wttl i ill r r i) v VOLUME XLV. BUSINESS PHONE 43 $6 CHAPEL HILL, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1937 EDITORIAL raoXE 4H1 NUMBER 85 YW To-Geletoate ' 'First jMMyersary Mrs. Milner Will Speak r n;!,. To Groun Tonisrht Library Display At Banquet Shows Volumes Last Tickets Today Of 14th Century By Delette Ruffin The celebration of the first an niversary of the Y. W. C. A. will be held in the Graham Memorial banquet hall tonight at 6 o'clock. Yellowed Book of Gutenbursr Apprentice Is One of Main Features of Exhibition "Y" President if :, , .fist 7! i . V i-, 1.' l A yellowed romantic-looking Mary Lillian Speck, who is in old book printed in Mainz in charge of the banquet, is respon- j sible for the program. LaRochelle to Decorate Virginia la Kocneiie is m charge of the decoration com- 1476 by Peter Schoeffer, one of the best early German printers and an apprentice of John Gut enberg, inventor of printing, is jnittee, and working with her are a part of the display of 14th cen Mary Elizabeth King, Marion tury books on exhibition in the Taylor, Alice Elam, Peggy library foyer. Johnston, and JP oily roilock. The chairman of the menu committee is Lillian Hughes. The largest gathering of wom en students'this year is expected at the banquet. Over 100 stu- Another was printed in Paris in 1472 by Friedburger, Gering and Krantz, the first printers in France. Still another was print ed in Rome in 1472 by Conrad Sweynheym and Arnold Pan- I no WIT Thrt f-i-w.et'T- Tmnf Awn i-n Ifnlw expected to attend. The celebra-r""1 ou AWV' tion is not limited to members of An important leature ot the the Y. W. C. A. only; other worn- dlsPlay is Ralph Higden's "Poly en interested in coming mav do chronicon," printed by Wynkyn - . I 1 TTT 1 V 1 - JAP" TTT ae worae in juonaon, 4yo. wyn kyn de Worde was the foreman for William Caxton, first Eng lish printer, and took over the press after Caxton's death. This i is the only example1 of 15th cen tury English printing in the University library. The books on display are from the collection of fifteenth cen tury books from the Hanes foun dation for the study of the ori gin and development of the book. S0, Milner Speaks Mrs. Clyde A. Milner, person nel director at Guilford college, will make the principal address of the evening. Mrs. Milner was a leader of the all-southern Y. M.- Y. W. C. A. conference held at Blue Ridge this summer. Jane Ross, president of the Alpha Kappa Gamma, the organization , instrumental - in founding the Y. W. C. A. last winter, will make a short, talk. A survey of the year's work of the "Y" will be given by Elva Ann Ranson. The guests for the evening will be Mrs. Milner; Ruth Gor mon, president of the Y. W. C. A. at W. C: U. N. C; and Edith Snooks, president of the Duke Mamie Rose McGinnis, second president of the Y. W. C. un der whose - leadership will be M. celebrated today the first anni versary of the "Y." UNC Grading To Be Argued Students, Instructors Will Meet Today Files Of Campus Daily Adequately Prove Old Adage Issue of 12 Years Past Carries Same Stories Now Being Run; Nothing's New Students T,o Play Hosts To Chemists Sere Next Spring ASUToPlan Labor Policy Open Forum Program To Be Discussed The American Student union will make concluding plans for collecting all coed petitions and presenting them to the board of trustees when the members meet tonight at 8 :30 in the Grail room of Graham Memorial. Also to be considered are the final figures secured in the inves tigation of labor conditions in local stores and eating houses. The union will probably formu late some policy of action to be taken in regard to this question, according to President v Tommy JVleder. Open Forum - Plans will be made concerning the open forum program of speakers to be held each week starting January 26. An attempt is being made to secure a Span ish speaker to inform the cam pus of the present crisis in Spain. All members are urged to attend and bring their completed oed petitions to the meeting. No Chapel Today The general assembly in Me morial hall will' not be held to day, so that the social science lasses may have'a special meet ing in 111 Murphy, according to Dean Spruill. Further announcements wil Banquet Tickets It is imperative that all girls planning to attend the Y. W. C. A. anniversary banquet . tonight get their tickets before 11 this morn ing, according to the chair man, of the social commit tee. They may be obtained in the "Y" lobby or from Mary Lillian Speck in Spen cer hall. Dr. M. R. Trabue, head of the department of education, will meet with the student committee on education this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Grail room of Gra ham Memorial to discuss tHe University grading system. 5 All interested students and professors are invited to attend. : Members of the faculty who have met with the student coni mittee on education in the past are : Dean F. F. Bradshaw, Phil lips Russell, and E. J. Wood house. Under the auspices of Dr. A. W. Hobbs, the student group has also met "frequently with the University deans. Members of the student com mittee on education are: Niles By Raymond Lowery Upon discovering a battered old issue of the Daily Tar Heel of about 12 years ago, the old adage everything's been done before" seemed to quite accurately apply to contemporary campus news stories in coihparison with for mer ones. The order of the Grail had an nounced its- winter quarter dances and members were hop ing for a large crowd of out of town belles to insure an adequate number of girls. Tony Sarg Marionettes were all set to per form . almost precisely like the performance to be given here next week. And a story about the recent violin concert by America's greatest living violin ist was probably the leading story. , Further proving our old prov erb, it appeared that Professor Koch had returned again from his annual visit to New York and had given his ideas on plays he had reported seeing. The Caro lina Playmakers were contem- (Conttnued on page three) Student-Faculty Day Votes Cast Campus Leaders Discuss Housing Program For Session For King, Queen Detailg Announced Committee Receiving Nomina tions for Queen; Election February 1-3 Campus Cabinet members last night heard plans for the Uni versity's spring reception of the BALLOTS! Voters are reminded that ballots for the election of the queen of Student-Faculty day are on the back page of this issue. Sarg To Present Marionette Show "Mikado" Tonight Scenes from Mark Twain, Sin bad, and Faust To Be Given at 3:30 This Afternoon What historians call one of the oldest forms of theater , enter tainment will be presented bv V Bond, Scott Hunter; Eddie Kahn, Tony Sarg and his marionettes Bob Magill, Nancy iSchallert, at 3:30 this afternoon and at Stuart Rabb, Julia Folsom, Don 18:30 tonight in the Playmaker Wetherbee, Newton Craig, Reed I theater. Sarratt. A.I.E.E. The marionette theater start ed centuries ago when a doll merchant jointed his dolls so they might act , more natural. For centuries this form of dra matic entertainment has flonr- The Duke chapter of the American Institute of Electrical chapter in Phillips hall last night mhf 0'd orid' yher in their regular quarterly joint meeting. Spalding States Attitude Of Audience To Musicians s-- .eading Violinist Explains That Artist Must Play "Danger ously" to Hold Interest The element of danger or the unexpected is the difference be tween canned music and a con cert performance, to paraphrase Albert Spalding's remark follow ing his concert in Memorial hall Monday night. ' America's .leading violinist continued with an ancedote about a lion tamer, and an Eng lishman who went to every per formance of the circus. When the tamer asked him about his interest, the Englishman replied that he was waiting for the time when the lions would "eat the tamer." Tension According tov Spalding, al though the audience may not realize it except subconsiously, and probably hopes nothing will happen to spoil the concert, it develops a tensness expecting something to, happen. So if an artist really expects to hold an audience, he must put in the background carefully, technical playing and play phonograph record one knows highly trained actors devote their lives to the profession. Mr. Sarg first became inter ested in puppets nearly 20 years ago. His marionettes are oper ated entirely by wires and string's from above.- As many as nine strings are used to manipu late each marionette. Heads- eyes, legs, arms, hands, feet and Uld ll" um "e v" bodies can be manipulated. penecuy as pussiuie ana meie At'th afternnnn t.pHWto is no element of the unexpected, j scenes from Mark Twain, Sin Regarding the incident which had R. Wl.w all!f QTlr1 tooK piace aurmg ms concer n . w0I1derland will be No reports on the early bal- American Chemical society and" lots for the queen of Student- immediately allied its student Faculty day are available as yet, body interests with those of the according to Newton Craig, alumni and the administration chairman of the sub-committee in playing host to the "biggest on voting. convention ever to come to Vptes will be collected on Sat- North Carolina." . urday of this week, and the re- The 30-odd student leaders, suits will appear in the January representing every activity and 26 issue of the Daily Tar Heel, organization on the campus, ar- he said. ranged student details, with rep resentatives of the administra- tion, for entertaining and hous ing the 2,000 society delegates who will come to Chapel Hill from all parts of the world dur ing the spring holidays. Dormitory Residents Dormitory residents will be asked to store their clothes and Blank ballots will be run in I open valuables in their trunks the Daily Tar Heel for the rest and in one of their room closets, of the week, and all voters are in the case of the two-closet dor urged to turn in their choices mitories, so that that closet can as soon as possime. j oe locKea ior tne vacation pe- Collection boxes have been od. placed in each of the dormi-l The visiting delegates will be tories, and in Graham Memorial given "hotel service" iirthe dor- and the Y. M. C.A. mitories with bell boys and in- Voters 'are reminded thatlformation desks. Departing stu- there are three blank spaces for dents als be asked to leave the choice of the queen. Either a blanket and a pillow, which one or all may be filled in with items the University will have the voter's selection. When the laundered at the close of the con- election results are announced vention. No student's linen will pictures of the 10 coeds receiv- ne needed. ing the most votes will appear I ' Reimbursement in the Daily Tar Heel. I For the possible inconvenience This week's balloting for the! of close packing in the one closet queen is a nominating vote. The I by the two room-mates, the Uni- 10 girls receiving the most votes I versity will reimburse each dor- will compete in a final deciding Imitory resident $1. Complete election for the honor of the care of the closeted property will queenship, and the positions of two ladies-in-waiting. The king, who must be a mem-1 ber of the faculty, and the court j jester, to be chosen from among the men in the student body, will 1 be elected from the results of this week's voting. Movies Of Holy Land To Be Shown Here given. JLonight a puppet version of the "Mikado" by Gilbert and Sullivan will be given. Freddy Johnson's Band To Furnish Coed Hop Music here, Spalding said that he did not mind it and that he did not think his audience minded. Accident During the quick firey, em otional "Tarentelle," of Szy manowski, Spalding's bow acci dentally hit the bridge of his violm. His accomnanist stop ped instantly. The Guarnerius violin, insured for $30,000, leap- Regular Quarterly Dance To Be ed dangerously in the air, and Held Saturday Night in the audience leaned forward. I Bynum Gym Before the maioritv of the spectators could discover just The winter quarter coed dance what had happened, Spalding wiU be held Saturday in Bynum had alreadv tuned his violin, gym from 9 to 12 p. m. Freddie nnintprf n flip cnro wish- Johnson and his band will fur- ed the accompanist to start nish the music. with, and resumed the "Taren- ine attair win oe iormai, ana teUe." I there will be one escort, 110 Following the concert, Spald- break. The Woman's council will ing and his accompanist. Andre be given corsages Benoist. were entertained bv the Tickets will go on sale this af t- membefs of Phi Mu Alpha at ernoon in the Woman's associa- the home of Mrs. A. C. Burn- uwa room in wanam xwiuvxkxi, ham, who is a friend of both Mr. and in Spencer hall from 2 to 6 (Continued en last page) Dean To Talk On Education Faculty Club To Hear Bradshaw Tonight Dean Francis F. Bradshaw will speak tonight at 8 o'clock in Local Churches to Sponsor Musi- the lounge of the graduate club cal Travelog Tomorrow A musical travelogue, "Chris tian Palestine," will be presented by Estephanious Antonius Hab- boosh, a native Galilean shep herd, tonight at 8 o'clock in Hill ! Music hall. . at the first winter quarter meet ing of the Faculty Philosophy of Science club. His subject will be the conflict between those who sponsor education for self-expression and those who sponsor education for discipline. The nroffram is beino- snon- 150111 smes 01 xne connicx win sored by the Baptist and Meth- be outlined and the views of such odist churches of Chapel Hill.! schotols as the University of Chi- which leans toward educa- Madame Hahhoosh will assist lsv the lecturer in costumes and in tion for disdP n be Pre the presentation of "The Lost sented- Coin." I A11 members of the faculty Mr. Habboosh will show sev- are invited to attend this ad- . Il t A 1 1 II 1 eral thousand feet of natural aress. ana xane part m tne ais- rnn-r mnti'nn nirtnrA film of iCUSSlOn. scenes in the Holy Land. President To Speak President Roosevelt's sec ond inaugural address will be amplified in the Graham Memorial lounge at noon to day. The plans for recep tion of the broadcast are being made under the spon sorship of the C. P. U. French Club The French club will hold its first meeting of the winter quar ter tonight at 7:15 in the parish house of the Episcopal church. The purpose of the club is to further interest in spoken French and the program will consist of conversation carried on in that language. All persons interested in spoken French are be made in the classes. j "dangerously." Listening to a and Mrs. SDaldin?. o'clock. invited to attend. ' -

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