Floyd Dill; Lenoir Little theatre, "The FlatteringWord" by George Kelly ; Reidsville Lit ( Continued on page two ) TO MEET AT 7:00 O'CLOCK terial for the biography and his board meeting in the east par- methods of obtaining it, touch- of the Carolina Inn at 10:30 o'clock on the opening day of errors about Lee that he has the meeting. This will be fol- found in his researches. lowed by luncheon at 1:00 An Wo Jr,f0r0o i Wo o'clock. The convention will be Gamma Epsilon at 7:30. W. L. Goldston, graduate of the University who is now en gaged in the oil business in Tex as, will speak to the local chap ter of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Many Announce Candidacy for Various Campus Positions as Day of Elections Draws Near; accompaniment Nominating Convocation Is applause, they came out laden Called for Friday, April 13. with pictures, tie clasps, and even a tiny white ivory elephant Campus elections for this that had formerly perched on a year will take place Wednesday, Carolina dresser. Judge Winston's discussion of Kormally ?end at 3:00 0'clock national honorary geological his book are cordially invited to attend. DEBATING TEAMS ARE ENTERTAINED Olsen Acts as Toastmaster at Informal Smoker Held in Gra Friday afternoon. Dr. W. C. Coker will have T i IT J someone conduct tne visitors through the arboretum. Fol lowing this, members of the Chapel Hill club will take the visitors on a tour of all the fraternity, tonight on the sub ject "Geology in Relation to Oil Finding and Recovery." The meeting will be held at 7 :30 o'clock in the chapter room of the fraternity on. the top floor of New East. All those yu-pci xxm .-- who are majoring in geology are ternoon. rjxiiiuiujrs aim visile 1 j- n -j j i lecture. the ors to the Dogwood Festival will ham Memorial Lounee for Ala- join the Garden club members bama and Vermont Debaters, on this tour, which is a regular PHARMACY SCHOOL m i j 1 t j r l 1 leature 01 tne iestivai. nxnTG PAHIT Tmi?Y William Olsen, faculty ad- The executive board of the viser of the debate squad, acted Garden club will be the guests Author, Subject, Shelf Catalogue as toastmaster at smoker for the 0f the Chapel Hill division at a Installed in Pharmacy Library. Alabama and Vermont debaters dinner at the Carolina Inn at given Tuesday night in Graham 7 -30 o'clock Friday evening. A complete author, subject, Memorial. - ; Later the club visitors will in- and shelf-catalogue has been in- Members of all the teams in- snect the pictures of the gardens stalled in the library ot the eluding those of the University hn South Carolina by Mrs. Bay- school of pharmacy. This is the first such index that the library has possessed and is the cul mination of an effort toward that goal extending over a five year period. This library contains a num ber of volumes that are of in terest to the public at large and which are valuable for certain types of graduate work. For eign and domestic journals deal ing with medical science are al so available. Dean J. G. Beard, head of the school, issued a cordial invita tion yesterday to the entire cam pus to take advantage of the material in the library at any time. The books are aceessable for from eight to ten hours each day. The hours are: 9:30 to 1 :00 o'clock in the morning. 2:00 to 6;00 o'clock in the after- xoia 01 nighlights on their trips, ard Wootten, which will be on The Vermont debaters related display in Davis hall. an experience in upper New The program for Saturday in York where they had to drive eludes a business meeting in the their auto across a lake to ,get ballroom of the Carolina Inn, a to a debate. George Burroughs luncheon at the Inn, and a tea and W. W. Workman of the at which Dr. W. C. Coker will Vermont team are on a 4.000 entertain the state club in his mile trip which extends from garden. Canton, N. Y., near Canada, southward to St. Petersburg, ; Florida, and. westward to West Virginia. The Alabama team, Robert i Kilgore and Julian Skinner, gave a review of their northern trip. Winthrop Durfee and Phillips Russell gave a short humorous skit on the evil ef fects of the higher education of FROSH-SOPH EXEC. COM. There will be a joint meeting of the freshman and sophomore executive committees tonight at 7 :00 o'clock in Graham Memo rial. It is urgently requested that all members attend this very important meeting. Junior Executive Meeting women. vsA t; TAii The executive committee of Avt JAdimiii, raiiupo ikuoocii, 1 and Winthmn Dnr fee related the junior class will meet to experiences on their southern night at 8:30 O'clock in Graham noon, and for varying hours a (Continued cm. vaoe two) Memorial. - night The completion of the mem bership for next year and the perfection of the plans for the induction ceremony will be the main objectives when the Uni-S versity club holds a meeting to night at 7 :00 o'clock in Gra ham Memorial. This meeting has been found necessary since several vacan cies were not filled when the club attempted the problem of membership last week. President Bahnson, who made the announcement yesterday, al so reported that the club has been very busy during the past week, having secured accommo dations for several members of the Dartmouth team who were forced to move out of Graham dormitory ghen the Yale Glee club arrived. The game room of Graham Memorial was opened to the athletes Wednesday morn ing. Aids the Visitors Continuing its policy of help ing in the entertainment of vis istors, the club will aid the ex tension department with the High School week program. Sev eral members have already vol unteered to usher Thursday af ternoon and at the final debate Friday night in Memorial hall. After the debate, the club will assist at the reception which has been prepared for the high school students in Graham Memorial. . April 18, it was announced yes terday by Harper Barnes, presi dent of the student body. Nominations for class offices will be made at meetings of the various classes Thursday night, April 12, and nominations for campus-wide positions will be made at a convocation of the The sad thing about it was, that as soon as the girls got down stairs, the surprised in habitants of the rooms took it all away again. They, nor any one else, thought that the dare would be accepted. When they were last seen, our two fair adventuresses were PHARMACY GROUP WILL MEET HERE C. L. Eubanks to Enter Contest Featuring Entertainment. student body in Memorial hall making5 their way homeward, Friday morning, the 13th. To Make Speeches Assembly -the following Mon- daywill be turned over to candi dates for the student body presi dency, who will deliver cam paign speeches. The balloting will take place at Graham Memorial between the hours of 9:00 and 5:00 o'clock. As is customary, the Australian secret ballot will be employed. each with no more than she had brought, and each one as scared as two exploring co-eds can be. McCORKLE TO BE CONTEST JUDGE Music Department Head to Act as Chairman ef Judges. Professor T. Smith McCorkle of the University music depart ment, will go to Catawba Col Election of the eight officers lege Saturday to serve as chair- of the Woman's association will man of judges for junior mu also be conducted on the 18th. sicians, sponsored by the state Nominations will be made on the 12th, according to Janie Jolly, president of the Woman's asso ciation. , , . The following men nave an nounced their intention of run ning in the coming elections: Virgil Weathers and Ben Proc tor, president of the student Dody: f rank Abernetny, vice- federation of music clubs, at ihe annual contest. mm . m 1 his contest involves every type of solo work. It will be participated in by a large group of young people from over the state. Last Saturday Professor Nel son O. Kennedy, Earl A. Slocum and nor J ohnson served as president of the Student body; I judges for one of the district Carl Thompson and Lonnie Dill, I junior contests at Elon College. editor of the Daily Tar Heel ; Others from Chapel Hill wil -bob Urane. editor ot the-aacke-iact as judges in the state con- .1 . - . ty Yack: Pat 'Gaskins, editor of I test Saturday; the Buccaneer; Joe, Sugarman and Virsril Lee. editor of the Carolina Magazine. George Barclay, president of Daniel, vice-president of the ath (Continued on page two) Neighborhood News Ben Proctor just bought farm. He reiuses to commen on anything because nobody asked him. ; Dean J. G. Beard of the school of pharmacy announced plans yesterday for the entertainment of the delegates to the meeting of the North Carolina Pharma ceutical association in Durham this summer. The plans include an afternoon's visit to the Uni versity campus. A feature of the entertain ment when the delegates are on the campus will be a contest in which several of the older and morey prominent pharmacists in the state will participate. The men, among whose number C. L. Eubanks of Chapel Hill will be included, will be required to take the practical examination now compulsory for a license to practice pharmacy in the state. The examination will be under the direction of the state board of pharmacy. Several difficult processes in volving a great deal of skill will comprise a part ' of the test. A handsome prize has been offer ed to the one who completes the examination in the best stead. Monogram Club Photo The Monogram club is sched uled to have the photograph for the Yackety Yack taken this morning at 10 :30 o'clock in front of Manning hall. All members are expected to turn out, as this is the last oppor tunity to have this picture taken. The members must appear in monogram sweaters.