0 s J- ) 4 i: .... ! : ft Band Concert Tomorrow 4 p. m. Davie Poplar it GtAIL Dancz 9 rn. 12 Gtmnastcm I 1 ! VOLUME XLIV EDITORIAL reOKB 4! 51 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1936 ntsorzss re oiri 4is NUMBER 171 i jB)rjp 31W HONOR PLAN WILL FACE VOTE OF CO-ED GROUP Proposal Would Add Advisory, Non-Voting Faculty Member to Woman's Council BATTY SAYS PWA FUNDS UNCERTAIN Furtherance of Funds for Addi tional PWA Allotments Is Held in Doubt HIGH SCHOOLERS WELL BE OFFERED COURSE IN MUSIC Summer School to Feature Band Music for Students Dr. Herman G. Baity, state di rector of the Public Works Ad- -WILL VOTE TUESDAY ministration, stated today that . ' I he had been nrriprsr! a i ni: t i "J " A.prupusoi yaidiiciuig wie istrator Ir.kes to fnmisli a Ht . r ttji tt I : comiueuuauuus ui jtziu nam- n Amnlnv,s i services can he disrrmtinnpd im. "r . Ui "mediately in the event no fur- for additional P.W. A. allotments. "Mr. Ickes' order that the initial day at 5 o'clock. This report was drawn up by a committee .composed of Jane requires pl,.hlp cunaument oe An all-State high school mu sic course, designed to: provide an opportunity for boys and girls of hicrh school aere to combine snsive music study, with healthful recreation, will be of fered during the first term of summer session here. Any high school student or graduate of the current year, up on recommendation of his super intendent and "music teacher, is BRADSHAW LAUDS SUB-COUNCIL IDEA Dean of Students Thinks New Honor Plan Will, Reduce "Tattle-Tale" Feeling Jloss, chairman, Margaret Jor- . M . An ti; ' ieasi percent ot the pres- mermann, Bobbie Moore, and "Nell Booker. : . Three members of this com mittee, Jane Ross, Julia Folsom, and Nell Booker also served on the honor committee appointed ent organization, notwithstand ing the continuing volume of work required to service the projects now under construe- In addition to daily rehearsals of the band and orchestra, stu dents will receive individual les sons on their principal instru ment, and in music theory, ap preciation, and chamber music Sectional rehearsals will be held Chatham To Come Here Monday As Speaker On CPU Program tion," Dr. Baity said. Dr. Baity stated that there is reffUiarlv with training in wood by Francis Fairley, of which a possibility that the Senate, wind brass and string ensem Phil Hammer was chairman.; r"" wc bles. Faculty Added rll Ui wmimuuice oi wie r. The program is designed for Tlin t-ptvmH- drawn nn W Viia ' S"1, caiiiiaifi. worV Wn levels t Advanced committee recommends the addi- df,finite ,sJLum f f.T" f band and orchestra for players of allotments. so, JNorth uaroiina applicants win iuoc tiicij. iasi ciiaiiue ux w taining funds to carry forward a program of sound, acceptable and socially desirable pr b j ects. tion of a faculty member with :no vote to the Woman's Council, working solely in an advisory volving violations of the: honor ? Program of sound, acceptable system. ; ! ' ' Another f acultv adviser is al so recommended in the adminis-ISophomore Collects tration of the campus code, and is to be chosen by the girl involv ed to serve on that particular ncase alone. The report also recommends the continuation of the co-ed ad- (Continued on last page) Should it fail to do considerable experience ; begin- Continued on page two) Indian Relics; Has Museum Of Pottery iBAND WILL PLAY HERE TOMORROW University Band to Give Second Concert of Series at 4 p. m. Tomorrow Afternoon Joffre Coe, Assistant to Guy Johnson, Has Archaeologi- cal Hobby COMPOSITE BODY PLANS STUDY OF FACULTY REPORT i Administrative Council to Con sider Faculty's Resolutions at Next Meeting By Ruth Crowell Hands Off My Head1 sign wnicn joiire ioe, more archaeologist, has put be- liS uic sopho- Students, townspeople and fac ulty are invited to attend the University Concert Band's out door concert tomorrow . after noon at 4 o'clock near the Davie Popular. Tomorrow's concert is the sec ond in the series of Sunday aft ernoon concerts featuring pop ular band music. The program Dean of Students Francis Bradshaw, feels that his charges will profit a great deal under the sub-structure plan of the Stu dent Council for class honor councils. ; . The plan for Student Council sub-councils in each class to handle offenders from its partic ular class will, he feels, "reduce the feeling that in reporting an offender as they do now, stu- dents are telling tales on a per son." - j ; Psycho-logic Jjean tsraasnaw reasons psy chologically that man is more apt to report a criminal to another member of his own class or gang than to an" outside authority. 'Similarly, a freshman, for ex ample, will feel more free to talk to a member of his own class than to a removed upperclass man," he (believes. "The plan will bring a sense of responsibility for preserving an atmosphere of mutual confi dence among students and be tween students and teachers," he declared yesterday. Birth of Idea The dean recalls that this year's sophomore class was, dur ing its freshman year, the firstf class of the. University to start an honor committee to work with the Student Council in maintain ing the class's "honor code. It is believed that this idea suggest ed the new sub-structure pro gram to council officials. LAST GRAIL DANCE The last Grail dance of the year will take place tonight in Bynum gymnasium with Lew Gogerty and his orchestra furnishing the music. The dance will begin at 9 o'clock and last until 12 with all freshmen admitted. Liberty League Offic ial to Be Fifth Talk er of Series IS UNIVERSITY ALUMNUS BISHOP PENICK The right Rev. Edwin A. Pen- ick will be at the Episcopal uuuicii luuiurruvv at me 11 n clock service to preach and ad minister the Rite of Confirma tion. Bishop Penick graduated from Sewanee in 1908, did graduate work at Harvard, and received his theological training at Alex andria. He began his rector in Columbia, S. C. where he was the minister of the Church of the Good Shepherd. In 1919 he I came to St. Peter's church, Char- lotte, and in 1922 he was elect ed Bishop Coajutor of North Carolina. , , will onen with the Senn Trium- partiy deteriorated maian neaa ., , , , from 300 to 1,000 years old wmuii ,it v,.vU "Pasadena Dav March ' Yadkin River flood three weeks , .. phal March" by Huf f er, which will be followed by Vessella's TIME NOT YET DECIDED ft Charles Miller will give a cor net solo, the "Grand Fantasia by Hartman. r The rest of the program will consist of Fauchet's "Symphony (Continued on page two) ago. Coe came to the University Discussion of the faculty's re-1 this year after spending one year cent resolutions concerning con- at Brevard. He is assistant to solidation was the principal Dr. Guy B. Johnson in the so- work : of the Administrative I ciology department, and has Council of the Greater Univer- been interested in archaeology M q cfe T Disappears sity wmcn -met yesteruay anei- smcc vo&. rui urc ioou iuui noon in the office of President years he has been on a number Frank Graham. - of field trips. He did survey The council, which is compos- work and exploration in Florida ed of renresentatives of the Ra- at Lake Apopka and was a mem - . Ii Jl T ? !l Ttl leigh, Greensboro, and Chapel per oi tne university ui v,m- Hill units of the University, con- cago's field party which survey- milfv's ed the Kmcaid Mounds m Illi resolutions of such importance Inc-is o -v mAw ptiirlir until tllii Hovtl AJ UlCllI OlUVlJ uuwi uvav . -a i PPfirnr. when thev will mxeraormitory vjruuy -"-' o . - - I i rrt Time fori i5anauets romorrow not Co-ed Diners Shocked By Scantiness Of May uay uancers AVttire May Pole Sprites Ally with Robin Hooders to Create Bedlam in Spencer Hall LEWIS APPOINTS YEARBOOK STAFF Thorp, Yeates. Clark, Griffin Receive Blajor Positions in Yackety Yack Set-up yet Council to Entertain Those Hold ing Office During Past Year be discussed again the next meeting has been set. Last Spring Last spring the council dis-l The Inter dormitory Council cussed the principles of consoli-lwin give a banquet for members elation. At that time it made the I who held office during the past As Human Vultures Pick Ancient Body Student Heartlessly Deserts Faithful Hybrid to Vicissi tudes of Campus Life (Continued on page twoi ussie vjuesses: A 4 Phi. Beta Kappa keys to 85 students. Only trouble is that ttinsp. kevs are like the ones vrvwv - - n cities thev won't unlock W V w V anything, YlMZ The Weather : f, 7yy- tomorrow, some what warmer. i - . year tonight at 7 :30 in Graham Memorial. Among the faculty members who will be present, are Dean R. B. House, Dean F. F. Bradshaw, C M. Anderson, L. B. Rogerson, and H. W. Schnell. Mr. C. M. Anderson, of the commerce school, will speak. Fletcher Ferguson, secretary of the Interdormitory Council, will give a resume of the activ ities of the council for the past year, and Albert i Ellis, council president, will present " keysto all dormitory officers present. A skit will also be ; given by Roy Armstrong of "stunt night fame. Reservations for the banquet may be made through tonight. By Herbert H. Hirschfeld ; The grass pushes up unob structed in the field back . of Manning hall. No longer need it force its way through spokes of automobile wheels, or pit its strength against that of a generator. A bright green model T Ford, which had been resting there since before Christmas vacation has finally been moved by some unknown benefactor who consid ered, it a sore spot on the cam pus. ' -The touring car was owned by Edgar Elrod, Charlotte Chi Phi, who had given it up as a bad cause, alter a broken iront con-j necting-rod and a burned-out bearing disabled it. No exact date of the car's birth could be given, for the owner had assembled it from junked parts. He had christen ed it "Elmar." ..The original body, came from Orangeburg, S. C, whence Elrod and a friend drove it up to Charlotte. There a new motor was put in. This (Continued on last page) Spencer hall inmates who did not participate in May Day are relieved that the festival is ov er, i i Though the event was interest ing and even beautiful, various gastronomic difficulties may be traced back to the last day of rehearsal, in which members of the cast wore their costumes. Great shock, which is extreme ly hard on the digestive system, was experienced at . dinner (Continued on fast page) Henry Lewis, editor of the 1936-37 Yackety Yack, y ester day announced all appointments for next year's staff of the Uni versity yearbook. A member of the new PU board, David Thorp will be the managing editor of the staff ap pointed yesterday. He has worked on the Yackety Yack for two years and was this year edi tor of the senior section. Davis, Clark Heading the senior section for next year is Glenn Davis who has worked on both the senior and activities section. John Clark, a worker on the senior and faculty sections this year, will Be the new head of the junior sec- ' (Continued on last page) Fifth CPU Speaker Is Proud Owner Of South Polar Bovine The plans and purposes of the American Liberty League will be the topic of discussion by Thur mond Chatham when he address es the student body in Memorial hall on Monday night. Mr. Chatham is an alumnus of the University and is national executive committeeman of the Liberty League. He is being brought to Chapel Hill by the Carolina Political Union upon the suggestion of Jouett Shouse, president of the League. Fifth Speaker This fifth speaker in the CPU , series for the current season is a native of Winston-Salem and is head of the Chatham Manu-. f acturing company of that place. He has attended all the meetings of the League and has kept in close touch with its activities. Mr. Chatham is the owner of the Klondike Farm at Elkin. N. C. President Shouse has said that "it is no. exaggeration to say that the League has been the most discussed and in some high quarters the most 'cussed' or ganization in the recent history of America." The organization was chartered in August of 1934 under the laws of the District of Columbia and has set forth its purpose as one to defend and uphold the Constitution of the United States. INITIAL MAY DAY ATTRACTS CROWD TO GRIMSWARD Arboretum Thronged with 1000 Onlookers as Queen Barlow Receives Royal Honor Two Foreign Movies To Come This Week E. C. Smith Schedules German and French Talking Pictures , E. Carrington Smith, manager of the Carolina theater, announc ed the showing of two foreign pictures for the coming week. For the benefit of the German department "The Legend, of William Tell" will be presented Tuesday night at 11 o'clock. "La Prince Jean" will be given at the same time Thursday night, m the interest of French stu dents. Both pictures will have English sub-titles. Smith announced that these two pictures will be the last shown this scholastic year, but that next fall many more pic tures than were given this year will fee secured. r During the summer an effort will be made to secure French, German, and -Spanish moving pictures. Thurman Chatham Has Agrar ian Hobby; Owns "Klondike Farm Near Elkin, N. C. MOLLY MOO" SCORES HIT Besides winning the best cit izens ward in his native town, American Liberty League Com mitteeman Thurmond Chatham of Winston-Salem is nationally known for his bulls. The Liberty League commit teeman who is scheduled to speak in Memorial hall Monday con siders his foremost hobby as farming, and practices this pas time in Elkin, N. C, where he has set up a mdclel Guernsey farm known throughout the country as the "Klondike Farm." Mr. Chatham gave up one of his favorite pets, a cow, several years ago to Admiral Richard Byrd to make the trip to the South Pole. - The New Deal had just been put into effect and the two; man agreed to name the Chatham pet "Klondike NIRA." While at Little America "Klondike NIRA" died, but her calf which had been bonfduring the trip was carefully cared for and brought back to the United States. Upon Byrd's arrival,' he (Continued on last page) Hester Barlow .was crowned the University's first Queen . of the May yesterday afternoon in a ceremony full of vouth-and color. Approximately 1,000 people were grouped around the grass court in the arboretum in the center of which was the Queen's white throne. Crowned Following the grand proces sional and the Crown Dance, Hester Barlow was crowned I Queen by her Maid of Honor, Mary Pride Cruikshank. Pre vious to this ceremony, Mary Lindsay as Robin, Hood was kept busy keeping small child ren out of the path of the danc ers and the court. The Archers danced first for the Queen and Mary Potts as the Jester, watched them critically and mimicked their every move with her small bow and arrow made'from a twig. The chimney sweeps, dirty, and blackened, fought furiously with each oth er as they danced and created much merriment. The hit of the show was "Mol ly Moo,", the cow, as she pranced around between the Milkmaids' dance. Manipulating the moves of the bovine from the inside were Frances Johnston aad Kay Quigley. May Day did not end formally until the children had tried out the May Pole for them selves and a little boy had squirt ed water on the chimney sweeps from his pistol in a vain effort to clean their faces. n I v 1 -,

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