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DR. SHELTQN SMITH : v 8 P.1L PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH vf DR. SHELTON SMITH 8 P.M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH SERVED BY THE UNITED PRESS VOLUME XLHI CHAPEL HILL, N. C., SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1935 NUMBER 126 ( I mw , n Y vY VC JL E. RONDTHALER IS VOTED ALUMNI ASSOCIATION HEAD J. H. Erwin, Jr., and R. C, de Rosset Become Vice-Presi-. dents for Next Year. a GRAY, ATHLETIC COUNCIL Dr. Howard E. Rondthaler, president of Salem College, has been elected president of the University Alumni .Association for 1935, it was announced here yesterday following a tally of the mail ballots cast by alumni dur ing the past several weeks. Dr. Rondthaler was alected over "William C. Woodard of Rocky Mount. The announcement of the offi cers for 1935 was made at the office of J. Maryon Sounders, executive secretary of. the asso ciation. Vice-presidents elected were J. Harper Erwin, Jr., of Dur ham and Robert C. deRosset of Raleigh who were named over Leo H. Harvey of Kinston and Dr. George L. Carrington of Burlington, respectively. j . Gray on Council Bowman Gray, Jr., of Winston-Salem won out over James S, Ficklen of Greenville for a three-year term as alumni rep Tesentative on the University Athletic Council. Dr. Rondthaler succeeds as president of the University alumni Dr. Hubert B. Haywood of Raleigh, who will continue to be a member of the . executive board as immediate past presi dent. Dr. Rondthaler is a grad uate of the class of 1893. As a student at Chapel 'Hill he was active in campus affairs. Since 1909 he has served as president of Salem College. Erwin is a cotton broker in Durham. He was graduated, in 1921, and as an undergraduate won considerable reputation for his basketball prowess. DeRosset, a native of Wil mington, has lived in Raleigh (Continued on page two) SYMPHONY PLANS CONCERT SERIES State Symphony Orchestra Will Feature King-Smith Singers In Durham Program. The North Carolina Sym phony Orchestra, presenting a series of five symphonic con certs in Durham, will offer as a special attraction several fea tures among the outstanding be ing the King-Smith Singer of Washington, who will appear with the orchestra at its Tues day night performance. The first concert of the festi val will be given tomorrow night at 8:30 o'clock and will feature a flute solo by Lamar String field, conductor of the. orches tra. Children's Matinee A part of the children's mati nee which will be presented Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock will be conducted by M. T. Cousins of Durham, a well known member of the orchestra. The King-Smith Singers who will be the special feature of the Tuesday night performance con sist of 12 voices selected from all parts of the United States. The feature attraction of the final concert which will be play ed Wednesday night at 8 :30 o'clock, will be a violin concerto, ''Romance," by Beethoven, play ed by Miss Kay Rickert, a for mer member of the orchestra. NEW ALUMNI OFFICERS i mm- mi it 1L. 5 II Pictured above are the new officers of the General Alumni Asso ciation of the University, elected by mail ballots, which have just been tabulated. Left to right, they are Dr. Howard E. Rondthaler of Salem College; president, and J. Harper Erwin, Jr., of Durham and Robert C. deRossett of Raleigh vice-presidents. Summer Session Galaxy Of Duke Professor Speaks At Forum Tonight Dr. Shelton Smith Presents Last of Inter-Church Lectures. The last of a series of five community church lectures will be held in the Sunday school rooms of the Presbyterian church' at 8 o'clock. Dr. Shel ton Smith of Duke University will be the. principal speaker on the program. His subject will be "The Barthian Road to Reality'." 4 The general subject of the se ries has been "Christianity and Contemporary World Move ments." The meetings have been informal and inter-denomina tional undertakings. LONG WILL FLAY RELIEFMEASURE Work Relief Bill and Long Fairley Feud May Embroil Senate Already in Tatters. Washington, March 9. (UP) The administration's work re lief bill, already subjected to a week of rough treatment, to night headed into another trou ble zone with Huey Long getting ready for new assaults and alarms. The resumption of Long's war on Postmaster General Farley promised a hectic week for an already badly disorganized Sen ate. The Long-Farley feud and the work relief bill developed side by side. Now they are thrown together with explosive possibilities. Washington, March 9. (UP) -The final action of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation ex tension bill was delayed again tonight when a revolting House forced adjournment before a vote was reached. The bill is expected to come up again Tuesday because the pink slip income tax publicity of the repeal bill has legislative right of way. Registration Period Is Tomorrow-Saturday Frosh and Sophs Failing in Fall Will Enroll March 25. The spring quarter registra tion period begins tomorrow and lasts through Saturday. . All stu dents are expected to enroll dur ing this time except those fresh men and sophomores who did not pass all their courses in the fall quarter. . All freshmen and sophomores who failed one or more courses in the .fall must register March 25. r f I,. r & .A. To Feature Noted Lecturers Talks to Be Course in Instruc tion1 and Administration For Summer School. FIRST OF KIND IN SOUTH Plans for the summer ses sion's headliner, the course in higher education, the first of its kind in the south and one of three or four in the whole coun try, are very nearly complete. Most of the distinguished group of guest lecturers have been defi nitely engaged and their topics chosen. This course, the successor to an institute on higher education held here successfully last summer,- will deal with problems of instruction and administration in higher educational institu tions. Members of the regular University staff will direct the course, in co-operation with the visiting teachers. Minnesota Dean First The first guest lecturer will be Dean M. E. Haggerty of the Uni versity of Minnesota, who will be here June 14 and 15. He will discuss the question "What Con stitutes a Good College Fac ulty?" and will report on his study of colleges in the North Central Association. This report will be published soon. He will be followed by Presi dent James W. Wood of Ste phens College, who with Profes sor F. L. Hovde of the Univer sity of Minnesota, will speak d.uring the week of June 17. President Wood will discuss the problem of improvement of col lege instruction. Professor Hovde's topic will be the work of the University of Minnesota's General College, where an atr tempt is made to provide for the individual needs of students. Columbia Dean One Week The entire week of June 24 will be at the disposal of Dean H. E. Hawkes of Teachers College, Columbia University. The topics of the discussion he will direct are : 1 Motivation. How may the college experience stir the in dividual to his best endeavor? 2 The survey course for freshmen and sophomores ; what educational purpose does it serve? 3 Measurement of college ac complishment; various types of examinations and methods of evaluation of college work. 4 College discipline as one aspect of personnel service. Dean Paul C. Pecker of Iowa State University, will discuss the work of that school in pro viding for the guidance of stu dents, in lectures July 1 and 2 College, curriculum revision, the purpose of survey and orien- (Continued on page two) REBELS PROSPER IN CUBA, GREECE Cuban Revolutionists Join Hands With Greeks Across Seas as Insurrection Arises. Revolutions are riding the crest of a militaristic wave in two parts of the world tonight as insurrectionists in the island republic of Cuba joined hands with Greek revolutionists in at tempts to overthrow their respective governments. Havana, Cuba, March 9. (UP) Acting swiftly under almost dictatorial powers, the government here established rigid military control through out Cuba tonight in a determin ed effort to smash a serious revolutionary strike. The Mendieta-Bastita regime, suspending all constitutional law, placed organized army re serves under military governors commanding the island's six provinces. Athens, " Greece, March 9. (UP) The Greek government opened a smashing drive today against rebels in Macedonia, ex pected to decide the outcome of the civil war now in progress. General George Condylis, per sonally commanding the govern ment forces in the field, threw a full force of artillery, planes, and troops across the mountain ous country around the Struma river down upon the rebels in the valleys. . -. -. UNC Will Hear 'Deepest Bass In The World' Hampton Quartet's Profound Vocalist Once Won Fund for School by Demonstration. Carolina students will hear the deepest bass in the world, according to General Y. M. C. A. Secretary Harry F. Comer, when the Hampton quartet appears in Memorial hall Tuesday evening. The low man on the Hampton outfit, which books out from Hampton Institute for Negroes in Virginia, has had much to do with the quartet's wide popu larity over the country. Appearing at Culver Military Academy several years ago, the quartet was heard by a very wealthy Hoosier who offered to endow a special scholarship at the Hampton school if, at the next evening's performance the quartet's bass would go one note lower than ever before. In the audience was a group of noted musicians who were to judge the depth of the Negro's bass. The quartet started "Old Black Joe." At the end the ten ors and baritone sounded their last note the bass had the air and; with eyes shut, he started to carry the whole Culver audi ence down into the lower regions of human tone range. , Down, down, on the last ca denza to "Old Black Joe." When the performance was over and the crowd stopped cheering, the judges announced that the col ored man had gone almost two and a half notes below his previ ous record. Hampton won her scholarship. Senior Executives An important meeting of the senior class executive committee will be held in the Y. M. C. A. tonight at 7 o'clock to consider detailed plans for senior week. Athletic Councilor ".-,V 1',s-X...'.-..v.v S 1-x:-:::c:-:::-::-::-:x mm ii mmimj v.-.v. cV,v.$ .W-'MWVi:. Bowman Gray, Jr., of Winston Salem, who has been elected by the University Alumni Associa tion to represent alumni on the University Athletic Council for a term of three years. STATE ASSEMBLY CONCLUDES TERM Committee Chairmen Struggle With Huge Difference Be tween Revenue and Bills. Raleigh, March 9. (UP) The North Carolina General As sembly ended the last week of its constitutional term today with none of its major problems remotely near a solution. The work from now on until official adjournment will be car ried on by the legislators with out pay: While members rested, four chairmen of " the Senate and House appropriations and reve nue committees struggled with the $1,650,000 difference be tween the revenue and the sup ply bills with the view of re porting on both next week. Prisons Investigated Another joint committee, on penal institutions,' bore down on the prison system today. A sub committee was appointed to in vestigate conditions in the Meck lenburg county camp where two Negro prisoners whose feet have been amputated were con fined. 7 Among the new bills in the House, two were by McDonald of Forsyth, to permit judges to substitute life imprisonment for death upon conviction for burg lary and arson. - They were re ferred to judiciary committee number one. No new bills were introduced in the upper House. XV Fount Of Wisdom, Second-Hand, Is Library's New Book Of Saws Trying to think of a good quo tation? The library has just acquired a new book 'Stevenson's Home Book on Quotations" in which you can find sayings "from the cradle1 to the grave," from Adam to Charles A. Lindbergh, from good to evil, from heaven to hell. And they are all listed alpha betically by subjects love tak ing up a goodly share of the space. If, in writing a letter to your heart of hearts, you drain of sugary discourse you can turn to the section on love. There you will find some of the fam ous love poems of the ' world, along with love's causes, effects, joys, sorrows, and all the other phases. "Love is a fiend, a fire, a heaven, a hell, Where pleasure, pain and sad repentence dwell." INSTITUTE PLANS CLASS SEMINARS, PUBLICLECTURES Lectures to Be Given at 10:10 A.M. and 8 P.M.; 9:30 Classes Will End at 10 O'clock. TO COVER THREE FIELDS More than 80 classroom semi nars, 12 public lectures in Me morial hall and a complete ex hibit in the lobby of Memorial hall are included in the gigantic outlay for the coming Human Relations Institute, according to Charles Poe, chairman of the in stitute committee. An imposing group of speak ers has been secured to repre sent the fields of business and industry, governmental and in ternational relations, and inter racial and class relations, the three fields which the institute will cover. To Curtail Classes Two lectures in Memorial hall are scheduled for each day dur ing the week. All 9:30 classes will be dismissed at 10 o'clock to attend the morning address which will begin at 10:10 o'clock, according to Poe. Everything connected with the institute will be open to the public. The evening address hour will be 8 o'clock. Besides the platform speeches in Memorial hall, visiting insti tute speakers will conduct over 80 classroom seminars. The regular University classes will digress from their text assign-' ments and hear an institute speaker present his subject dur ing the first half of the hour, leaving the last part of the pe riod for questions and discus sion. Technical Studies According to Chairman Poe, the object of the seminars is to give the speakers a chance to thrash out more technical prob lems than they are allowed to in the public platform ad dresses. The Memorial hall exhibit will be open all week and will include an attractive collection of books, posters, pamphlets, and literature of various sorts relating to the three fields cov ered in the institute's study. Several important speakers who have been invited have not been heard from, indicated Poe, but the list of those who have al- (Continued on page two) Another author calls it "that reason for all unreasonable ac tions." One says, "Love is a beautiful dream." And still an other adds, "Love is a kind of warfare." You can take your choice. But remember, "Ab sence makes the heart grow fon der for the other fellow." .Then there is a section devot ed to prudence. "One has no protecting power save pru dence." However, "Prudence, keeps life safe but does not al ways make it happy." Others of more witty nature are also found. "A proper place for men to sow their wild oats where they will not spring up." "Many a one goes for wool and comes back shorn." The book is filled with wis dom, wit, satire, humor in fact the frontispiece sums up the work in quoting, "I can tell thee where that saying was born."
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 10, 1935, edition 1
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