Wht THDITORIALS: ij O Thirty-fight Years ' j of Service Serapbook Boys WEATHER: Continued Fair and Warmer vr III W II Irfr "mm E a I ! 2 2a VOLUME XLVI 77 ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH EDITORIAL PHONI 4! SI Bob Magill Is Appointed As director ut student Union To Succeed Guy "Pete" Ivey CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1938 BUSINESS raOKI 4H NUMBER 166 To Serve Two-Year Term Beginning Next August 1 Director HOBBS, GILMORE NOMINATED FOR CPU CHAIRMAN Six New Members Voted In; Election At Later Meeting Bob Magill, of Evanston, 111., and Shanghai, China, was ap pointed director of Graham Me morial for the two years begin ning August 1 by the board of directors yesterday afternoon. Magill had no statement to 1 i. 1 TT- 1 1 miuve yesieraay. ne nas Deen a member of the Grail, Golden Fleece, Athletic council, Student Audit board, YMCA, is the ex- president of the student body and has been active in many campus organizations. Board The director is appointed byya board representative of most of the groups on the campus for two years and is ineligible for a sec end term. It is preferred that he be fresh from the student body. Pete Ivey, director of the me morial since 1936, has announced that he will enter the newspaper advertising business here or in New York. This year the board was ,com losed of Deans Bradshaw . and House, J. M. Saunders, Alumni secretary, Harry Comer, YMCA secretary, Reuben Graham, vice- president of the student body, Bob Magill, president of the stu dent body, Jack Davidson, repre tentative of the senior class, Jim Joyner, representative of the Junior class, Nancy Nesbit, "Women's representative, ' Bob Hay, president of the Interfra ternity council, and Bill Robert son, president of the Interdor initory council. Mac Smith was chairman of the sub-committee which nomi nated the candidates. Jim Joy ner will head the board of direc tors for next year. The mem bers will be representative of the same groups. 32 I - - ' ' 4 ! f , 1 ! 1 r Fleece Taps Nine Campus . 'Leaders In Annual Ceremony Men's Glee Club Officers Bob Magill, ex-president of the student body, who was yes terday chosen by Graham Me morial Board of Directors to succeed Pete Ivey as director of the'Student Union for the com ing year. VICE-PRESIDENT OF INTERDORM COUNCILCHOSEN Stauber Chosen Secretary; Upton Is Treasurer CALL ISSUED TO ORDER PHIKEYS Regular Meeting Of Phi Tonight Phi representatives who wish to order keys must do so at the regular meeting tonight at 7 :15, John Rankin, secretary-treasurer, announced yesterday. This will be the last time mem bers will be able to buy keys un til next year. All keys must be paid for in advance as the keys bear the representatives' ini tials. The assembly will discuss the national issue concerning the re organization of the federal gov ernment and the campus ques tion of full coeducational policy. pprrppTitQtive Ben Dixon will report on the first bill: Re -solved, That the Phi assembly approve the proposed reorgani zation bill now before the Con gress. An introduction to the second bill: Resolved, That coeds may attend the University for four undergraduate years vill be given by Representative Edith Gutterman. Final plans will be made for a 1'hi weiner roast in Battle park. Charles "Puddin' Wales was last night elected vice president of the Interdormitory council at its last meeting of the year with both old and newly elected meijt bers present. Wales, who defeated Bill Pear son and Bill Stauber for this of fice, succeeds himself. As Secre tary Bill Stauber was elected over Hank Pessar, Hero Lang sam and Sam Broadhurst, suc ceeding Forrest VonCannon. Wingate Upton received the of fice of treasurer over Oliver Briggs and Bill ,onn. He fol lows Tom Fry, recently elected president. Tom Fry, Charles Wales and John Singletary were nominated for the council's representative on the University dance commit tee, to be chosen by the present committee. Due to the lack of a quorum an amendment to the constitu firm concerning absences was not vfted on. Sam Hobbs and Voit Gilmore were nominated for the. chair manship of the Carolina Political union, and six new members were elected to membership in the organization at a regular meeting yesterday afternoon. New members selected were Miss Elizabeth Spencer, Hyman Philips, Don' Ward, Ted Blount, DeWitt Barnett, and Ben Dixon. They replace Gordon ' Burns, Leighton Dudley, Chairman Alex Heard, Miss Margaret Hender son, Ed Jeffries and Miss Frances Johnson, who are all leaving the union this spring. Although the new members will not be officially accepted in to the ranks of the CPU until the beginning of school next fall, they will sit in on future meet ings during the remainder of this year. The applications of all unsuccessful candidates will be kept on file for future ref erence. , The union's 25 old members will select either Hobbs or Gil more as their new chairman at a special meeting the latter part of this week. The positions of vice-chairman, secretary and treasurer will also be filled at that time. Hobbs and Gilmore have both been prominent in inner-union doings during the two years they havebeen in the organization. Hobbs, a native of Selma, Ala., fyf.s been a varsity debator for 'two years. For two years also, he has been on the debate coun cil, and during the 1937-38 sea son served as chairman of that organization. He was recently selected as he University's candidate for the Geneva scholarship held ast year by Mac Smith. He nas also been active m the Di senate and is chairman of the Carolina Radio forum. He is a member of the Delta Kappa Ep- silon fraternity. Gilmore, who hails from Win ston-Salem, has been prominent (Continued on last page) The newly-elected officers of the Men's Glee club for 1938-39 are, reading from left to right: Front row, Frank Turner, Assist ant Business manager; Brooks Patten, Business Manager; back row, Professor John E. Toms, Humphrey Swift, vice-president, Gene Turner, president. University's First Bathing Beauty Contest Today At 5:30 -4r Social Workers The Social Workers' club will fnt tonight at 7 :30 in Alumni Ending. Carl Goerch will lead Uie forum on "Purging the Re- Symphony Orchestra Will Give Second Concert Wednesday Swalin To Direct Program To Be Presented In Hill Hall At 8:30 The University symphony or chestra under the direction oi Dr. Benjamin F. Swalin of . the music department will give its second formal concert of the - : Q.QA year tomorrow evening u in Hill Music hall. Harold Wile, oraduate student in music, wil be the featured soloist on the urogram. Opening the concert, the or chestra will preserit Haydn's "Drum Roll" symphony in flat. Mr. Cone will play a Schumann i piano concerta ac rWnied ) bv the orchestra. VS-'vr- f " Tim (following tute the remainder of the pro gram: Overture to "Phedre; by Massenet, Pavane," and Bo (Contimed on page two) WOMEN ALUMNAE DAY TO BEHELD HERE SATURDAY Meeting Planned - In Connection With May Day Fete Saturday, May 14, which is the day set aside for the annual May Day festival to be held in the arboretum, is also schedul- Jere King Will Furnish Music While Seniors Swim As the senior class swims to the music of Jere King and his orchestra, graduating coeds will parade before a group of selected judges this afternoon at 5 :30 for the first bathing beauty ti tle offered at the University, "Miss Class of '38." Manager Fred Weaver an- nnnnppd vlrilnv flint tmoh cu "cr Ui " . 1. I faculty member on Emerson women oi ine university. M mis win De tne secona gen- pate in the senior-facultv base- eral meeting of the women gra- 111 ame and atf en(1 nirniV duates in the history of the Uni- in the Emerson outfield fol- versity, the first one having been lowing the game. neia last year aiso in conjunction with May Day. AKG Both celebrations are in the Following the contest, the sen iors gather at 8 o'clock in Swain nanus oi me iuvui uiaP;i Dean R R Hoiip as snpakpr Alpha Kappa Gamma, women s (Continued on last page) Gene Turner Elected Head Of Men's Glee Club Here Library Shows Contemporary News Exhibit War Stories, Lincoln Assassination Presented In Main Entrance Cases The University library is now presenting an exhibit of "Great Events as told in Contemporary Newspapers" in the three cases at the main entrance. The assassination of Abraham Lincoln in 1865 in the form of a news editorial is shown as it ap peared in the North Carolina Times with these words as an introduction : "The millions mourn, Abraham Lincoln is no more." Civil War An entire page was given to the article on the firing of Fort ... ii 1 J? IT. w r.onsti-1 Sumter and the outoreaK oi me nuiuwv . ,i t -r 1. r v war in tne rsew xoift. V Times shown in one of the cases. In tli p. Dailv Union of the journalist Stuart Kabb as class historian and prophet and Jere King as of dinner dance music maestro. There also will be an election of permanent class officers. Last night, after President Joe Patterson's official nrocla- mation, senior week of 1938 got underway with a band concert of novelty numbers. Then Kenan Last week-end the Men's Glee stadium was filled with rockets, club elected Gene Turner as pre- multi-colored roman candles, and sident, Humphrey Swift, vice- varied ground displays in the president, Brooks Patten, busi- University s first fireworks pro ness manager, and Frank Tur- gram, the last of the day's ner, assistant business manager, events. Swift, Patten, Frank Turner Also To Hold Offices for next year s officers. Gene Turner, Swift, and Pat ten have been members of the Glee club since their freshman year. As business manager, Brooks Patten plans to arrange an ex tended tour of the south next year during spring vacation as well as trips off the campus on several week-ends. The mens choral group will also sponsor two concert-dances here on the campus. The remaining activities of the Men's Glee club for this year include a concert on May 20, assisted by Dale Sanderfur, in structor and graduate student in music. Professor John E. Toms, di- (Continued on last page) The rest of the week's ehter (Continued on page two) Students Vote On Corsages Tomorrow Coeds will vote in a separ ate box in the corsage poll to be conducted tomorrow in the lobby of the "Y" by the Daily Tar Heel. This will give the girls on the campus a chance to ex press their opinion on the matter of boys sending flow ers to girls attending dances. All students graduates as well as undergraduates will be allowed to vote on the corsage question. Jason Ramsay Potts Opens Ceremony; Music By Schinhan Joe Patterson, Alex Heard, Bill Jordan, Bud Hudson, Jimmy Verner, Jim Joyner, Nick Read, Allen Merrill, and Pete Ivey were tapped into the Golden Fleece Sunday night in the an nual public ceremony of the hon orary society. An active member of the Grail, Joe Patterson, D. K. E., is president of the senior class and a premedical student. Union Head Alex Heard is head of the Carolina Political Union and an S. A. E., while A. T. O. Bill Jor dan holds the presidency of IAED, honorary premedical fra ternity, and is an outstanding YMCA leader. Student council member-at-large Henry "Bud" Hudson pitches varsity baseball. Jimmy Verner, law student, holds the associate editorship of the Law Review and is head of the student law library staff. Junior class president Jim Joyner was recently elected pre sident of the student body for next year. St. Anthony Hall's Nick Read was associate editor of the Carolina Magazine and past president of the University Club. Editor Allen Merrill, Phi Delta Theta, is the new editor of the Daily Tar Heel and a former member of the Publication Union Board. Colonel Pete Ivey is well known as director of Graham Memorial, past editor of the Buccaneer, and originator of campus amateur programs. Ramsay Potts, Jason of the Fleece, opened the ceremony by stating that "the judgment of the membership of the Fleece is not infallible . . . there will be some among you who will feel (Continued on last page) JOB, SCHOLARSHIP BLANKS READY Dorm Job Seekers File Immediately The University Self -Help com mittee, of which H. F. Comer is chairman, and the scholarship, committee, of which Dean D. D. Carroll is chairman, have issued calls for work and scholarship applications for the 1938-39 aca demic year. Applications Self-Help Secretary E. S. La nier announced that application blanks may. be obtained at his office at the YMCA. Present holders of jobs and scholarships must apply for renewal, he said and applications should be made at once. Since dormitory managerships and assistant managerships will probably be assigned for the next school year before the end of May, it is important for stu dents interested in these classes of jobs to file their applications at once, Mr. Lanier said. 1 Broadcast Henry Nigrelli and Alex Heard will , present the internal tional scene in the weekly broad cast of the CLIC which will be heard over WDNC at 10:05 to night. This is fifth in a series of programs bringing- campus per sonalities to the radio audience.6 (Continued on last page) Jiof R011S." t

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