. .. . WEATHER: Continued Fair and Warmer Today THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH VOLUME XLVI EDITORIAL FHOHJ 4JS1 GHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1938 NUMBER 149 One-Act Hays To FURTHER POOL RULINGS HAVE Council ets Time, Place Open ProdEctioin Fori -Off Race Tomorrow BEEN RELEASED j y 1 .i-iiim II I v v' w ain Playmaker Leader I in.., I,in.l .1'.ri..Mn-ji& Series Will Begin Tonight At 8:15 In Memorial Hall Four one-act plays will initiate the fifth public production of the current Playmaker season tonight at 8:15 in Memorial hall, with another perform- Instructions For Faculty, Staff Are Included By William Snyder Further regulations concerning use t of the new swimming pool were re leased yesterday afternoon by athletic ance scheduled for tomorrow night officials. Instructions for the faculty, and four new creations for Friday University staff, and their wives are ana baturday night. Admission to any one evening's en tertainment will be by season ticket. while admission to another of the se J n i t .-w . - - ' included in the latest rulings which are as follows: ' (1) The above mentioned can se cure swimming privilege cards from ries will be by the season ticket and the offiee of Dean of Administration. Professor F. H. Koch who has se lected the plays which will compose the fifth public production of the cur rent Playmaker season. The produc tion opens tonight when four one- act plays will be presented at 8:15 in Memorial hall. World News Edited by Jim McAden 25 cents. "Dutch Boy" "Dutch Boy," by Bernice Harris, will be directed by Fred Koch, Jr., as the first play tonight. Sam Hirsch, Catherine Moran, Annetta Burnett, Fred Howard and Betty Hearn com pose the cast. Rose Peagler's "While Reporters Watched" will be the second perform ance. Directed by Clemon White, the cast includes Elizabeth Malone, Henry Nigrelli, Bill Morgan, Milton Kind, Don Muller, Fred Howard, Bob Ber- nert, Gene Lahgston, and H. Wolf. "One Man's Horse Vivian Veach will direct "One (2) After physical examination, faculty men should present their swimming privilege cards at the ath letic office for locker assignment. A deposit fee of $1.00 will be charged for lock rental. This deposit will be refunded upon return of lock, towel, and swimming trunks. (3) Faculty men 'will be issued swim trunks and towel. These two items are to be returned to the basket room after each use. (4) Wives of faculty members will not be assigned lockers, but will be assigned swim suits and towels at each swimming period. They must furnish their own swimming caps. No I1 ' r ih - A. WHimtiiJ '' ' ftf 3 Scientific Frat To Present Dr. Stanley Friday Rockefeller Institute Scientist To Speak On "Virus Diseases" GLASS AGREES ON RELIEF; ATTACKS PUBLIC WORKS Washington, April 19. Senator Glass of Virginia today attacked the administration's plan to allot a billion dollars to provide public works loans and grants to cities and states. Glass, chairman of the seriate ap propriations committee, said that the expenditure would duplicate a pro gram which is possible under authority recently given the Reconstruction Fi nance corporation. The senator said he would, however, support the President's plan to spend $1,250,000,000 for relief. The recently-passed bill which Glass referred to provides that the RFC make public works loans to state and municipal governments. The same bill authorizes the agency to make loans to business, while thus far no such loans have been considered. Glass, in introducing his bill, said that he thought it would be suffi ciently wide in scope to provide for public works. At the same time, a joint senate house conference met to try to iron out differences between the senate and house revenue bills recessed today, still undecided, to meet again Fri day. The committee started its meetings last week, but even at this stage has teen unable to reach a compromise n major differences between the bills f the two houses. wnm pti will Tno in tlio Tnnl Man's Horse," by Gwen Pharis, in Lrftw. MTV5. XT XT-' J 1 TH T 1 ni 1 x wie wuru piay. ueu cusn, Eleanor (k Cw! nrMlMm riir wist. Clough, Betty Smith, Sam HirschJ TOBAntpi ma yT Jordan Barlow, and T. A. Hearn will cjp h nl Swimming Periods The final play for tonight and to The following swimming periods morrow night's slate will be "Mary J have been announced for this group: Marge," by EUen Deppe, directed by ,3:00-3:45 women's period (regular Lois Latham. The cast will be Fran ces Goforth, Eleanor Clough, Burr Leach ,and T. A. Hearn. The plays have ,been selected by Professor F. H. Koch from his play- writing class and will be supervised by Professor Sam Selden. The ' cur tain rise will be preceded by a 15 minute organ- recital by" Mr. Panetti of the Andrews Music company of Charlotte. Friday and Saturday's program is (Continued on last page) Dr. Juan Clemente Zamora, political science instructor at the University of Cuba, who will deliver two ad dresses today at a luncheon and in Hill hall tonight. He will also speak tomorrow morning. period (regul coed period) ; 6:00-6:30 men's pe riod; 7:30-8:30 mixed period (regu lar student period). In addition fac ulty men may use the pool at any of the regular periods for men students. Athletic officials also emphasized the fact that there will be no swim ming after 6:30 for the remainder of this week until Saturday night. Such a ruling has been made because of the Red Cross instructor's courses which will be offered during the eve ning periods. Veneers To Open Gym Sport A 1 VAIL ts To Take Tour rssmi . .. .sg&Ski .;.;.w.w.v:v:vf:-:C-: FOES OF NAVY BILL CONTINUE HEAVY ATTACK Washington, April 19. Senate op ponents of the administration's huge navy expansion bill renewed their at kck on the measure today by de manding that the senate kill an au thorization for 950 additional navy airplanes. Chairman Walsh (D., Mass.) of the nate naval committee, began floor debate on the bill, expressing the con fidence that it would be passed by an overwhelming majority. Senator Nye (R., N. D.), one of the bill's principal foes, stated that the Present navy force of 2,050 planes is Efficiently large, and said that the army should have the job of defending uur coasts and naval bases. France and italy now ready to talk peace Kome, April 19. Agreement be JWeen Italy and France was reached loaay to begin immediately discus S1ns for formulating a friendship pact similar to the one recently Professor J. E. Toms, head of the University voice department, who will take the glee club on a two-day tour around the state, leaving tomorrow. This is the first trip undertaken by the club since the arrival of, Toms. Men's Glee Club To Leave On Tour Tomorrow Two Day Concert Trip Is First Under Direction Of Professor John E. Toms Forty-five members of the Men's Glee club will leave tomorrow on a two-day tour of Sanf ord, Fayetteville, and Wilmington. This will be the first concert trip undertaken by the Hub since the arrival of Professor John E. Toms as head of the Univer sity voice department. Thfl songsters will perform at San ford this afternoon and then proceed to Fayetteville, where they will pre sent a concert sponsored oy tne ray mi- rr;Ti Krhnnl band at 8 p. m. The men will spend the night m Wil (Continued on page two) Will Face Georgia Tech Squad Here Saturday Night : By Jerry Stoff Carolina's New Gymnasium will of ficially be ushered into intercollegiate athletic circles Saturday night when the fencing teams of North Carolina and .Georgia Tech meet in the sea son's finale for the Tar Heels. The fencers will move into their new headquarters this afternoon. Throughout the remainder of the week, the team will be housed in one of the two auxiliary gyms underneath the main floor on the third level. It is expected, though, that the equip ment and facilities will be moved to the main floor Saturday morning for the meet that night. Up To Now Up to now, the new athletic head quarters have only been used for bas ketball and boxing practice and swimming. Saturday's meet will be gin a long reign of varsity competi tion in the new and spacious gymnasium. However, there will be little pomp and ceremony attached to Saturday's fencing meet. The contest alone will provide enough interest for ardent fans. One Loss The Carolina swordsmen have met defeat but once in their reborn year of fencing this season, at the hands of William and Mary, one of the coun try's leading contingents. During the course of their schedule, the Carolina fencers have defeated Maryland, Middle Atlantic titlist, and already have once turned back Geor gia Tech, southern conference cham pions, at Atlanta, 9-8. ? Other teams which have tasted dis aster at the hands of the powerful Blue and White fencers this year were VPI, Kentucky, and the Char lotte Men's club. DR. ZAMORA TO START SERIES OF ADDRESSES First Of Three Talks Will Be Today At 1 Speaking at a luncheon in his honor at the Carolina inn at 1 o'clock to day, Dr. Juan Clemente Zamora, political-science instructor at the Uni versity of Cuba and director of the study center of the Institute of Wel fare and Social Reforms in Cuba, will begin a series of three addresses on the campus. He will again be heard at 8:30 to night, speaking on "Cuba and the Cu bans" in Hill Music hall. A banquet in his honor at 6:30 tonight at the Carolina inn will precede the address. His last talk will be at Hill Music hall tomorrow morning at 10:45, when he will give an informal talk in Spanish. Dr. Zamora, who has studied at Harvard, the University of Havana, Columbia, and Paris, has just con ducted a similar group of lectures at Duke university. He speaks under sponsorship of the Institute of Inter American Affairs, which is supported by the Cuban government and 10 southern American universities. , With the intention of furthering in terest in scientific research, the So ciety of Sigma Xi, honorary medical group, will present Dr. Wendell M. Stanley of the Rockefeller institute, who will speak Friday night to the public on "Virus Diseases." Dr. Stanley, who held the Interna tional Research Fellowship in Munich, 1930-1931, has for the past seven years been a member of the scien tific staff of the Rockefeller institute where he has chiefly been engaged in the study of the types of diseases he will discuss in his lecture. He was winner of the 1936 award of $1,000 for the most important paper present ed at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Ad vance of Scjence. Education Stanley received his. education at Earlham college, and at the Univer sity of Illinois. He has received rec ognition for his success in crystalliz ing the virus which is the cause of the tobacco mosaic disease. , The Sigma Xi society has for its members persons who have made some definite contribution to science, usu ally in the form of independent re search that has been published. DEAN BUCHANAN TO LECTURE ON CAMPUSTODAY Undergraduate Philosophy Club Sponsors Speaker ASU Meeting A general meeting of the Ameri can Student Union will be held to night at 7 o'clock in the Grail room of Graham Memorial, it was announc ed yesterday. Sponsored by the Undergraduate Philosophy club, Dean Scott' Buchanan of St. John's college, will speak here today in two appearances, one at 3 o'clock this afternoon in 204 Peabody hall, and the other tonight at 8:30 in room 206 of the same building. The meeting in the afternoon will be an open discussion in an informal vein on "The Place of Mathematics in the Curriculum," and the evening lecture will be for the public also on "The Origins of Our Universities." Philosophy Professor Dean Buchanan was formerly pro fessor of philosophy at the University of Virginia, and later served as edu cational adviser to ' President Hutch ins of the University of Chicago. At present Dean Buchanan is en gaged in the direction of a new edu cational system at St. John's. Under the novel system, students are con (Contmued on page two) i Present Group To Hold Last Meeting Tonight By Chasles Barrett The Student council last night set from 9 to 5 o'clock in the YMCA as the time and place for tomorrow's run-off election for junior representa tive to the Publications Union board. . The session was the council's next to the last before inauguration of the new student government body next Tuesday. The last meeting of the 1937-38 group is scheduled for to night. President Bob Magill said he was planning to make this year's inau guration ceremony, when Jim Joyner will be inducted into student body presidency, more attractive and im pressive than ordinary, and expected a larger group of students to hear Joyner's inauguration address. Morris Rosenberg, University party candidate, and George McDuffie, inde pendent, will vie at the polls tomor row in the University's first run-off election in five years. Rosenberg, with a plurality of 15 ballots in last Tuesday's general campus election, failed to gain a majority of the votes cast in the three-way race for the PU board post. Bert Premo, Student party aspirant, was the third candi date. Rosenberg, McDuffie Rosenberg has served on the Daily Tar Heel staff for the past two years, and is now the only sophomore news editor. McDuffie has been an assist ant business manager for the Yack-ety-Yack the past two' years. The run-off election was requested by Vaughn Winborne, who nominated McDuffie in the campus-wide nomi nations session. University rules re quire a candidate to secure a; ma jority of the votes cast in his race before he is assured of victory. The only parallel to this year's run off in recent political history was in 1933, when presidency of the Stu dent body and editorship of the Caro lina Magazine were undecided in the first election. Di Plans Social; Phi Group Opposes Skating Rink, 12-4 Frank McGlinn Makes Brief Talk To Assemblymen The Phi assembly last night defeat ed a measure favoring the conversion of the Tin Can into a roller skating rink by a vote of 12-4. Representative Wallack spoke in favor of the bill and asserted that Chapel Hill, as a modern community, should provide such a facility "as the rest of the nation has done." Speaker Leighton Dudley protested Senators Will Have CLIC, FPL WILL MEET TONIGHT John Kendrik To Lead Discussion According to an announcement made by Henry Nigrelli yesterday the CLIC and the FPL will hold the second in the series of joint meetings tonight at 7:30 in the Grail room of Graham Memorial. The purpose of the meeting is to make further plans for the International Relations Con ference for students of Southern Col leges that the two clubs plan tto hold on May 5, 6, 7. The two organizations are working through the Southern Council on International Relations. Kendrick To Speak After the business of the meeting is over, John Kendrick, graduate stu dent in economics and vice-president of the FPL, will lead a student dis cussion on "Recent economic tenden cies in international relations." The discussion shows all signs of being the change, and said the Tin Can was their guests will be able to get to the very interesting and follows the talk Run Of Game R00m'tnat Mr Burnstetn made last week before the two groups on "Interna tional Money." All students who are interested in international relations and would care to participate in the discussion are urged to come. The two organizations plan to con tinue this type of routine. At one meeting one of the members will lead a discussion as a follow-up to the pre vious address. Both organizations at present are concentrating on the con ference that will come in May. In Union Party That the Dialectic senate will en tertain its members and prospective members at a special social in Graham Memorial next Tuesday evening fol lowing the regular meeting, was de cided last night when the senators met as usual in New West. Next week's meeting will be begun at the regular time, 7:15, but will be cut short so that the senators and needed for track practiie. Frank McGlinn While Speaker Dudley had the floor, Ex-Speaker Frank McGlinn took the chair. McGlinn was speaker for two terms last year. In a brief talk to the assembly, he said, "Chapel Hill is the most demo cratic place in America." ' Representative Edith Gutterman led a short discussion on the income tax bill, which finally was tabled hntil the next meeting. .Representative John Rankin was appointed to serve as publicity direc tor for the assembly for the rest 4i the year. ; memorial by 8 o'clock. Games and Refreshments Pete Ivey, director of the memorial, has granted the senate the full privi leges of the game rooms of the stu dent union building and refreshments will be served. The social will serve a double pur pose. Primarily it is being given as an entertainment for the active sena tors, but it is hoped by those in charge that it will also act as a stimulus to the interest of prospective members in the senate. Each senator will be entitled to in- (Continued on page two) Bill McCachren Is New Head Of Dance Committee r Bill McCachren, preside -elect of next year's University A'.ietic asso ciation, was elected by' members of the University Dance committee re cently to fill the unexpired term of Chairman Randy Berg who resigned because of scholastic duties. McCachren will serve as head of the committee for the remainder of Berg's term, at which time there will be another election to determine next year's chairman. . ' (Continued on last page)