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1939
Mew Officers To Be Inaugurated Under Poralar
political windup ' J1 XV'' J-fl lX VV not ffHd
3525 a THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST
VOLUME XLVII EDrrouAt raoNE 4i I" CHAPEL HILL. N. C TUESDAY. MAY 9 r
New B
JOYNER TO SPEAR
ON SUSPENSIONS;
OTHERS SCHEDULED
Free Movie Will Be
Awarded Group With
Largest Attendance
Inauguration of the newly-elected
major campus officers will be held un
der Davie poplar tonight at 8 o'clock.
In case of rain, however, the event will
be staged in Memorial hall. A free
movie will be given to the dormitory
and fraternity having the highest per
cent of students present.
Jim Joyner, retiring president of
the student body, and other members of
the student council released plans for
Jim Joyner requested last night
that a representative of each dor
mitory and fraternity on the cam
pos come by the YMCA some time
after 12 o'clock today and receive a
placard for his residence. Instruc
tions should then be carried out ac
cording to the story in the following
paragraphs.
the event with high hopes of breaking
all previous attendance records. Joy
ner stated that last year was the first
time that inaugurations have been held
in the open air, and according to him,
the atmosphere proved to be quite an
attraction.
SPEAKERS
There will be no principal speaker
as the council has been delayed with
some urgent business matters during
the past few weeks. However, mak
ing short talks on the program will be
Dean R. B. House, Jimmy Davis, Miss
Melville Corbett, and Fred Weaver.
Jim Joyner will preside and will also
discuss the recent "expellment of a
University senior and freshman," and
(Continued on page Ut column 2)
Rotary Exhibit
Opens Tomorrow
In Person Hall
The rotary exhibition of the Art
Students' league of New York will
operf tomorrow in the studio of Person
hall art gallery. The exhibition con
tains 17 watercolors and 20 prints
executed by students and associates of
the league.
The prints include works of Jon
Corbino, whose paintings have been
reproduced in Life magazine and else
where, Edna W. Lawrence, who is
noted for the humanness of her por
trayals, and Marjorie Rye'rson, whose
drawings of dogs have been acclaimed
by critics.
The watercolors include pieces by
Carl Busk, S. N. Fleck, , and Charles
E. Pont.
ART SCHOOL
The Art Students' league is one of
the foremost art schools in this coun
(Continued on page 2, column 3)
tix . " ' '
Faculty Chips In Opinions
On 'Grade Your Prof' Poll
Bazbv Savs Method Tsy-
ehologically Inadequate';
Epps Is 'All For It'
Wishing to learn the opinion of the
faculty, as well as of the students, the
Daily Tar Heel has taken an infor
mal survey of various professors on
the 'grade your prof poll now in pro
gress. Most of those questioned are in favor
of the pool, and have given whole
hearted support to it along with some
helpful suggestions.
Dr. English Bagby of the psychology
Apartment is in favor of a means of
informing the administration as to the
teaching efficiency of the faculty, but
he says that the means used by the
Tar Heel is psychologically inade
quate. OPPORTUNITY FOR HELP
"The administration has always
shown a disposition to be guided by
(Continued on page 2, column 6)
SISIS IFor Tiuifl ftfi OTIH 1R a tea Aimimonmni W
Take A Look At New Student Officers
i 1 -
DWlS FstSZASy HARMON GZE WVgg LVVO
STAuaea. Kl we Hobbs Humteg. Kimball. ftuexANOBR.
Shown above are students elected to responsible positions in recent Carolina balloting. Left to right they are: Upper
row Jim Davis, president of the student body; Jack Fair ley, vice-president; Martin Harmon, editor of the Daily
Tab Heel; Allen Green, editor of the Carolina Magazine; John Bonner, president of the YMCA; Jack Lynch, editor
of the Yackety-Yack. Bottom row Bill Stauber, editor of the Carolina Buccaneer; Chuck Kline, president of the
Athletic association; Vance Hobbs, cheerleader; Benny Hunter, president of the senior class; Gates Kimball, president
of the junior class; Bill Alexander, president of the sophomore class.
TOMS TO PRESENT
SOLO TOMORROW
Soloist Now In
Third Year Here
John E. Toms of the University de
partment of music will sing a recital
tomorrow evening at 8:30 in Hill Music
hall. He will be accompanied by
Herbert Livingston.
This is Toms third year at the Uni
versity where he is in charge of vocal
music. Since he came here, he has
sung several recitals and has present
ed both the men's and women's glee
clubs in a number of concerts. During
the spring vacation, he took the men's
glee club on a tour. In April, Toms
sang five oratorios at various places
in the state and one in Charleston,
S. C.
PROGRAM
The program for the evening is as
follows: "Bist du bei mir" Bach; "Se
bel rio" Rontani; "The Lass with the
Delicate Air" Arne; recitative and
aria from "Jephtha," "Deeper, and
Deeper Still" and "Waft Her, Angels,
Through the Skies" Handel;
"Trock'ne Blumen" and "Ungeduld"
Schubert; aria from "Carmen," "La
fleur que tu m'avais jetee" Bizet;
"Apres un reve" Faure; "L'heureux
Vagabond" Bruneau; "Les Cloches"
Debussy; "Stornello" Cimara;
"Morgen" Strauss; "Heimliche Auf
forderung" Strauss; "Silent Noon"
Vaugh-Williams; "An, Love, but a
Day" Mrs. H. H. A. Beach; "The
Shepherdess" Macmurrough; and
"Sea Moods" Tyson.
3-
Fairley Supports
Policy Of Student
Francis Fairley, former president of
the University student body, last night
defended the policy of the student coun
cil in maintaining its usual secrecy
concerning the recent suspension of a
senior and freshman.
Speaking before the Sophomore
YMCA cabinet in Di hall, Fairley ar
gued that only through secrecy can the
council most fairly act toward the stu
dents under consideration, which is its
major aim.
Alex Bonner, president of the cab"
inet, appointed a committee to work
with the Junior-senior cabinets on the
YMCA picnics scheduled May 22. Mem
bers of the committee are Roger Ray
burn, Arthur Rogers, and Herbert Mc
Nary. Attention was called to the change
(Continued on page 4, column 1)
. ' .
Di, Phi To Vote
On Code Trials
By Professors
Precipitated by recent campus pro;
ceedings, both the Di senate and Phi
assembly will tonight separately dis
cuss the question: "Resolved that all
honor trials be first tried by a faculty
committee and then appealed to the
Student council." After the discus
sion has been concluded, the two or
ganizations will vote on the bill with
the following provisions: If both
groups favor the proposal, the student
legislature will be petitioned to throw
the matter open to a campus referen
dum; on the other hand, if they dis
agree, a debate will be held between
the two politically-minded organiza
tions. The Phi Ways and Means and Ad
ministrative committee will meet this
morning in the YMCA at 10:30. The
Di will discuss an unnamed bill after
the discussion on the honor code mea
sure has been completed.
Prospective Teachers
All persons seeking teaching posi
tions in public schools beginning next
fall are asked to meet Professor G. B.
Phillips, director of the Teacher Place
ment service, in 204 Peabody at 10:30
today. This is important.
Brings Display From Orient
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Joseph Ellis, traveler in the Orient, whose display representing native life
in Java, Borneo, Singapore, and the Dutch East Indies began yesterday and,
will continue throughout the week in the small lounge of Graham memorial, i
NOTED PHYSICIST
WILL SPEAR HERE
Scientific Group
Meets At 8 O'clock
Dr. Rose C. L. Mooney,- one of
America's most famous women phy
sicists will be the guest of the Physics
department and tonight will address
a general scientific group on "X-Rays
and Crystal Structure," in Room 206
Phillips hall at 8 o'clock. The lecture
will be illustrated by slides.
Dr. Mooney is noted for her investi
gations of the positions of atoms and
molecules in crystals. She is profes
sor of physics in Newcomb Woman's
college of Tulane university, at New
Orleans. In recognition of her impor
tant work she has recently received a
Guggenheim Traveling Fellowship
which will take her to Europe for work
in the Royal Institution in London and
in laboratories at Leyden, Holland, and
Cambridge, England.
Business Staff!!
An important meeting of the
members of the business staff of the
Daily Tar Heel will be held at 1:30
this afternoon in Graham memorial.
All those not present will be auto
matically dropped from the staff.
'Quarter Hour' Plan Intends
To Raise $75,000 More Funds
STUDENTS CHOOSE
NEW OFFICERS OF
LAW ASSOCIATION
Speight, Clark,
Boucher, Lyon And
Wheatley Elected
The law school last week elected
new officers for the Law association
and new class officers. New officers of
the Law association are: Bill Speight
of Spring Hope, president; Herman
Clark of Fayetteville, vice-president;
Harry Boucher of Damascus, Va., secretary-treasurer;
Pope Lyon of Smith
field, student council representative;
Claud Wheatley of Beaufort, represen
tative on the student legislature.
Officers of the rising second year
class of the law school are: Tom Rav?
enel of Charleston, S. C, president;
D. T. Whitley of High Point, vice
president; Leon Roebuck of Washing
ton, N. C, secretary; and Allen Cobb
of Louisburg, treasurer.
Officers elected for the rising
third year class are Marshall Yount,
president; Julian Warren, vice-president;
and Miss Elizabeth Shewmake
and Miss Margaret Johnson were
elected as joint secretary-treasurer.
Retiring first year officers are Jim
Dorsett, president; Fred Pa'rrish,
treasurer; Tom Ravenel, vice-president;
and Joe Cheshire, secretary.
MISS ROWLAND
SPEAKS TO YWCA
Six Good Features
Are Pointed Out
Enumerating six characteristics of
a good Christian association, Miss Bil
lie Rowland of the Woman's College
made a talk to the YWCA last night
listing points which might prove help
ful to the local cabinet.
She pointed out that at the center
of the YWCA should be a group of de
voted and courageous individuals who
should be well acquainted with the or
ganization's work. Second, the YWCA
should be inclusive and not exclusive
and should not be made up of little
groups or cliques. Third, the organi
zation should be democratic; fourth,
it should meet the needs of the cam
pus; fifth, its program should be well
rounded; and sixth, the YWCA should
feel itself a part of a great interna
tional movement and not a local organi
zation. OTHER POINTS
Miss Eleanor Hinson, chairman of
the worship committee of the Woman's
college YWCA, also brought out some
points which had been used effectively
by that organization. She told of the
peace movement, Far Eastern student
fund, and a convention held recently
(Continued on page 2, column 3)
Lopez Preview
Junior-Senior
Gilbert Stephenson
Speaks Here Today
On Trust Banking
Gilbert Stephenson, director of the
Trust Research department of the Gra
duate School of Banking, maintained
by the American Bankers association,
will speak today at 3 o'clock, in the
first year classroom of Manning hall,
on "The Distribution Provisions of
Wills and Trust Agreements."
Mr. Stephenson is a former officer
of the Wachovia Bank and Trust com
pany of Winston-Salem. He is the au
thor of a number of books dealing with
trust administration, and in recent
years has lectured on this subject be
fore the Law school here and at Duke
and before the North Carolina Insti
tute of Bankers. , .
Tomight
New Differentials
ForOut-Of-State
Students Planned
By JIMMY DUMBELL
A new, modified reciprocal plan of
charging tuition on a "quarter-hour"
basis, designed to raise $75,000 addi
tional revenue ordered by the state
legislature, and a new method of estab
lishing out-of-state differentials to go
into operation in September,was an
nounced yesterday by the administra
tion. The new system consists of charg
ing for the actual quarter hours for
which the student registers and estab
lishes the differential fees according to
the tuition rates of similar institutions
in each of the six regional districts of
the country.
Under this practice, state resident
students will be charged $1.65 for each
quarter hour. On the basis of 48 re
quired hours, omitting physical educa
tion and hygiene, next year's North
Carolina freshman will pay $79.20 tui
tion for the year.
DIVISIONS
Six standard divisions of the nation,
which have been set aside by econo
mists and sociologists, were used as a
basis on which to group state universi
ties throughout the United States. Stu
dents from the following states will be
charged, a tuition-plus-differential fee
of $6.00 per quarter: Connecticut,
Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massa
chusetts, New Hampshire, New Jer
sey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island and Vermont. This will aver
age $279 per year.
For students in all other states, ex
cept the above, and the state of North
Carolina, the tuition-plus-differential
charge will be $3.65 per quarter hour.
This will average $169.72 annually.
All students from foreign countries
will be charged $6.00 per quarter hour
bringing their annual tuition-plus-differential
expenses to $279.
The above rates were set after com
(Continued on page 2, column 5)
Housecleaning Is
Vogue In Lewis
Bedbugs have caught the attention
of Lewis dormitory residents a far
cry from the current gold fish gulping
craze. Spring housecleaning began in
every room in the dormitory Sunday
night.
Several students are reported to
have been forced to sleep on the floor
over the week-end as the result of the
sleeping time pests. The authorities on
bedbugs were notified yesterday and
steps were taken to put the boys back
in their beds.
f
IRC Broadcast Hour
Changed To 7:15
, The hour for the weekly Interna
tional Relations club broadcast, to be
held this evening over WDNC, has.
been changed from 10:15 to 7:15.
Tonight For
Prom Trotters
Students Will Have Oppor
tunity To Get Opinion Of
Maestro Before May 12, 13
J unior-Senior - dancers will - hear a
preview of what to expect the week-end
of May 12-13 when radio station
WPTF, Raleigh, features the latest re
cordings of Vincent Lopez's "Suave
Swing" orchestra in its "On With the
Dance" program from 7:45 to 8 o'clock.
Felix Markham, senior class presi
dent, Paul Thompson, senior dance
committee chairman, Bill Inhes, and
Alan Truex heard the recordings in
Raleigh yesterday and reported favor
ably of Lopez's latest renditions.
The orchestra will play for the week
end set of Junior-Senior dances and a
concert.
Tonight's program, devoted entirely
(Continued on page 4, column 1 )
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