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Library 0f UUG Chapel Hill, ft. 0. vf VOLUME XLV EDITORIAL PHONE 4SS1 CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1937 Bxrsnizss phosb $ NUMBER 127 Jwe Will AddbressK ml(ginidl lorhysicists mil Wmfcv split Munitions Investigator To Be Sponsored By CPU "Peace" Is Subject Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, prominent con gressman and advocate of peace, will address the student body to morrow night at 8:30 in Me morial hall on "Preparedness for Peace" under the sponsorship of the Carolina Political Unions i Senator wye, a ; progressive Republican and chairman' of thi recent senate investigation of the munitions industry, will be entertained at a banquet of C P; U. members immediately preced ing his address. ' ' Series :' This address will be the first in a series of three to be pre sented within the next several days by the unions-Senator Rush D. Holt will speak Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock on a coast-to-coast,, hook-up in reply to Postmaster General Farley's speech; and ex-governor Eugene Talmadge of Georgia will speak Wednesday. r : Senator Nye was born at Hor tonville, Wisconsin in 1892 and Nobel winner To Speak Medical Pictures Winter Grades Winter quarter grades will be given out in the side room of the "Y" building, first floor, beginning at noon today. Any incomplete grade slips have been caused by the failure of professors to make final reports. They may be gotten from the in dividual professors. At Duke Tonight Harold C. Urey, Nobel prize winner and professor at Colum bia university will r address the Duke-Carolina joint physics col loquium tomorrow night at 8:00 in room 114 of the Duke univer sity physics building on "Iso topes" iroiessor Urey is known to scientists all over the world as the discoverer of heavy hydro gen and heavy water, for which he received the Nobel prize in 1934. At present he is attempt ing . to separate the, isotopes or different kinds of atoms which are contained in carbon, nitro gen, and oxygen Results - mi ' i ne experiments - are now To Be Presented At Venable Hall Alpha Epsilon Delta To Show Variety of Subjects Tonight In Venable Hall Potts, SmitlvBerg Head Paiiy Ticket Builders File Bids On Gym Construction To Begin - A J- A 21 f AUUUl April J. meeting with partial success al- Th Wd f. it cwin,, though the yields of the different of the new gymnasium and r"1"0 -f"? - v.,- -f Tonight in room 206 Venable hall at 8 o'clock, medical movies will be shown to both medical hd premedical students. The slides for the showing to night were ob tained by the I Alpha Epsilon Delta frater nity under the leadership of their president, Joe Patterson. Interest in the pictures will center around ; ' Political yews - From now until time for elections the Daily Tar Heel will strive to bring to the campus all the information obtainable about candidates for office, selected by poli tical parties or running in dependently. : Political reporters have been offered all parties for regular news stories. The Daily Tar Heel's pur pose is to stimulate campus interest in better student government and in the pro cess of electing campus leaders for that govern ment. . . swimming pool were filed March ure 7 ? .? " v A I J 9 with the state W. P. A. off ice ? colleagues. is inviteu to acumu. m jrniiiips nan, accoramg xo vjiicuusw auu oiuiogisuj wm ue vuxic vaj.xui.jr A duujcvuj . . Stanley H. Wright, state admin- able to incorporate these heavy pertaining to medicine will be &tUQeilt-r aCUlty istrator of the W. P. A. : atoms m molecules and to ob- covered. Subjects included will ; IVlr. Wright and C. W. Mengle, serve the effect of these substitu- be, "The Values of the Heart in chief engineer, are holding a tions on the properties of these Action". "Plastic Surgery," and nf the molecules. It will be nossible. f or 1 "Methods of Blood . Trans- base bids, alternates, and provi- example, to give foods contain-(fusion.' sions of the bids. They expect to ing heavy carbon to experimen- To Sip Tea Again Graham Memorial Sponsors Sec ond Gathering Tuesday graduated from the Wittenberg f ? contracts for construction, tal animals and to find out where Monogram Clubmen in the heating, and plumbing near future. Construction on the project is expected to begin before April 1. 1 Bids the food materials containing heavy carbon go when they are digested and enter the blood stream. To Meet At Swain The second student-faculty tea sponsored by Graham Me morial, will be held next Tues- . Dr. Urey is at present on sab- high school in Wisconsin in 1911. His career began when he be came the publisher of "The Re--view," in Hortonville in 1911. Tn 1Q1K Tia ViPpnmA manatrpr anil editor of the "Daily Plain Deal- . 1 ne Dase Dms Ior ine COIlstruc' batical leave from Columbia and pp" m ( rMtnn nw H'n Inwinor wan uc tue uuivcisiw ui .Vila Ivo Tiraa witVi i-Tntx "Fifta HTninoa Const. Co. $479,600; J. A. Jones North Carolina until June work- Register and Leader" for a few 'Z Ta t ing on the second edition of his take place in Swain hall at 8 ? months and then moved to North iu ana Ur. A. m. KuarK's DOOK, LVwv , l r.w j CO. S457,UU: JNOrtn-last UOnst. "Atoms. Molecules, and Quanta " co. tjjio,iuu; vvm. jiviuixiieaui ; x xa OJt,.w v v.v.. acquaintance. Const. Co. $458,800: G. W. Kane A tc r.. wii. mS will be Judge iU. ii.. Kives oi nrty,af rrt ciqr nnn PnHw tuiiuu uiuup ii3 Greensboro, a member of the W snuu)uu, -- '" I Tk.T FT f !? I ' T 1 ? J. J. Mc- iicw ltien o uiiice University athletic councu. : iVC .t"wawra iiwi vwpa "7 , r, Qv Coaches, captains and .others i DOin "PS necessary burg Pioneer." He settled in Cooperstown, N. D., in 1919 and became the editor and manager of the "Griggs County Sentinel and Courier." -In November 1925 he was ap (Contvnued on last page) Sam McPherson And His Band day afternoon from 4 to 5 p. m., To Entertain Group according to an announcement bv Pete Ivev vesterdav. Swing music, provided by Sam , . , McPherson and orchestra, wiU xc r """r, " 1,1 u" be a feature of tonight's Mono- served m the main lounge of gram club meeting, which will anam Memorial to students anu iacuiiy raeraoers, wno wm ndulge in conversation and in general strengthen the ties of nee. ." Cooperation Shakelford $462,720; Devitt & Co. $462,550; Angle, Inc. $469,440; Gregory $468,450; and Thompson $473,800. c- W- Willingham Is j. m. man Of Engineers - The local chapter of "brief remarks." function. The board of directors of Gra- tne I Varsi'tw axrarda fnr. TXTintpr TVie w nlumbinff bids were American Institute of Electrical Lnvf will v,o flwJham Memorial has arranged the J. L. Powers $22,785; Rowe- Engineers met in Phillips hall ers will be given all freshmen pudget of their appropriation al- Coward, Inc. $22,593;- Bagwell Tuesday night and elected as of- who have made numerals dur Plumbing & Heating Co. $25,- ficers for next year B. J. Willing- mg the fall and winter' quar- 538; Biemann & Rowell $23,- ham, chairman; H. M. Sparger, ters. This is the first time that Piaf Pomia poeAVfll. 900 ; Albemarle Plumbing & vice-cnairman ; b. i. nawneia, freshmen have been given sweat- v vumpuo a aow TTni-xn (torr 9ft7 . w M WiV- sec.retarv ; . E. G. Willine-ham. a ucauiiK , i . -o rf , - o ' i vx k RabbiToLead Ancient Rites lowed by the University to in clude a series of these teas which shall be held at intervals of two weeks for the remainder of the quarter. n m -W-fc TT 1 1 APrVlf'A in KA HP n . am orrt j ni.AAlU.An.n.A.. TiT T1 W Wi1r gms ts o. a iu 1C71C ' New business will also be tak- Rabbi Bernard Zeiger, direc- Hill Plumbing & Heating $23,- ler, faculty adviser. en up during the meeting'and tor of the local Hillel foundation, 500. These officers assumed duties the athletes and their guests yesterday announced that the The base bids for installation immediatelft replacing seniors wiU culminate the evening with first Jewish Passover service to of heating were Kowe-uqwara, u a McCall, F. W. Campbell, refreshments OHVOri ATI Viia nnwinnn mill Inc. $82,391 ; Bagwell Plumbmg TnSpTrti Starr, and J. A. Marsh. TiPld i ni ;i m & Heating $84,000; Reliance winlcler was reelected to the of- Women u uinuam .txciiivj. i vu - o I March26. Engr. Co. $7b,dZ4; Niemann : fice 0f adviser. Davis WiU Read Broadway Play ! v.. rri. T Tir:u "v... Acclaimed By Critics . A 4- 4-1. Tvii rr' ? RnwIl $83,830: and J. L. Pow uie service xvaoui zeiger ' will conduct the traditional "Se- ers $78,796. IZ Bradshaw To Lead Egypt. "The narrative," said the Rab bi yesterday, "is interspersed ith material in a lighter vein to produce a mood of joy." He -added that "the traditional Pass- "You Can't Take It With You," a new American comedy Meeting At WCUNC MMMMHM r ..." N. C. Conference For Democracy Will Begin On Friday Francis F. Bradshaw, Univer- sity dean of students, will pre- over of the Jew was observed by side at the opening of the North Jesus and is known in history as Carolina Conference for Democ- Best Examples of American the Last SunDer." racy, which will get under way Visitors r, tomorrow morning at the Wom- Among visitors expected: at en's college, in Greensboro. , the service will be President The conference will be opened nd Mrs. v Graham, Dean and by Superintendent Clyde Erwin Nominations for next year's The electrical engineers made officers of the -Woman's associa- plans for all Of the juniors and tion will be made at a meeting y moss iart ana George b. seniors to attend a" district of the association this afternoon Kaufman, will be read by Harry A. I. E. E. meeting in Auburn, at 5 o'clock in the banquet room Davis in the Playmaker theater Alabama on March 31.- of Graham Memorial. bunday evening at 8:30. Written by the authors of "Once in a Lifetime," "You Can't Take It With You" has been called by New York critics a Gargantuan absurdity" with hilariously preposterous antics problems imnosed bv and the rumble of friendly 'Fifty Books Of The Year ' On Exhibition At Library Bookmaking Selected By Graphic Arts Institute "The 50 Books of the Year," an exhibition of American book- Mrs. Bradshaw, Dean and Mrs. Other prominent speakers who making, seated fnd-Bhownby nnll onnoor Vicf nrtt fhft p-atheriner American Institute of urapnic 5?ri t . , , x - nr: xinwiflf -Rnintt dean of Arts is now on display m the sme jewisn sxuaems irom aie u iiw . - - T..i. .... i ' - nrnM's nnWnrra I pfirnHnra nf the University il" -uise wui also attend. l women, at wie wimcn o x6, Rahhi Mr. -R'.irton Fowler, headmaster brary foyer. hvi. . . 7 . tt'h ti nr;ivi?. I tvo fltirnnse of the 1936 ex- reservations for the service oi Tower mu w nmu- " ; ' - , wst be made through him at his ton, Delaware; Dr. A. M. Proc- hibition of the 50 books oTtne office m v vat tnr Duke university. year, is, as in former years, xo evpni. ah x,..J- tut. n,r T? Phillins. of the show 50 examples of American ally invited to participate in University' of North Carolina bookmaking, selected on merits me observance, which is ex- will present a summary oi tne oi xPnyx 7" I ' I ! j . Xm. wwrv a-m j-J nfl Kill . Pected to la3t approximately two entire conference on. Saturday - hours. cess with which the designer has met the editorial content and conditions laughter." Dealing with the mad nf nrnd notion activities of a middle class New Judges The v books eligible were those published between December 1, 1934 and December 1, 1935 and manufactured in the United York family, the play finds its authors in a genial, laugh-pro voking mood. Character Among tne -characters is a States or Canada. More than 500 mother who took up playwriting books were submitted xf or con- because someone left a type- sideration by publishers, print- writer in the house, and a grand ers and designers. The selections father who had himself declared were made by a jury composed legally dead in order to avoid of Lewis Mumford, critic and paying income tax. author, Milton Glick, of the Vik- The reading will be one in the ingr press, and Karl Kup, cura- series sponsored by the Carolina tor of the Spencer collection, Playmakers, and will be open to New York public library. the public. Ellis Quits Party On Failing To Get Joseph "Patterson Named Thousands Cheer Tuesday night the Univer-. sity party's 18man steeriitg" committee reversed an earlier decision to make Mar vin Allen its c a n d i date . f o r t h e p residency of the stu dent body and substi tuted in his place Ram say Douglas Potts, in a move which- hreatens to split the party. The week before examina- 10ns Dy a close vote 01 some thing like 8 to 7, the steering committee had . selected Track man Allen (Kappa Sigma) to head its slate; but in the re-consideration Wednesday night the supporters of Potts succeeded in giving him the party's support. , Allen's Qualifications Alleh'has Served this year as. president of the Monogram club, University dance committee, senior nonor council, track, Grail, vice president Athletic as sociation. He has worked two years on the Student council, his sophomore and junior years. As . t freshman, he won the cake race. Poits Qualifications High Besides being captain of the tennis squad, a national ranking racket-wielder, and star of the basketball team, Potts is a mem ber of the junior class honor council, board of directors Gra ham Memorial, dance committ- tee, Grail, Amphoterothen. Last year he was president of the sophomore class, on Phil Hammer's Honor committee, Yackety Yack, and winner of the Grail basketball scholarship award. In his first year he won the freshman cup for carrying off the highest scholarship rec ord for any first-year athlete. Party Might Split The fight between Potts and Allen has thrown the steering committee in two factions and threatens to split the party. This . impending break-up is accentuated by the party's policy to allqw the D. K. E.'s only one major candidate, although Frank McGlinn's fraternity; has three potentialities : Staff - nominee Mac Smith, for the Daily Tab Heel, Joe Patterson for the sen ior class presidency, and Staff nominee Haydon Clement for the Buccaneer. Smith For Tar Heel The steering conimittee has adopted. Smith as its candidate for the editorship of the Daily Tar Heel; and gave the senior class nomination to Randy Berg (S. A. E.) and the Buccaneer to Lawrence Hinkle (non-frat). As staff nominee, Clement must run for the editorship of the Buccaneer. Unconfirmed statements had it yesterday that the steering com mittee polticians were allowing only one major candidate from Continued on last page) morning.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 18, 1937, edition 1
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