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DEAN R. R. WICKS 8 P.M. MEMORIAL HALL H i H JIT OPENING 2 P.M. MEMORIAL HALL SE2VED BY THE UNITED PRESS VOLUME .XLIH CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 1935 NUMBER 132 NOTED SPEAKERS TO MAKE TALKS BEFORECLASSES Duggan, Hope, Lederer, and Lan dis Will Lead Classroom Semi nar Discussions Tomorrow. PUBLIC FREE TO ATTEND Over seven classes will hear seminar speakers tomorrow, ac cording to a schedule announced yesterday by J. D. Winslow, head of the Human. Relations Insti tute seminar committee. Beginning at 11 a. m., Profes sor Frazer's class in Govern ment 21 meeting in 213 Saun ders will hear Dr. Stephen P Duggan of the Institute of In ternational Education. Public Invited r All classroom discussions "throughout the week will be open to visitors from outside the membership of the class, accord ing to Winslow. Also at 11 o'clock, Dr. John Hope, president of Atlanta Uni versity, will conduct the semi nar for Professor Crittenden's History 48 class meeting in 314 Saunders. Dr. Emil Lederer, dean of the graduate faculty of the New School for Social Research, has been selected to lead a discussion at a joint meeting to be held in 103 Bingham for 12 o'clock classes in Economics and Gov ernment 143 and 158. Landis to Speak At 3 p. m. James M. Landis, United States securities and ex change commissioner will lec ture to the classes in Economics 197 and the University's admin istrative law courses in 103 Bing ham. Winslow indicated that the whole class periods would be turned over to the visiting speakers. The committee for arranging the seminar program is com posed of Billy Harrison, Harold Bennett, Simmons Patterson, and Winslow. Special seminar speakers who are not listed on the public ad dress program include Dr. Thom as Jesse Jones, educational di rector of the ( Phelps-Stokes fund; Dr. J. F. Rippy, profes sor of history and government at Duke University; Dr. N. C. Newbold, director of the depart ment of Negro education in North Carolina; and Julian Har ris, advertising- director of the Atlanta Constitution. Officials Limit Thomas Dinner Tickets To 100 Tickets for the Norman Thomas banquet next Friday evening in Graham Memorial have been limited to 100, it was announced yesterday. They are being sold for 60 cents. There has been a heavy de mand for admissions to the af fair and officials of the Caro lina Politcal Union, which is sponsoring the dinner, urge that reservations be made immedi ately at the office of the Y. M C A., with Robert Smithwick at Everett dormitory, or with Phil Hammer at the Daily Tar Heel office. 1 nomas will speak on some phase of politics, probably Tam many Hall and other New York political machines. There will be ample opportunity for asking the speaker questions pertinent to this or other subjects. INSTITUTE I A 1 - I i - v i v 5 "t $ - 1 ' t -c? V :-:::?;-:-r;vy?-:-:-:-v . . " n,-, k drn -- -- - ixMWwJ WMdMKsVM 'xtowooi tf s K - 4T I . " ' I i v I 1 -r ' ' I 5 ? - - " ; -r v -f I t Si I ! H r I 1 , f , : I ,,-.- , I I - ' 5 I " , ? f , s '. " J ' a. , :! y N-' 5 1 ' S- j . ' . U , ' , ? - .-I i 1 1 - - ! - i - - n j? - - ; ; ! - . ' ! r 1 I ! ' f i If '? Pictured above are some of the speak at the third quadrennial opens here today. Left to right, top row, they Dr. Stephen P. Duggan, Donald Comer, Sanf ord Bates, Dr. Everett Dean Martin, George Soule, Jr., Dr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, Dr. Shailer Mathews, Norman Thomas, Hamilton Fish, Jr., Harry F. Comer, and Charles A. Poe. Comer and retary and student chairman of Presentation Of Awards Ends Carolina Dramatic Tournament Dean of Administration Robert B. House Gives Prizes at Final Session of Festival. - NEW OFFICERS SELECTED In session here at the Caro lina Playmakers theatre for more than three days, the 12th annual festival and state tour nament of the Carolina Drama tic Association ended last night with the presentation of awards for all the contest winners by Dean of Administration Robert B. House. Twenty-three awards were made to various dramatic groups representing all parts of North Carolina. Officers of the Drama tic Association for the coming year were elected yesterday morning. Guests Make Talks Guest speakers for the occa sion included Lee Simonson, the distinguished scenic director of the New York Theatre Guild who opened the festival Wed nesday night ; Samuel Freidman of the Theatre Union,. New York; Playmakers Director Frederick H. Koch; Herbert Kline, editor of the New Thea tre, New York; Playmakers Son Paul Green, and University Summer School Director Edgar W. Knight. The winners in the several contests, as announced at the close of the tournament last night by Professor Koch, are: i (Continued on page, four) LEADERS - -ii ' j' V w f U t t it v outstanding authorities who will Human Relations Institute which are Dean Robert" Russell Wicks, Poe are serving as executive sec the Institute, respectively. Co-eds Meet Tuesday The Woman's Association will meet Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock in the Woman's Association room at Gra ham Memorial. Nominations for next year's officers will be made and plans for the quarterly co-ed dance will be discussed. ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATION TO BE DISCUSSED TONIGHT Members of the Foreign Pol icy League interested in discuss ing plans for the anti-war dem onstration to be held here Apri 12 are urged by R. P. Russell to meet tonight at 7 o'clock in the Graham Memorial lounge. The following members of the league are especially urged by Russell to be in attendance: Agnew Bahnson, Don Becker, Phil Hammer, Don McKee, Niles Bond, Joe Barnett, John Schulz Nick Read, and Charles Lloyd. The session will not conflict with the institute program to night but will be over in plen ty of time for all the Foreign Policy League members to hear the evening platform address of Dean Robert Russell Wicks. Glee Club to Meet The Glee Club will morrow afternoon at in Hill Music hall. meet to 5 o'clock V 7r iminyiiiiin'ulTji R elation s Institute Will Open Today With Speakers Filling Local Pulpits; Program Continues Through Saturday NOTED LECTURERS SCHEDULED HERE FOR COMING WEEK James M. Landis and Dr. Emil Lederer Continue Institute With Talks Tomorrow. SOULE TO CLOSE SESSIONS James M. Landis, United States Securities and Exchange Commissioner, and Dr. Emil ederer, dean of the graduate acuity at the New School for Social Research, will make the two public platform addresses omorrow, . continuing : the Hu man relations institute pro gram which will last until Sat urday. Landis will discuss "The Sig nificance of Federal Regulation of Securities' at 10:15 o'clock tomorrow morning in Memorial hall. Says Business Week of Lan dis : "The vast extent of his knowledge fools a lot of people who cannot believe that one man could know as much as he does about so many things, and then have spare brain cells for some thing else." Lederer Talks at Night Dr. Lederer, who will make he evening lecture tomorrow at 8 o'clock, will talk on "The Back ground of European Dictator ships." A world-renowned authority on economics, ieaerer win also conduct several seminars during the week. Traveler and writer, he has held proiessorsnips m three foreign universities and has traveled and lectured in China, Europe, and throughout other parts of the world. He was a member of the Socialism commission and at one time edi tor of "Archiv fur Sozialwissen- schaft and jSozialpolitik." The Foreign Policy League will entertain Dr. Stephen Dug gan at a special banquet at 6 p m. tomorrow before Lederer's evening address. In order to allow students to attend the morning addresses, the University administration has arranged for all 9 :30 classes to end at 10:08 o'clock. The morning lecture throughout the week will begin at 10:15 o'clock and will continue till 11:08 o'clock. The regular 11 o'clock classes will assemble at 11:15 o'clock. Tuesday's Program The program for Tuesday in eludes public addresses by Dr. Stephen P. Duggan, director of the Institute of Internationa Education, Dr. John Hope, president of Atlanta University, and Sanford Bates, director of the bureau of prisons . of the United States Department of Justice. Dr. Duggan will speak at the morning convocation on ine Present Situation in Europe;" Dr. Hope at 4 p. m. on "The Ne gro in the Modern World." Bates at the evening address will dis cuss the question, "Have Our Prisons Failed?" Talks on Wednesday Honorable Hamilton Fish, Jr., Congressman from New York, Chester Wright, public relations counsel for the United Textile Workers, and Donald Comer, president' of the Avondale Tex tile Mills, are the three speakers scheduled for Wednesday. Fish on "Government and In (Continzied on page two) Today's Program Address: Dr. Carl C. Taylor. Baptist church 11 a. m. Address: Julian Miller. Methodist church j: 11 a. m. Address: Dr. McNeill Poteat. Presbyterian church 11 a. m. Address: Dr. Howard E. Jensen. Episcopal church . 11 a. m. Opening of exhibit. Memorial hall 2 p. m. Convocation: Dean Robert Rus sell Wicks. memorial nan d, m. PUPPETS PERFORM MDRAMATONIGHT Playmakers to Present Health Play at 7 p. m.; Performance Completes State Tour. A special showing of the Play makers puppet health drama will be presented tonisrht at 7 o'clock in the Playmakers Thea tre. The performance is being sponsored to give drama students and friends in ChaDel Hill and Raleigh an opportunity of see ing the play that has been tour ing the state. There will be no admission charge. Sponsors of Play Puppeteers Louise McQuire and William Long of the Play makers, will have charge of the production of the show that they have carried to school chilldren in 29 counties under the spon sorship of the state dental de partment and the National Good Tooth Council. Tonight's performance will be presented, according to Long, for Dr. Ernest Branch, head of of the state division of dental hygiene. The drama which the Play makers sent out reached 49,000 children in 80 performances, an nounced Long. Tonight's show ing will complete the tour which began here several weeks before the holidays and included points over the state irom tne moun tains to the. sea. Solely an educational produc tion, the performance is not in tended to conflict with any pre viously arranged church pro grams nor with the address of the Human Relations Institute guest, Dean Robert Russell Wicks of Princeton, in Memorial hall at 8 o'clock. Banquet for Duggan Foreign Policy League to Spon sor Dinner Tomorrow Night. Dr. Stephen Duggan of the Institute of International Edu cation will explain the Moscow summer school session for American students at a ban quet in his honor at 6 o'clocjc to morrow evening in Graham Me morial. Dr. Duggan, who will appear on the Human Relations Insti tute program Tuesday morning, speaking on "The Present Situ ation in Europe," will also dis cuss the part American stu dents can play in expressing themselves to their government on current public problems. Tickets for the affair, which is being sponsored by the For eign Policy League, are on sale in the Y. M. C. A. DEAN R. R. WICKS TO TALK TONIGHT AT aiASS MEETING Opening of Institute Exhibit Will Take Place at 2 p. m. Today In Memorial Hall. SPEECHES OPEN TO PUBLIC Four Chapel Hill pulpits will be filled by Human Relations Insti tute speakers this morning, and the series of public platform ad dresses will be inaugurated to night at a general mass meeting in Memorial hall at 8 o'clock. At 11 a. m., Dr. Carl C. Tay lor, regional director of the Land Policy of the AAA, will occupy the pulpit in the Baptist church. Dr. Taylor will speak on "The People and Our National Re sources." Miller at Methodist At the Methodist church Ju lian Miller of the editorial staff of the Charlotte Observer, will talk on "How Much Better is a Man Than a Gasket?" Dr. McNeill Poteat, pastor of Pullen Memorial church in Ral eigh, will fill the Presbyterian pulpit. Dr. Poteat has announced that he will speak on "The Emancipation of the Spirit." v Discussing "The Sociological Background of Our Contempo rary Conflicts," Dr. Howard E. Jensen, professor of sociology at Duke University, will appear at the Episcopal church. Opening of Exhibit The initial opening of the In stitute exhibit in Memorial hall will be at 2 p. m. In the lobby there has been set up a complete display of hundreds of the best books arid periodicals on the subject matter of the Institute. The exhibit will remain open till 10 :30 and during the week from 9 a.m. till 10:30 p. m. More than 32 national organi zations and publishers furnish ed materials for the exhibit which has been arranged by Joe Sugarman, Dr. Harold D. Meyer, Phil Hammer, and Don McKee. Wicks Talks at 8 p. m. Dean of Chapel at Princeton University, Robert Russell Wicks will address the first of the Institute's public mas3 meet ings in Memorial hall at 8 p. m. Wicks is to discuss "The College Student in a Sacred World." Author,- theologian, speaker, World War Y. M. C. A. service worker, Dr. Wicks has been dean of chapel at Princeton since 1929. Fifty-two-y ear-old Dr. Wicks is a graduate of Hamilton Col lege and Union Theological Seminary and- has three times been given the degree of doc tor of divinity, from Hamilton, Williams, and Yale. During the World War he per formed "Y" services for over six months and since that time he has had an outstanding career as lecturer, preacher, and writer. Dean Wick's topic for to night's address, "The College Student in a Scared World," will' serve to prepare a background for the Institute's study for the week. According to Charles A. Poe, chairman of the Institute com mittee, the three major fields for study are: international rela tions and government, human relations in business and indus try, and interracial and class relations.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 31, 1935, edition 1
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