TOVR
W o r Id
B$ Km Murphy
COUirt APFE0VE3
Vf&zhizzUm, Xlsy 2i Social
tfccerity legislation, intended to
protect worker against another
Ie?m?,ion, and to prorlde fcr
them in old ae emerged rktor
today from its encounter
vitb the United States Supreme
Court to give the Incumbent ad
ministration a dean rsreep fat ita
litigation with the higft tri-
The tribunal sustained prorU
&km of the federal measure pro
viding for unemployment insur
ance and old age pension and
then upheld tate unemployment
compensation law, designed to
supplement the federal act.
Court hfll opponent promptly
predicted that the Court' ap
proval of social security spelled
doom for the President' court
revision hill but administration
leader who favor Eoozevelt'
measure refused to admit pos
sible defeat.
The approved legislation will
affect ome 27,800,000 worker
and 2,700,000 employer who
will be taxed to provide the old
age benefit which etart In 1942
when the recipient reaches the
age of 65,
ROCKEFELLER DIES
'AT FLORIDA HOME
Ormond Beach, Fla., May 24
The founder of the world'
greatest "dollar dynasty," John
X), Rockefeller Sr., died Sunday
morning at 4:05 at hi Ormond
Beach winter residence "The
Casement" jut 26 month
uhort of hi cherfehed desire to
live a 100 years.
Dr. Harry L. Merryday,
Rockefeller physician, attribute
ed death to a hardening of the
heart muscles.
Though tKfi elder Rockefeller
rose from a $4.D0 a week clerk
to the master of a fortune est!-
mnioA hrh a t9jiAA.AAA.nnA.
ho died a comparatively ' 'poor
man." A family spokesman said
the eminent oil marketer left a
estate.
A special train was ready to-
clay to take Rockefeller's body
to his home In Pocantico Hills.
N. Y., where a simple private
junerai win uc neiu tomorrow.
THIRD SON BORN
TO LINDBERGHS
Cleveland, May 24 An
nouncement came today from
Miss Annie S. Cutter, aunt of
Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, to
the effect that a baby boy was
bom to tho Lindberghs corona
tion night, May 12.
New York, May 24 No report
has como from the Lindbergh's
English residence, Longbam,
HovanoaKs. Kent, out sources
Closo to the famed fliers family
nM foflnv 1W n hmr wn hnrn
u. t ,iv.' i, n.. in i-t.A
mot coronation OI MCOrgO 01
England.
Thwoh rnnnrU .rrt w1aIv
...w-a..
1 - i 1.... et
lion nas as yet oeen received.
CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE Almost new, 3
Hpccd English bicycle. In good
condition.
Call at 7 Vance
dormitory.
WANTED JUNE 1 Oil 15th:
Three-room furnished apart
ment or cottage for ono year.
Write llox 204.
FOR RENT Two room apart
ment. Apply No. 7, Village
Apartments after 7 p. m.
Spring Quarter Examimitioa Schedule
Kois: Ihe schedule belor gives the order of examinations
for esdes3S eocrses.
ExsTBTTralisss for csrrses Ei Ergraftrmg, fr.rirfrg: Engineer
ing Ilathfssatks, are scheduled in Phillips H2IL
Ej action cf the faculty, the tine cf bo examination may be
charged alter U has been fried in the schedcTe,
Ilonday, Hay SI at 2 o'clock
AH 9;S0 o'clock 5-ard 6-hosr classes and all 90 3-hcur
XL VT,F. classes. : - -
Xiosday, Ilay 31 at 9 o'clock
All Accounting Courses AH French 25 ia Saunders Hall
014- All Hygiene 3 sections as follows: Hygiene 3, sees,
l and 2 in Peabody sec 3 in Peabody 203, sec 4 in
Peabody 202, see 5 in Peabody 203, sec 6 in Peabody
031, Sec 7 in Peabody 123, sec 3 in Peabody 201, sees.
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 in Phillips 206, sees. 16, 17,
IB, 19 and 0) in Eingham 103, sees. 2a, 6a, 7a in N. W.
10L ;
Tuesday, June 1 at 2 o'clock
All 11 o'clock 3-hour T. Th. S. classes and all afternoon
3-honr M. W. F classes.
Tuesday, June 1 at 9 o'clock
AH 9:30 o'clock 3-hour T. Th. S. classes.
Wednesday, June 2 at o'clock
All 12 o'clock 5-and 6-hour classes and all 12 o'clock 3-
hour M. W. F, classes,
Wednesday, June 2 at 9 o'clock
All 11 o'clock 5-and 6-hour classes and all 11 o'clock
classes.
Thursday, June 3 at 9 o'clock
All 8:20 o'clock 5- and 6-hour classes and all 8 :30 3-hour
T, Th. S. classes.
Thursday, June 3 at 2 o'clock
All 12 o'clock 3-hour T. Th. S. classes.
Friday, June 4 at 9 o'clock
All 8:30 o'clock 3-hour M. W. F. classes.
Friday, June 4 at 2 o'clock
Ojen for all other examinations not specifically covered
in this schedule.
I
I Actors To Do
Original Plays
Last Bill Of Season To
Be Given Thursday
The Playmakers will present
five original one-act plays on
Thursday afternoon and night
a the final bill on their experi-
mental aerie. Harry Davis is
supervising the productions and
Frank Durham Is acting as gen-
eral manager.
"Courtship at Eight," by
Charlotte Wright; "The White
Doe," William Peery; and "By
Any Other Name," written by
?f ario.n Hartshorn, are three of
tne" P8 10 ven Ci Will
bc directed by the authors.
Directors
Manuel Korn'g' "Earth Tread
ing Stars" will be directed by
Samuel Hersch, and "From Sul
len Earth" by Frank Durham
under the direction of Bed
ford Thurman.
Mural Track
rv
litiiun xumuiiuvy
(Continued from page three)
(Aycock), Laney (Lewis), Foreman
CMPbI.)
Broad Jump Shore (Lambda Chi
Alpha), Dill (Ruffin), Spencer (A.
T. O.), Freudenheim (Graham)
Clark (Zeta Pei), Coughcnour (Sig
ma Nu), Dick (St. Authony), Joslin
(Sigma Nu).
Shot put Ray (Lewis), .Slagle
(Lewis), Budden (Aycock); Clark
(Zeta Psi), Ditt (Chi Phi), Powell
(Beta), Jetro (Lewis). Harkins
(Phi Thcta).
Javelin Maynard (Phi Delta The
ta), Sawyer (Ruffin), Stutt (Gra-
ham), Derrickson, (Magnum), Dick
lt. Antnonyj, uavis lueta ineta
Pi) Darden (Phi Gamma Delta),
Dincus Slagl (Lewis), Austin
(Grimes), Maffitt (Graham), Clark
(Zeta Psi), Taylor (D. K. E.) Fore-
. r., r,,v T--1,- Ttfttn
W" v.
Softball Teams
Vic For Titles
(Continued, from WQt three)
Zeta Psi will be shooting for its
SCCOnd consecutive
title having
taken tho basketball crown this
past winter. Sigma Nu after
many years of reaching the fi
nals only to be denied, will be
shooting the works in a last at
tempt at tho crown.
The winners will meet Thurs
day for the campus title which
will mark the end of an extreme
ly successful intramural season.
TEE DAILY TAB EEZL
Kay Believed
Baton Work
Was Over
Alumnus Kyser Saw Turning
Point Of Career At "Special
Call" Here
When Kay Kyser, who soon
play for the last four dances of
returns to his alma mater to
the Finals, received his A. 6. de
gree here he disbanded his or
chestra which he had directed
during his undergraduate days.
He was through with dance
bands and ready to enter law
school.
However on the eve of the
campus' most important dance
set the orchestra engaged failed
to show up. The committee in
charge of the dance knew of only
one solution "GET KAY!"
Turning Point
Hastily recruiting as many of
his (band as he could, Kyser
played for the affair and has
not laid down his baton yet. He
had intended to make it his
4 11 1 m . m
lareweu engagement; nut in
stead, he says, it proved to be
the turning point of his acreer.
Since then he has had success
ful engagements at the Miramar
hotel in Santa Monica, Calif., the
New Yorker in New York, th
Gibson in Cincinnati, the Bal Ta
barin in San Francisco, the
Penn hotel in Pittsburgh, the
Belle-rive in Kansas City, and
more recently at the Blackhawk
restaurant in Chicago where he
was a nightly feature over
WGN.
Perhaps the oldest feature of
the band is the Glee Club which
Kay installed at the time of the
band's organization. The entire
personnel of the orchestra as
sembles in typical glee club style
to render choral arrangements
of popular and classical tunes.
At the present time Kay Ky
ser and his band are making
tour of the states . east of the
Mississippi under the supervis
ion of the Music Corporation of
America. Russ Morgan and his
Hotel Biltmore orchestra wil
open the Finals series on Thurs
day night, June 3.
; The Purdue basketball team
scored a total of 349 points in
eight Big Ten circuit games.
LETTERS
To The Editors
CenZhmed from page two)
sriA ennobling ag7.rprtp- of their
relationship with the divine.
Cczne Clean
The persons who assert that
the pnbllc exposure cf leg3
(from the knees down) is inde
cent should quit rationalizing
and TwaVp a candid statement of
their position. I imagine such a
confession would ran something
like this: "The notions of de
cency to which we were subject
ed during our youth had such a
marked effect upon our imagina
tion that we are now unable to
view certain portions (approx.
90) of the human body with
out experiencing an unpleasant
sense of shame." This is the un
fortunate condition that actual
ly prevails.
Perhaps it would be a good
idea for the interested portion
of the students to form a nudist
colony in order to combat this
prudish tendency of the ethical
autocrats of Chapel Hill. It
would at least give them some
really scandalous material to
work with.
Almon Barbour
To the Editor,
The Daily Tab Heel:
Let us assume that a great
number of the students of the
University spend one-third of
their first five quarters taking
French. This is one-third of
nearly two years work spent on
one subject. This represents an
investment of at least two hun
dred dollars per year for French
alone.
ine question now arises:
Could not this $400 be spent
more profitable in the study of
French in France? It appears
only reasonable that the study
of a foreign language could be
conducted more effectively in its
own country.
Why could the University not
arrange for all students taking
French to spend several months,
say between or during their
sophomore and junior years
studying French in France?
Everybody To Europe
ll w
ine university, in coopera
tion with some French universi
ty, could obtain school facilities,
including dormitories and din
ing hall, at a very reasonable ex
pense. It could afford to take
the entire French department
with students, en masse, furnish
them with room and board for
four months and bring them
back for $450 per student.
Under the present set-up
French to most students is a pos
itive bore. It takes more time
than all other courses combined,
with less return. In the above
arrangement, however, French
would no doubt be one of the
most popular courses in school.
The principal argumen
against this idea will doubtless
be to the effect that the stu
dents would not study. To this;
n .
01 course, we nave nut one
answer: The instructors would
have to fail these students and
require them to repeat the
course, just as they do now and
-'' 11 .
nave aone au aiong. At any
rate, a lot more French would
be learned by alland if, after
all, this is the real purpose of
the study, it seems that all ob
jections on these grounds should
be withdrawn. "
It may be added that this ar
rangement would be equally as
applicable to the study of Ger
man and Italian also.
mi v 1 1 n
ine university taKes great
pride in being a leader in many
fields Why should it riot be
come one in this study of mod
ern language?
Patrick Matthews
Daily Tar Heel advertisers
deserve your support.
New Club Meets
Tomorrow Night
High School Teachers To Ad
dress Education Group j
Four high school teachers
from different section cf North
Carolina and from different
types of high schools in the state
will lead the discussion at the
last meeting of the Education
club in 123 Peabody tomorrow
evening at 7:30.
The four teachers, David
Gamble, cf Efland; His3 Fran
ces White, Waco; John HoweH,
Union Hills; and H. E. Simpson
of Lemon Springs, will be able
to give practical advice to those
students planning to accept
school work next year.
At the last meeting of the
club, F. E. Thomas was elected
to the chairmanship of the club
activities during summer school.
Handball
Tournament
(Continzied from page three)
Hauptman, upsetter of Fink,
this afternoon-
Results of yesterday's play:
Results Of Yesterdays Play
Upper half second round ... Lip-
schntz (Everett) over Lowenthal
(Everett) 31-5; IL Cohen (Graham)
over Corrubia (Aycock) 31-0; Haupt
man (Everett) over Fink (Everett)
31-14; Freudenheim (Graham) over
Levitt (Graham) 31-16; and Klitenkk
(Graham) over Oettinger (Z. B. T-)
by default.
Lower half first round . . . S too-
pack (Graham) over Horowitz (Ever
ett) ... second round . . . XL Schehr
(Independent) over Edwards (Z. B.
T.) 31-2; Rubin (Everett) over Simon
(Graham) 31-25; Katz (A. E. Pi)
over tfarba ( Lewis) 31-25: Geller
(Carr) over Puttennan (Aycock) by
default; Shapiro (A. E. Pi) over
Rosen (Everett) 31-23: Feldman (T.
E. P.) over Vitriol (A. E. Pi) 31-11;
and L. Schehr (Independent) over
Glicksburg (Everett) 31-25.
Today's Schedule: -2:00
Zuckerman vs. Miller; Top
ping vs. Harp.
3:00 Stoopack vs. Sager; Feldman
vs. la. Schehr.
3:30 Geller vs. Shapiro.
4:30 Topkins vs. Stoff; Freuden
heim vs. winner of ToDuiner-Kan):
Rubin vs. Simon. .
5:00 M. Schehr vs. Edwards; Lip-
schutz vs. winner of Zuckerman-Mil-ler;
M. Cohen vs. Hauptman; Kliten
ick vs. winner of Topkins-Stoff.
Campus Has
Fly Circus
(Continued from page three)
scale the result the 'fly cir
cus.
Paging Mr. Buck
Maffitt, with the help of
stooges, catches the flies in a
milk bottle, and brings them
back alive. However, he modest
ly admits Frank Buck has it all
over him when it comes to
bringing animals back alive.
Once the flies are caught they
are put through an extensive
training period in which they
are taught to read, write, per
form on the flying trapeze, and
box.
Substitute -
Right now Maffitt is training
two of his biggest flies to fight
in Madison square oarden bowl
me nignt oi June v in case
Schmeling and Braddock do not
go through with their scheduled
battle.
The present gigantic Maffitt
circus boasts but one ring, but,
forward looking, Ben promises
he will soon present a five ring
circus that will positively be the
last word in showmanship and
splendor.
Hank Greenberg, Detroit first
baseman, was paid $20 for each
minute of play with the Brook
lyn Jewels, N. Y., basketball
team in 1934.
Dr. R. R. Clark
Dentist
PHONE 6251
Over the Bank
TUESDAY, HAY 25, 1
BULLETINS
AH Commerce Stcderts Drli
Orens rpe&ks tonight Birj.
frgjn editor! zi 8 o'tlxk ci
The Sitticn in Eeta2 Di
buticn
University Qnb There "rill de
finitely be no meeting tcrigtt
Duke Blanks
Carolina 4-0
(Ccmtatmed from peg tkrt)
Devib ot-shine then. XL
teaia. vrz3 minus the services of
Tom Buroette, who injured H3
knee in the Saturday tilt Li
Greensboro, and lost Hal Bistt
at the end of the fifth. The lat
ter took Topkins throw on
Cheek's grounder and broke the
big finger of hi3 left hand which
he had sprained a week ago.
The seventh inning: was the
sole one in which the Tar Heels
advanced men past first Ed
Bullard and Hope Melchor, both
playing: their last -games for
Carolina, led off with singles,
.the former getting one to right
and the latter sending him to
third with a clean hit to center.
Barley, who fanned eight in
turning in his 24th triumph for
Duke, then displayed some mas
terful pitching. He forced
Grossman to pop out to Berg
man and fanned McCarn and
Bricklemyer with M3 corner
cutting curves.
PATRONIZE OUR
ADVERTISERS
SPECIAL SU3IMER RATES
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Every "Wednesday Afternoon
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. Jeweler and Watchmaker
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