CHEMISTRY FRESHMEN 10:30 206 VENABLE HALL f ri COMMERCE FRESHMEN 10:30 ; MEMORIAL HALL SERVED BY THE UNITED PRESS VOLUME XLIII CHAPEL HELL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1935 NUMBER 98 1T y PHOTOMEN HAVE VARIED PROGRAM IN LAST SESSIONS ri-niin Win race aim insia.ii -.T-n i7i i. ' J t H New Officers at Final Meet ing This Afternoon. PLAYMAKERS ENTERTAIN Demonstrations, discussions, entertainment, mixed m happy Droportions, featured yesterday's sessions of the JNortn uaronna Photographers Association which is holding its tenth annual con vention at the . University. Attending aref approximately 100 photographers irom ,xnis ji. and neighboring states. The con- vention opened Sunday evening and will close this aiternoon -with the election and mstalla- lion of officers for another year. Coloring A feature of the program was Mrs. R. R. Jennings of Atlanta, 'Ga. Mrs. Jennings prefaced her demonstration with a short dis- course on the relation ot color to the photographer s art. A study of the human anat- omy is essential to being a good photographic "color" or "brush" artist, Mrs. Jennings pointed out. "Through a knowledge of the bones, deep muscles, and particularly the superficial mus- cles of the face, one is able to create, by the proper use of col or, an advanced improvement .upon the photograph," she said. George Kossuth, vice-presi tot of the Photographers Asso- nation of Americarthis - after- noon conducted a demonstration on photographing men. E. P. iHicnois, oi tne Eastman ioaaK Company, delivered a technical iessional Photographic Papers." Later in the afternoon the Wootten-Moulton studio in Chap- Tiiii ,a T.n, o4- n given in honor of the visiting photographers. Playmakers Entertain An address by George Koss uth in the Playmakers theatre on "The Old Masters from Bel lini to Whistler and their Com parison to Photography," fol lowed by the nresentation of (Continued on page two) EEUGIOUS COUNCIL PLANS BROADCAST Charge of Second Weekly Pro- gram over WDNC Today. Continuing, the Religious Workers' Council series of radio broadcasts, the local Presbyte- wan cnurcn win present program over station WDNC m Durham at 2 o'clock. . . According to Kev. uonaw Stewart of the Presbyterian church, tndav's Drosrram will consist of three quartet selec- q short talk by Mr. Stewart on the evening at 8 o'clock in 214 Gra subippf "TIip Church and Stu- ham Memorial. "yn. i . w 1 1 v in in vtuiuoi maim dent floral Sitntion." Onnrtpt The quartet will be composed of rinrio -Railarrl sPPnriH tenor : U) -w v -"iuce uiurem, DariLune, ixueo Dgp ioee. ar.ri Jrv"hn Walker. first ten. ' Miss Katherine Hodges will company Miss Jane Ross, Chi The Presbyterian-planned pro- tram follows a similar one meeting of the following mera Planned by the University Y. M. bers of the Foreign Policy - A., another member of the League toniffht at 8 o'clock in Religious Workers' Council. The baptist church will arrange the broadcast for next week. Heads Photographers W,MJJXU mWMW M ' 1 1 1 OWP -V - N s NO Di . . i a. u. Clement, president of the North Carolina Photograph- ers Association, who is presiding i- i over the annual convention of the association here this week. COMMERCE MEN HEAR BERNSTEIN state Professor Speaks to Beta Gamma Sigma Members. Continuing the series of dis- cussions sponsored by Aloha chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, the honorary scholastic organi- zation in the school of commerce. Dr. E. M. Bernstein addressed the chapter Monday evening on "Public Expenditures as a Means of Ameliorating Business Depressions." Analysing the effects of re cent expenditures of the federal ernment on ft national in- come, production and wages in this country, Dr. Bernstein pointa out that the effects of such expenditures in the United states had on the whole, been faVorable It was the opinion of Dr. Bf n?te that e V0!Ume f Physlcal Production had unques- tionably been increased as a re- Ui UW1 wut wf- ditures. Law and Med Schools To Sponsor' Dances Students of the schools of law and medicine will make merry this week-end, each sponsoring a dance, the law school on Fri day and the med school on Sat urday night. Both will collabor ate on a tea dance Satnrriav af. ternoon, Jimmy Poyner and his State Collegians will furnish the music for all three dances. Ned Phifer with Miss Connie twii r.winf wm the figure at the medical school school dance have not been an- fti , There will be no general ad- migsioil at the dances, although each member of both schools wiu haye an extra bid tQ anyone he wishes DEUTSCHER VEREIN There will be a meeting of the Deutscher Verein tomorrow r. Meno Spann of the Ger- man department will deliver an illustrated lecture on picturesque German towns. The lecture will A be followed bv the singing oi " , German songs. The meeting is under the di- rection of Dr. Spann. League Members to Meet There will be an important Graham Memorial: Joe Barnett, Albert Ellis, Don Becker, Niles Bond, and Lewis Morris. y ! 5 SENATE TAKES NO IMPORTANT ACTION Does No Legislating Other Than to Table Two Bills. The Di Senate did no legis lating last night except the tab ling of two bills and a motion. The bill, Resolved, That the I United States should establish soil erosion service in connec i tion with the C. C. C, was killed by being tabled indefinite ly. The senators also tabled, for lack of a quorum, the bill. Re solved, That the United States should have entered the World Court. 5 a j i- ti senator nussen s motion, hnally tabled until the , next meeting, that the Senate should present to tne law senooi; its i j ji i ii Picture ot Judge Ruffin, met with lively and detailed discus sion. A substitute bill, ' Resolved; That the state legislature pass the child labor law, was moved by Senator Fletcher and accept ed in, the place of the soil ero sion bill. Mason Gibbes, acting critic, reprimanded the Senate for the lax manner in which the meet ing was conducted. W. M. Cochrane was re-ad mitted to membership, and Bill Hudson was admitted as a new senator. A. S. M. E. TO SHOW AVIATION MOVIES W- Van Haitm!.of '"f, Schoo!j of Aeronautics Will Have Charge of Program. An aeronautical program pre senting the recent developments in aviation, and the vocational aspects of the industry will be hei,j in Phillips haU February 14 under the auspices of the local orancn oi tne a. . m. Hi. W. Van Haitma, director of placement in the Boeing School of Aeronautics at Oakland, Cal., will have charge of the program which is to be illustrated with several films. Historic Film An historic film on the devel opment of the airplane from the Wright "pusher" to the modern tri-motor transport will be the U11 ""81T. A reel showing the manufac turing processes involved in the construction of Pratt-Whitney airplane engines and the Boeing 4 P ai&u uc Boeing school willbe de- picted upon the screen showing m,gnt anf gr0!ina tr?mmf m.,. .ds' and equipment and facili- ties used. A reel entitled "Across the Continent in 20 Hours" will feature United Air Lines trans Dorts in oneration on coast to coast flights. Each film will take 15 minutes. Applications Due Today All applications for the posi tion of business manager of the Carolina Fin j an are due in the office of, Professor J. M. Lear in 109 Bingham hall before, o'clock this afternoon. Bost to See Freshmen Dr. R. W. Bost requests all freshmen registered for the de gree of S.B. in chemistry to meet Wm.at 10 :30Ck ing in room 206 Venable hall. Commerce Freshmen Dean Carroll will meet the commerce freshmen in Memorial I hall today at 10:30 a. m. STATE AID ASKED FOR ENCOURAGING SAMGJNSCH00LS Grisette and Bradshaw Request $25,000 Appropriation for State Thrift Society. PLAN TWO YEAR PROGRAM Felix A. Grisette and Francis Bradshaw appeared before the joint appropriations committee in Raleigh yesterday afternoon to request $25,000 aid during the next two years to make the North Carolina State Thrift So ciety a movement in which they have taken leading' parts, a per manent, self-supporting organi zation operating in schools all over the state. The society is an organization chartered by the legislature in 1933 for the purpose of stimu lating the teaching and practice of the principles of thrift among the children in the public schools. School children will be urged to open savings accounts in the society by making deposits of five cents or more with their teachers, Tuesday of each week being especially set aside as de posit day. When a student has accumulated $10, his deposit is transferred to the bank of his choice and begins, of course, to draw interest. Upon the trans ference of the sum to the bank, the society's responsibility is ended. The money requested yester day would be used largely for nostaee, printing, Held travel, and the salaries and wages' of a full-time executive, an expert bookkeeper, and a stenographer. At the end of the first year of operation the society, would be partly self-supporting ; and after two years it would be entirely self-supporting, drawing the funds for its expenses from the interest on the money deposited (Continued on page two) FISCH REVEALED AS BRUNO'S AIDE Flemington, N. J.f Feb. 5.- (UP) Benjamin Heier testified today that he saw Isidor Fisch jump over the wall of Stray monds Cemetery on April 2, 1932, the night the Lindbergh ransom money was paid. Reilly presented witnesses who attended the farewell party in December, three or four days before Fisch sailed for Ger many. All testified Fisch ap- Deared at Hauptmann's house and carried a box under his arm. Reilly said he has two sur- prise witnesses, rne case is now expected to reach the jury about next Tuesday. Policy League Plans Discussion on Orient J. S. Fletcher, A. Mason Gibbes to Lead Meeting Tomorrow. J. S. Fletcher and A. Mason Gibbes will lead a discussion on the Orient, placing special em phasis on the economic phase of the question, at the meeting of the Foreign Policy League to morrow night. 1 This meeting will be the first in a series of two seminars on the Orienf and its connections with 'the United States, in which all phases of Oriental policies and relations which affect this country will be discussed. Any members of the League who wish to read up on the sub ject beforehand will find refer ences in the February issues of the periodicals Asia and Today Two Speakers Added To Institute Program Donald Comer and Chinese Min- i ister Sze Accept Invitations. , ' Two outstanding speakers have added their names to the list of lecturers for the Human Relations Institute, it was an nounced yesterday by Charles A. Poe, chairman. Donald Comer, leading Amer ican in the textile field, will ad dress the institute on the pres ent textile situation. Minister Sze, Chinese repre sentative at Washington,- an nounced his acceptance of the in stitute's invitation to visit the University in the capacity of his country's minister. HUEY ALL RIGHT, SAYS ASSEMBLY 'hi Says Long Not Menace; Dis continuance of NRA Opposed; Tobacco Evil Is Deplored. Huey I, regent of the rice- fields, was given a pat on the back by the Phi Assembly last night when that august body de feated the bill: Resolved, That Huey Long is a menace to this country. The assembly also defeated the bill calling for discontinu ance of the NRA, but advocated the abolition of child labor in third bill. Trip to Raleigh The visit that was made to the state legislature in Raleigh Mon day night was discussed. The members seemed impressed by the wrangling over trivial mat ters in both houses. "I don't think any North Carolinian will appreciate his state until after he has visited the legislature," said one of the visitors, "and I don't think he will appreciate it after he visits it." jesse utt, oi uoiasDoro was introduced for . membership. Robert Smithwick was appoint ed to attempt to procure a por trait of the late Steven H. Bradshaw, prominent North Carolina lawyer and former member of the assembly. A resolution to permit smok ing on the floor of the assembly was defeated, after Drew Mar tin and Winthrop Durfee point ed out the evils of the use of the weed. Monday night, February 18, was set as the tentative date for an assembly social. Russell Will Speak In Gerrard Tonight Di, Phi, "Y," Anti-War Confer ence Sponsor fleeting. The Di Senate, the Phi Assem bly, Y. M. C. A. cabinets, and the continuations committee of the Anti-War conference are sponsors of the meeting tonight at 8 o'clock in Gerrard hall, at which R. Phillips Russell, stu dent delegate to the Internation al Anti-War Conference, will deliver a report on the work done at Brussels. The continuations committee and all those interested are in vited to remain after Russell's report to discuss plans for for warding the work begun. This report by Russell was made possible by the Anti-War conference held here last quar ter. Carl Thompson was ori ginally chosen as a delegate, but withdrew in favor of Russell when he found it impossible to attend. Thompson will preside at tonight's session. S VATORS INVITE EMPEROR HUEY I TO NORTH STATE State Assembly to Horn in on Louisiana Provided Cantor And Rubinoff Also Speak'. HOUSE HAS PARTY FIGHT Raleigh, Feb. 5. (UP) Not to be outdone by the back woods Kingdom of Louisiana in monopolizing headlines, an oth erwise sedate North Carolina Senate today decided to invite Emperor Huey I, Delta Dicta tor of the House of Long, to, speak here. - ' - ' . The legislation was passed on the condition that Eddie Cantor, God's gift to coffee, and Dave Rubinoff, the Smokey City's do nation to violindom can also be persuaded to appear on the same performance. Senator Johnson of Duplin county smilingly suggested a program featuring His Majesty, and Bagley of Currituck county added the provision that Cantor and Rubinoff play second fiddle to the headliner. Debate in House Raleigh, Feb. 5. (UP) Af ter the most acrimonius debate since the present session opened, the North Carolina House of Representatives . adjourned to day in respect to Rev. Theodore Patrick, who died last night. The Senate received two local bills, but immediately referred them to respective committees, and adjourned until 11 a.m. ' The House debate centered about an apparently innocent lo cal bill presented by Represen tative Cloud of Polk county to increase his home county's com missioners. The fight was en tirely partisan with Cloud de fending himself as a staunch Democrat who . gained office on the Republican ticket at the re quest of "50 per cent" of Polk county Democrats. The bill finally was sent committee wards. The House, after receiving 14 local bills and one state-wide, ad journed to reconvene at noon. DRAMA TRYOUTS SET F0RT0NIGHT Campus Theatrical Group Will Produce Three New Plays Written by Playmakers. Try-outs for the new produc tion of Carolina Plays by the Carolina Playmakers, set for February 28, March 1 and 2, will be conducted this afternoon at 4:30 and again tonight at 7:30 o'clock. The coming production will include three one-act plays writ ten this year by Playmakers and will mark the 40th bill of "New Carolina Plays" produced here by the dramatic group. Many New Plays Chosen from a large group of new plays, the three selected for the coming bill include "Cottie Mourons" by Patsy McMullan, "Ancient Heritage" by Philip G. Parker, and "Yours and Mine", by Ella Mae Daniel. , Copies of the plays are on the reserve shelf at the library. The try-outs are open to all. Professor Frederick H. Koch, director of the Playmakers, es pecially requested that anyone familiar with the peculiar dia lect of the Okracoke Island folk should try for a place in the "Cottie Mourons" drama.