J .".'"'' 1 - : 1 9 flee via n VOLUME XLV EU2ISISS raOSZ 415 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1936 . nrrorixL re on 4is i NUMBER 24 M2W PLEDGE SET WILL BE INVITED BY FRATERNIT Ramsel-Dgmsel Leg Pulling 14 Names Of Rushees Due At Student Union Late Tomorrow After a week and a half of -playing host to new men the campus fraternities will extend to approximately 225 of these visitors tomorrow afternoon be tween 2 and 6 o'clock in Graham Hemorial the invitation to join them. Henry Clark, president of the Interfraternity council urges "that all fraternities turn in to Tete Ivey at Graham Memorial a. card for each rushee that is "to be invited to join as soon as possible after the close of rush ing tonight. Blank Cards Blank cards for this purpose may be obtained from Ed Green at the Phi Kappa Sigma house; Clark also requests that with these cards a typewritten sheet containing the names and ad dresses of all boys asked to join he turned in. Clark explains . that these cards will be arranged alpha betically and postal cards will be mailed out the following day no tifying the boys to the effect that they have been invited to pledge. In case a person who expects an invitation does not receive one and has a reasonable right tb expect it, Clark urges that he consult a master bulletin in Pete Ivey's office tomorrow between 1 and 2 o'clock. , r4 -.: X-' s f 111 4, vs. 1 PHILOSOPHY CLUB ELECKOFFICERS Woodhouse Makes Talk On Political Issue Claiborn "Benny" Carr, former editor of the Daily Tar Heel, is shown putting his best foot forward as the late Ross, Negro trainer, asks, "Who stole Rameses?" Carr is now preparing to steal the Fordham ram in conjunction with Carolina's meeting with N. Y. U. next Saturday. Harvard will also play. ASU PUSHES BILL FAVORING COEDS Trustee Committee To Be Given Petition Dixon Hits AG New Deal In Memorial Mall Speech k A - r n i- i . memories or Rameses isianaDDinQ Called Up By Letter From Carr Fnrmpr "Eilifnr nf fh Tlnilv Tar-l Heel Tells of Plans N. Y. U. Game for Pete Ivey received a card in his usual morning's mail yester day that will again bring into prominence the story of the kid napping of Rameses III and Benny Carr. Only seniors will remember the occasion of this hoax when on the morning of Friday, No vember 17, 1933, at 2 a. m. the entire campus was alarmed by the ringing of the South build ing bell and the announcement by Benny Carr that Rameses had been snatched by Duke stu dents. Havoc An assembly of about 400 mere, Long Island, is again active in the ram market. In the card which he wrote to Ivey he discloses the negotiations in which he is engaged. Carr is conferring with Fordham offi cials in an attempt to borrow the Fordham ram with which to encourage the Tar Heels when they meet N. Y. U. in the Yan kee stadium in New York this Saturday. Carr, editor of the Daily Tar Heel in 1933-34, suggests also that the band rehearse "Dixie" before coming north. Since the game is to be played in the "Yankee" stadium, "Dixie" he believes, will be an appropriate number. Foreign Films Professor E. J. Woodhouse of the department of political sci ence addressed the first meeting of the Undergraduate Philoso phy club Tuesday night on "The Political-Philosophical Issues of the 1936 Presidential Cam paign." Preceding, the address, Frank Wells was nominated and elect ed president of the club and Miss Sue Sandlin was nominated and elected secretary. Both candi dates gained their offices with out opposition. Personalities Professor Woodhouse in his address touched on the various phases of politics and compared the more outstanding personali ties in the field. Warning his listeners that they were going to hear a biased opinion, the speaker outlined his ideas and beliefs on the present situation. "I believe," he stated, "'that the political philosophy the man holds will be the deter mining factor in the present campaign. . . . Party platforms mean very little, though they should mean more. We have 48 parties in this country, one in each state. How can they possi bly agree' on any platform or group of compromises ?" Mr. Woodhouse gave the mem bers of the club a number of excellent criteria for judging public figures, and the meeting closed after a brief business ses :sion. . Wilson Is Lecturer loyal Carolina men were worked into a boilin? rase bv Carr's ex- Mr. E. Carrington Smith has hortations. About half of this agreed to show the foreign pic number invaded the Duke cam- tures f or the different language pus and wreaked havoc in gen- departments, according to a eral. On the following evening statement made oy ur. w. r. Duke repaid the compliment and Friederich of the German de- invaded Chapel Hill in strong partment force. Instead of the midnight After the battle that had shows, which Mr. Smith has de- waxed heavy on both campuses cided not to use, the foreign film the truth came out. The entire will be shown with a regular story of the kidnapping was pure picture thus making a double fiction. Rameses III was still ieature win De snown at tne reg At a meeting of the executive committee of the Board of Trus tees in Raleigh Monday morn ing, the American Student union will present a petition askinsr the admittance of University employees' daughters into the freshman and sophomore classes of the University. Petition The petition to be considered by the committee is one signed last spring, by all but three pro fessors of the faculty. If the committee approves, the petition will be brought before the Board of Trustees at their next meet ing. Jack Frink, president of the A. S. U., made arrangements for this action after an interview with John Sprunt Hill, member j of the Board of Trustees, yester day morning. The union voted at a meeting last night to pre sent the faculty petition to the committee Monday in the hope that the committee will approve its presentation to the board meeting. Pass Books Proceeding to other business, the union appointed a committee composed of Jack Frink, Tommy Meder, and Mary Lindsay to in vestigate the exchange of ath- etic pass books between Duke and the University. The open forum for students on party platforms, sponsored by both the A. S. U. and the Phi assembly, will be held tentative ly Tuesday night, October 27, at 8:30. Milton Yudell, chairman of the committee arranging the forum, called a meeting tomor row afternoon at 5 o'clock of both the Phi and A. S. U. com mittees in Graham Memorial's north lounge. Power Plant Blaze Causes Disruption Of Current Supply New Two Million-Gallon Basin To Alleviate Strain On Old Plant Jeffersonian Democrat Blasts Policies Of Roosevelt Group GPU Pls Host "The New Deal is an illegiti mate child; I disown it," barked Thomas Dixon last night in Me morial hall in the fieriest politi cal speech the Carolina Political union has given the campus this fall. Citing the Roosevelt adminis- safe on the farm where he was ular afternoon and night hours always kept. Benny, now living, in Wood- Action a-plenty was seen at the University power plant Tuesday afternoon when the main generator caught fire and ( burned for five minutes, until ! fireman Charles Maynor and tration for a violation of the f ed- engineerJ.M.Pendergrass sub- erai constitution and for an aiarming tendency toward so- guisners. cialism and communism thp Jpf- Supervising engineer H. E. fersonian Democrat declared Thompson hazarded the opinion that at the coming presidential tnat insulation, which had election, America "will be at the broken down because of heat and cross roads." .1 j it ii i oia age, was me cause oi tnei Crisis mi- , , . , Dixon, a vigorous 72-year-old the coils have burned out, and natiye North CaroIini it will take at least a few days tumed to politica, w put uib Kenerawr DaCK in con-Uj faU for the first time in 5 union. i . , .... yeaxa, ueuause lie Levis we are During that time, power for jn a crisis." 1, TT:.,-:.t.. i v. i tt:ii I i, rT u L With mingled humor and pa will be taken care of by the Ui v iA , . ' -r. . . L ... , tuua ue siuatterea me present r r ' I Art mi Til strati nn nnmprriTiiilv standby agreement. Electri-K . . . . a cians started work immediately Dea, he cried to hi3 medium. r raTg. F, , OI , greir sized audience. Debt Instead of economy we have billions piled on billions. Our national debt has risen 13 bil lion." Democracy stands for states' ti rr Trf a TTio Mow Tnol of o n a fctuaentS AO Attend Bar f0r the destruction of states Meeting In Raleigh rights. tor to get at the burned out coils which will have to be replaced. HOLIDAY PLANNED FOR LAW SCHOOL Students of the law school will "Democracy stands for sim- nlinfir in frnvorTiTTionf T"Vio "Moixr be given a holiday tomorrow, i. , . , -, . . , : , ' Deal stands for the multiplies- beginning at 9 :30, in order that faculty and students may attend the annual meeting of the North Pi Beta Phi Issues Bids To Eight Girls Pledge Dance to be Held October 23 at Carolina Inn 1 Plans Being Drawn For New Reservoir By Local Engineers - Faulty Generator Insulation Be lieved to be Cause of Tuesday's Mishap Dr. H. V. Wilson of the zoolo- :gy department gave the Dohme lecture at Johns Hopkins Uni This will permit students to see the picture without spending his next morning's "eight-thirty" m bed. The former plans of putting the University equipment to use have not materialized. Jew Directory The 1936-37 directory of stu dents and faculty members will be issued by the Y. M. C. A. next Plans are being drawn up by week. it was announced by Sec- Consolidated Service plant for a retary Harry Comer yesterday, new reservoir which' will hold A corrected list of all admin 2,000,000 gallons of water to re- istrative and clerical staffs of place the old one which held on ly 250,000 gallons to alleviate the strain now nlaced ou the present water storage plant. the University as of the first of this month will be included in the directory. j. c. Little, assistant of.H. e. House And Saunders Thompson, supervising engineer of power and water estimated yesterday that if the 12 inch wa- Plan Speaking Tour Pi Beta Phi sorority admitted eight pledges in ceremonies held Tuesday night. Girls re ceiving bids were Alice Cheshire, Raleigh; Lyal Boice, Bocky Mount; Eloise Broughton, Hert ford; Phyllis Hawthorne, Scars- dale, N. Y. ; Anne Turner Knight, Chapel Hill; Garnelle Raney, Salisbury; Margaret Sears, High Point; and Elizabeth Taylor, Warrenton. St. Mary's, Coker College, Wellesley, and Salem College are represented by the new pledges. ' The annual pledge dance will be held at the Carolina Inn on Friday, October 23. It will be preceded by a banquet, also at the Inn. Tempe Yarborough, who was pledged last spring; Nan Tin- sley, transfer from Randolph Macon Womens college, and Mary Elizabeth King, transfer from the University of Chatta nooga, will be presented with the new pledges at that time. tion of everything. Democracy stands for a gov- oTTiTTtonf vF law 'I'ha "NJonr Tloal Carolina State Bar, Incorporat- . , - . stands for a government of men. The principal speakers of the dnTn Thp Ne Dpal stand, for i i n i i i meeting wmcn me law stuaenis slavery, he asserted. win De ame to near are xne ion. r - rreaencK n. ouncnnem, presi- He conceded the New Deal dent of the American Bar asso-i n ti, -d ciation, Minneapolis, Minn., and he said aias adopted at least r uoi. u. k. mcuuire, general one lank of the Democratic counsel to the comptroller gen- platform of i932he did give eral, Washington. ns morft ahnndant lifft' of linnor. I X The North Carolinians who 1 (Continued en last page) will STiealc are fJnvemnr .T. C: B. Ehringhaus, the Hon. Thos. J. Friendship Council Harkins, of Asheville, Judge J. Plans To Entertain Will Pless of Marion, B.S. Worn- For New Students ble of Winston-Salem. Judge L. R. Varser of Lumberton, and Event to be Held in Lounge of Charles G. Rose of Fayetteville. Graham Memorial rru 4.; u freshmen and new coeds will j.iic iuccuug id uc yicaiucu i .... . . ... .Inn vp n "nnncp tr Hytrin ThPiT sn. over hy Julius U. smith oi Greensboro, the president of the c,ial life !.n th? p6"?? Mo Dean R. B. House and J. ter main which leads from Uni- Maryon Saunders, alumni secre- versitv lake to the filter house tary, will make a three day were to break that Chapel Hill speaking tour of alumni, meet- would have only enough water ings in Atlanta, Birmingham, to last for one day. and New Orleans. It was estimated that 150 gal- Alumni of these three cities Ions of water per person is used are making extensive plans for each day here. University lake meetings to beheld on October contains approximately 680.000,- 22, 23, 24 respectively. The 000 gallons of water. If there meeting in New Orleans will be were no more rain the supply held on the evening after the would last a year. ' Tulane-North Carolina game Incorporated Bar. New Stacks A new floor of book stacks will be added to the five floors already in use in the University library, was the announcement made yesterday by.R. B. Downs, librarian. - According to Downs, there is room for four more floors, the new one being the sixth. The contract has already been let and the floor is due November 15. Program Announced For Toms, Recital John E. Toms, of the school of music, announces his program for the-song recital In Hill Music hall tonight at 8:30, as follows: "Somni Dei.' Handel-Bibb; "Non Piu," Stornellata Mari nara," Cimara; "E se giorno tornasse," Respighi; "In Mezo al Mar," Sadero; "Nel," "les Roses d'Ispahan," Faure; "Phi- dyle," Duparc; "Mandoline," Faure; "Auf dem Kirchhoffe," Es traumte mir," "Ach! wende diese Blick," "Meine Liebe ist grun," Brahms; "O, Thou Bil lowy Harvest Field," Rachman inoff; "Blue Are Her Eyes," Watts; "Thy Dark Eyes to Mine," "The Lament of Ian the Proud," Griffes. This program is the first in a series of faculty concerts to be presented during the year. - day evening at the special meet ing for all new students which will be held in the lounge room of Graham Memorial. The so cial is under the direction of the Freshmen Friendship council and is being given to " promote friendship arid social life in col lege. Speeches Dean R. B. House will speak in connection with social life from the faculty viewpoint, while. Fred Weaver and Ramsay Potts will represent the stu dents' side of the question. There will be a musical program after the talks. After the above program the guests will be given free use of the game room. This will be fol lowed by refreshments 6erved by the fair sex who attend the social. The new coeds and freshmen are urged to attend whether invited or not, as some names may "have been over looked. . i 1 versity last Monday.