" '"'"",Ma " " ' "- mm ''" j VOLUME XLV CMIPUSTOHEAR DOUGHTON SPEAK ON BEHALF FM. Prominent Democrat Accepts Invitation To Speak Oct. 26 BUSXHESS PHONE 41S6 CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 193S EDrrotiAZ. rem m NUMBER 12 Advisers Get Facts Concerning New Men For Student Record Dean Spruill Tells His Gronp to Get Good Start Here Don Seawell Democratic Congressman R. Li. Doughton, chairman of the House Ways and Means commit tee, has been secured by the Carolina Political union to speak nere October 26, according to an announcement yesterday by President Frank McGlinn. As a result of previous nego tiations, McGlinn received a let ter yesterday from Washington stating that Congressman Doughton would speak to the University student body on be half of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic nominee for reelec tion to the presidency. Gardner McGlinn further announced that O. Max Gardner, former governor of the state, who had been petitioned by,the union to speak in October, would be un able to do so because of the pressure of his business. The Rt. Rev. Paul Jones, prominent socialist and resident minister of Antioch college, was personally selected by Norman Thomas, presidential candidate of the Socialist party, to speak at Chapel Hill at the request of the union. Rev. Jones is sched uled to talk on behalf of the So cialist party Monday night, in Memorial hall. As announced, in yesterday's paper, Colonel Frank ;Knbx Re publican candidate for the vice presidency, will arrive in Chap el Hill October 13 to deliver an address. Freshmen met their respec tive advisers yesterday during the regular chapel period in New West, New East, Bingham, Phil ips, Venable, Murphy, and Me morial hall. The object of the meeting, ac cording to the advisers, was to gain a first-hand knowledge of each student, to be kept on rec ord.. Start Dean C. P. Spruill of the gen eral college told his group in Me morial hall to get a good start and that four years from now they would thank themselves. I He 3' 1 - The University debate squad will hold its first meeting of the "Ask yourself this question !" year tonight at 9 o'clock on the the dean of the general college seconcl noor of ranam Memo demanded. "Are the things I am W1- Don Seawell will speak on doing the most worth while ?ne Enlish debate trip. Find what you are especially fit- Seawell was one of the two ted to do and stick to it. You debaters chosen through the can't take part in all of the acti- University Debate council by the vities. but choose one for vour- Student Federation of America Publications Board To Hear Applicants For Buccaneer Post Business Manager to be Chosen At Meeting Wednesday Applicants for the business managership of the Carolina Buccaneer will be heard by the Publications Union board next Wednesday at 3 p. m. The board, in its first session of the fall, yesterday received and accepted the resignation of Niles Bond from the manager ship of the humor magazine, ef fective after the publication of the first Buccaneer this year. Audit Written applications for the position should be presented Professor J. M. Lear, board ad- 1 - V -t viser. next Monday. In presenting the audit of the board's account at yesterdays meeting, Mr. Lear announced that profits on the four student publications last year totaled approximately $900. Giant Pep Rally To Be Staged Tomorrow Night At Postoffice Alumni Association Plans For Affair Tnrlnrf a Directors To Meet Parade A self and do it well. Problems "The main problem in busi ness today is dealing with peo ple. Your problem on this cam- to represent the country at large in the British Isles last spring. Tour The two debaters spoke in all parts of the Isles. They began DORMITORY MEN VOTE YESTERDAY ON 1936 OFFICERS Councillors Elected For Each Floor; Many Races Are Close PUS IS tO get acquainted With 1X1 ouumaiupiim aim weui up me your fellowmen, so as to learn west c0st through Cardiff, Bris- howto deaf with them. Friction tol, Wales, Liverpool, and Glas may arise, but vour task is to sow. They then crossed to the study that person and yourself." eastern coast of , Scotland, came down to Edinburgh, thence to Newcastle, Manchester, and to London. Following that they spoke in Reading, Cambridge, Oxford and a few other places. ANNUAL SPENCER HOP TOMORROW Blind Date' Card Dance To Be Held In tJounge Advisory Board The annual Spencer hall dance will be held tomorrow night in the main lounge of the woman's dormitory. Class officers, publications TrM- The new members of the Stu dent Advisory board appointed by Dean Bradshaw are Mar garet Jordan, Niles Bond, Henry Clark, George MacFarland, Al bert Ellis, Marvin Allen, Allan Louis -Shaffner, Fred By Jim Sivertsen : VvJ ' Along with the rain yesterday came a flood of votes throughout the "dormitories bringing into of fice ,the;new councillors and" the filling of other vacant offices. Newly elected officers in Old East are : north section, C. C. Armfield; center section, Clar ence Klutz; south section, Andy Bershak. Charles Wales went unopposed into office as athletic manager. Aycock In Aycock Pete Peterson was elected first floor councillor; the second floor men, Phil Walker and Bill Wilson, tied for the po sition and a run-off will be nec essary ; for third floor, William Tenenblott; and Bert Ressler for athletic manager. In Grimes the running was somewhat closer, a second elec tion being necessary for the fourth floor between Pete Avery and Boone Grant. Malcomb Allan and Beaty. Bass were unopposed as first and second floor representatives, re spectively. August Mayland was elected for the third floor. Jim Joyner was unopposed as ath letic manager. Ruff in Things were still warmer down in Ruffin as. Lafayette Wrenn and Gordon Gifford tied for the. first floor, the same situ ation holdingvtrue for the sec f mirth floor between t - m t n men, ieiuw,euuiuv uuxu ic w Don McKee. John Par Interdormitory and Interf rater- ker replacing Jack Poole and nity councils, the Athletic coun- pete Iyey replacmg Harper en, ana onicers oi xne campus garneg organizations, nave Deen mviiea to the affair. The dance is of the "blind date" type, and each dance by card. This is the third year that the Shack has staged, the affair. Weather Maps Show ; How Hurricane Was Deflected From Coast Session at Carolina Inn Set for October 3 By Rameses HI Mascot to Make Initial Bow The. regular fall meeting of the board of directors of the General Alumni association will be held here October 3 in thel Joy, or something, will reign Carolina Inn. I supreme tomorrow night when The reports of officers and the Carolina student body drops committees will be heard, and its sophisticated composure to plans for the coming year made, join in a parade and pep meet- At that time a date will be set ing as a fitting prelude to what for the annual Alumni Assem- will be a miirhtv crood football bly, and a program to entertain game between Tennessee and the various representatives of Carolina. each class and each local club Reasons 1- ' -1 ?11 .11 J I which wm aii-enu. Tha o-omo riil V,Q A luncheon at the Carolma home ame of the year. it Inn will start the meeting, aft- be Coach Bear Woirs formal in- er which the directors will at- Production to the greater nart of stend the Tennessee-Carolina th stndpnt hodv? if. will ho ih Students To Choose football game as guests of the university of North Carolina's Coed Stylist Today Polls Will be Open at "Y" For Dame Fashion Election Polls will be open all day to day in the "Y" for each student to cast his vote for Dame Fash ion, the leading figure in Alpha Kappa Gamma's pageant of styles, to be given October 29 and 30. . One of the following five girls will be chosen the outstanding coed stylist: Elizabeth Keeler, Virginia Burd, Mrs. Kirby Smith, Marguerite Morris, and Eliza Rose., .. ., . . The shdw Will ie "divided into two acts, depicting old and mod ern dress styles. Gowns of 1776, 1860, 1880, 1900, and 1936 will be reviewed by Dame Fashion. Both boys and girls will partici pate in the showing of the styles. The Betsy Ann Shop of Chapel Hill is making arrange ments for securing costumes and gowns in New York for the show. TT ;. i niuurirv i i t i ... W""V1U,V'' . most poient attempt to beat a Secretary Saunders antici- Neyland-coached Tennessee pates a large attendance. Presi- team somethinjr it's never done. dent Howard E. Rondthaler, Reasone noughf orth reepepral- president oi daiem uoiiege, wiii jjg preside. Officers K. C. deRos- Alumni Clubs Of Nation To Meet In Celebration Of University Day I New York City Group Planning Dinner -Dance -Following Car- j x . ; olma-N;. YU.1 Game Alumni clubs all over the na tion are planning to hold meet- Charts in Geology Building Trace inS3 soon. in celebration of the pai, nf TVnmVnl Sfnrm I4ard university jjay. Alumni in and around New hurricane York City are planning a dinner rnast nf dance and other entertainment Seeing the recent charge toward the North Carolina and veer away to be given at the Hotel Ambas to skirt the whole Atlantic coast sador October 17, directly fol- line is made possible by the ser lowing the Carolina-N. Y. U. ries of weather maps on exhibit game in the ffeoloev librarv. An information and registra- The path of the storm is trac- tion booth will be established in ed on a series of maps which are the same hotel, and students may issued every day by the XL S. weather bureau. Beginning on September 17 each day brings the hurricane farther out of the southeast toward Cape Hatteras. When it is about 100 miles out, it is deflected slightly and turns to the northward, coming within 50 miles of Norfolk. The storm is pushed eastward slightly and roars up the coast tnarrowly missing the port cities. An explanation of the turning is seen in the high pressure area which centered in the Lake Michigan region and , extended to the eastern edge of the Unit ed States. The storm was a low pressure area which would have, crossed eastern North Carolina, Virginia and other Atlantic states had not the "high' stood guard and bounced it off. LANETOEXl Last year was the first time that the Tar Heels have defeated the Vols since 1909. Plans Plans for the occasion include a wildly-cheering horde of stu dents, a torchlight parade, ap propriate speakers, rousing cheers led by Hoge Vick and cpmpany, and last but not least, the first 1936 appearance of Rameses, a ram. extraordinary and a tradition in himself. mi 3 in i l -e l. RenrsPTitativAa the TTn? I Ane wm sutrt m irons versity extension division wm of the Post office at 7:15 tomor- visit Charlotte tomorrow for the V, ,?I?fe,a UP f sett, J. G. Ramsay, George Watts HUl, and H. B. Haywood along with the board of direc tors and district directors will be present. EXTENSION HEADS OPEN INTERVIEWS Will Hold Conferences At Charlotte Soon purpose of interviewing recent to the stop light, down Columbia high school graduates unable to ?ee toCa?e avenue ,and men to ooutn Duuaincr. wnere members of the team and coach- make reservations for the affair by writing Dr. T.J. Wilson, III, at 1 Park Avenue, New York City, or by notifying J. M. Saun ders in the Alumni office here. In North Carolina the Greens boro, Asheville, and Oxford clubs have almost completed plans for University Day. Dr. Archibald Henderson will ad dress the Greensboro alumni. New Orleans is also planning reception for the Carolina team, alumni, and students Oc tober 24, after the Tulane game. The headquarters will be at the Bienville Hotel, and alumni from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas will gather there. nhpr meetings' are being V - planned in Georgia, California and New York. . BIT ART WORK HERE Subject Matter Taken From South Beginning today and lasting until October 15, 25 water color paintings by Stephen Lane, young American artist, will be exhibited in Hill Music hall. His exhibition of water colors is composed chiefly of subject matter found in the vicinity of Baton Rouge and New Orleans. There are several, however, of Greensboro subjects. Mr. Lane is working in Greensboro .at present. According to Mrs. Corinne McNeir, art teacher in the ex tension division, the artist has a fresh, spontaneous style of water color painting that is pe culiarly suitable to the medium. Born in 1911 in Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Lane studied at Cornell, the Ringling Art school at Sara sota, Florida, the Art Students' league of New York, and Louisi ana State University. Several years ago he was one of 10 stu dents selected out of 1,000 from all parts of the United States to win a scholarship to the Art Stu dents' league of New York. These scholarships are awarded on the basis of competitive merit of paintings. " attend college this vear and other Drosnective studpnts -wlin desire to begin or to continue ins staff wiU make their appeai their collecre studies at homp. R. M. Grumman, director of Complete plans with informa- the extension bureau, and Miss tlon aDout sucn things as obtam- Mary L. Cobb, in charge of the m2 torches will be published to- bureau of correspondence in- morrow. The University club is struction, will represent the Uni- attending to the details. "cSE- . WOMEN STUDENTS Group and individual confer- mA . Trr 1TT ;Tril ences with students, will beheld 11) fllAIlL tllAnuJ from 4 to 6 o'clock in the after noon and from 7:30 to 9 :30 p. m. m Central high school. Dr. E. h. Garinger, principal of the Will Revise Constitution high school, is co-operating with University Officials in making the local arrangements for these educational guidance interviews. The extension division plans IN ORGANIZATION To Permit Changes In Elections At a meeting of the Woman's to hbld similar guidance confer- association yesterday afternoon ences in several sections of the T was unanimously aecioea inai state this year, the Charlotte a cnanse e maae m tne organi meeting being the first of this zation's constitution to the effect series. tnat town girls be permitted to elect, their own representative to "Ram-Tender" For '36 To Be Elected Tonight! University Club to Decide Who Shall Escort Rameses Members of the University club in their meeting at 7 o' clock tonight in Graham Memo rial .will elect a student to the important position of ram-tender for the football season of 1936. The winning candidate will lead Carolina's venerable mascot, Rameses, in his first campus appearance tomorrow night at the Tennessee game pep rally. Members of the club who would like to nominate students for this position are asked to bring their candidates to the meeting in order that all club members may know the nomi nees on which they will vote. the council. Erika Zimmermann was se lected by this group as their representative for the year. In this office, she automatically be comes chairman of the advisory committee, which acts as go-be tween of the students and the council, handling probations and smaller projects. Shack President By another change in the con stitution, the Spencer hall resi dents will be the only ones to vote in the election of the Shack president, who is also represent ative to the council. This elec tion will be held in the spring with the general Woman's asso ciation election of officers. Plans It was also announced that Frances Faust will be the coun Continued on last page) j s .1 i ; i 4 1 il VtlVI MIAAM w Contimed on last page)

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