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THE ONLY QOLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST
VOLUME XLVII
EDITORIAL PHONS 4151
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1939
BUSISESJ PHONE 4JI6
NUMBER 180
(1(1
J
fii rsf
( E 11 II
University Dance Gomniittee
Minounees 13 New Members
.1.
Worley, Galloway
Elected Officers
For Coming Year
". The University dance committee last
night announced the appointment of 13
new members and 3 holdover members
to its organization and officers for the
coming school year. .
Richard "Fish" Worley, rising senior
and- Grail representative, was chosen
chairman, and Leon Galloway, Gradu
ate club representative, became secretary-treasurer
of the group at a recent
meeting.
Bill Blalock, Jesse Pike, and Reddy
Grubbs serving on the committee this
year will retain their position until
next spring as holdover members.
NEW MEMBERS
The names of the new members, to
gether with the organizations which
they represent, are as follows: Bert
Premo, senior class; Ed Ericson, junior
class; George Coxhead, sophomore
class; Leon Galloway, Graduate club;
Tom Heath, Interdormitory council;
Frank Holton, Interf raternity council;
John McNeill, Pharmacy school ; Emery
Rape?, Law-Med school; "Fish" Wor
ley, Cy Jones, Grail; Studie Ficklen,
Julian Coghill, Louis Sutton, German
duK
. It was announced yesterday that
both new and old members will be on
active duty during the finals dances
next week. Empowered to regulate the
conduct at all University dances, the
committee will strictly enforce its rules
regarding conduct at that time espec
ially the clause concerning drinking.
RISING JUNIORS
TO SEE ADVISERS
Schedule Is
Given For Sophs
, Dean A. C. Howell of the college of
arts and sciences has requested all ris
ing juniors who will enter his school
' next year to meet their advisers some
time before the close of this school year
in order that they may plan their pro
grams for the coming year.
Below is a list of all advisers in the
college of arts and sciences. At the
hours and places given they will be
available for conferences:
Division of the Humanities :
Art: Prof. R. T. Smith, Person Hall,
10:30-1:00..
Classical Languages: Prof. S. G.
Sanders, 208 South Building, 10:30
11:30 and 2:30-3:30.
Dramatic Art: Professor Selden,
Plavmakers' Theater, 12:00-1:00 and
other hours by appointment.
English: Professors W. D. MacMil-
lan and H. K. Russell, Murphey 203,
10:00-12:00 Thursday and Saturday,
and all next week. 3:00-5:00 Thursday
and Friday; and. 3:00-4:00 all next
week.
General and Conroarative Litera
ture: Professor H. R. Huse, 304 Mur
phey, 9:30-11:00.
Germanic Languages: Professor
Richard Jente. 107 Saunders. 10:30-
12:00.
History: Professor W. E. Caldwell,
306 Saunders, 9 :30-ll :00.
Music: Professor Glen Haydon,
Hill Hall, 12:00-1:00, and other hours
by appointment.
Philosophy: 'Professor S. A. Emery,
101 Peabody, Monday-Friday, 8:30
9:30 and 10:30-12:00, Saturday 8:30
12:00. Romance Languages : Professor J . C
Lyons (French), 309 Murphey, 10:30
(Continued on page U, column 2)
Frosh Orientation
Committee To Meet
Tomorrow Night
With the problem of the adaption of
freshmen to their new environment
upon their arrival at the University
to be dealt with, the freshman orenta
tion committee will meet tomorrow
evening in the Graham Memorial ban-
- quet room at 7 :30.
Jim Davis, student body president,
will preside over the meeting, while
Dean Spruill will be present to answer
all queries of the committeemen. A dis
cussion in the education of student gov
ernment will also take place, specifi
cally tied up with the orientation pro
gram. '
The committee would like any own
ers of films of student elections and
student government in action to see
Fred Weaver in the Dean of Students'
SOPH CLASS GETS
QUORUM TO PASS
YEARBOOK BILL
Group Will Have
Individual Pictures
In Yackety Yack
Individual pictures of the sophomore
class in the Yackety Yack heretofore
only a dream, will become a reality next
year. The rising sophomore class final
ly drew a majority to Memorial hall
yesterday morning, aided by the jiving
of Charlie Wood's "Swing-wing'
quartet, to pass the measure by a un
animous vote of the 389 freshmen pre
sent. ' .
SECOND ATTEMPT V
A quorem of 375 was needed to act
upon the bill submitted by Bill Alex
ander, rising sophomofe class presi-
jdent. fhis number failed to appear
n n,i . 4.v .1... i x.
week, when Carlie Wood's All-camnus i
band furnished entertainment. Since
that time numerous freshmen have
spoken in favor of individual pictures,
especially after seeing the group pic
tures which later appeared in the 1939
Yackety Yack.
-
The rising sophomore class, by vot
ing for individual photographs, has set
a precedent over other classes of the
past.
President Bill Alexander stated yes
terday : "Since the majority of the class
favored the individual pictures, we've
done much for the betterment of our
school and our yearbook."
New Stamp Club
To Hold Auction
Tonight At 8
Under the guidance of Dr. George
C. Taylor of the English department,
a Chapel Hill stamp club is being of
oganized, with its first meeting to be
held in the small lounge of Graham
Memorial tomorrow night at 8
o'clock.
According to Dr. Taylor, the club
will be organized along financial as
well as purely interest lines, and each
meeting will include a stamp auction
in which collectors can sell duplicates
and also purchase stamps below mar
ket prices. In addition, each auction
will be followed by an informal period
for trading, discussion, and exhibition
of collections.
"A club of this sort will fill a defi
nite need in North Carolina," Dr.
Taylor asserted. It is hoped that
Chapel Hill will become the stamp
center of North Carolina. .
CHOICE ITEMS FOR AUCTION
The main feature of the initial
meeting Wednesday night in Graham
Memorial will be an auction, for
which many choice items have al
ready been submitted including mint
coronation issues from Ceylon, India,
Strait Settlements, and Hong Kong; a
selection of the Trans-Mississippi is
sue of 1898; and a mint plate number
strip of the two cent 1895 U. S. issue
from the famous r urocKer selection
which has just been auctioned in- New
York. ,
There is still room for more items
in the auction, and collectors wishing
to place , items on sale must submit
the stamps with Catalogue number,
value, and 'minimum price of sale to
the secretary, Frank Turner sometime
prior to Wednesday night.
"A large crowd of philatelists is ex
pected as notices have been sent out
all over the State inviting collectors
to this meeting.
Matsner To Address
Medical Students
Dr. Eric M. Matsner, an outstanding
authority on birth control in this coun
try. will speak Friday to the medical
students of the University and to the
public health department. His address
will concern the modern aspects of
birth control.
Dr. Matsner is a representative of
the Birth Control Federation of Ameri
ca and is pouring through this part of
the country. He will speak at Duke
Saturday. Tentative arrangements are
for Dr. Matsner to make his address
here from 12 to 1 o'clock. The place has
i not yet been decided upon.
Committee Head
Richard "Fish" Worley who has
been selected as the chairman of the
University Dance committee for
1939-40.
THREE PLAYMAKER
EXPERIMENTAL
SET FOR TONIGHT
Tickets Obtainable
From John Parker
At South Building
Texas, Massachusetts, and the Great
Smoky Mountains of North Carolina
form the setting for the three new
plays to be produced experimentally
in the Playmaker theater tonight at
7:30. Tickets may be obtained with
out charge from John Parker, business
manager of the Playmakers, 314 South
building,. Seats will be held for ticket
holders until 7:20 after which time
they will be opened to the general pub
lic. - -
In "Out From Bedford" Fred Walsh,
holder of a Rockefeller fellowship in
playwriting, writes of the whaling
days in his native city, New Bedford,
Massachusetts. His play is concerned
with the pull of the sea for the men
who have grown up near it and who
wrest,their living from it. From tales
told along the wharf by the old sea
men or droned beside the fire of a win
ter's evening, the author gained a vivid
picture of the days of sailing vessels
when men set out from New Bedford
in search of the great sea-mammals
that supplied oil for the lamps of every
household. Then came the discovery
of the oil that came out of the ground
and of its many purposes and the great
whaling industry gradually declined.
Mr. Walsh has set his play in this tran
sition period.
POLITICS
In "These Doggone Elections" Fred
Koch, Jr. writes a comedy of election
chicanery in the household of Hank
and Seamy Millsap, which is split by
political diversities. Hank's staunch
Democratic heart almost quails before
Seamy's Republican shrewdness but a
hound dog and a mouth harp finally
restore the family political balance.
Emily Polk Crow's play of Sam
Houston, "Texas Forever," is set in
Houston's Gonzales camp in 1836 and
depicts a tense situation in the ragged
Texas army during the revolt against
(Continued on page 4, column 3)
UNC Symphony Orchestra
Has Diverse Personalities
Undergraduates, Graduates,
Noted Faculty Members,
And Townspeople Included
The University Symphony orchestra,
which gave its last concert of the year
in Hill Music hall last night, has per
haps the most diverse and unusual
personnel of any organization on the
campus. .' '
Of the forty-eight members, nine
teen are undergraduates seven are
graduates and assistants, seven are
on the faculty, five are Chapel Hill
High School students, four are Chapel
Hill townspeople, and six are from
Durham or Raleign.
Among the faculty members is Dr.
Urban T. Holmes of the Romance Lan
guages department, who is a noted
linguist and is well-known on the cam
pus for the4eading roles he has taken
(Continued on page 4, column 3)
Committee
For "Awards
Held: In Memorial Hall At 8
JOEDAWSONIS
ELECTED HEAD
OF PHI ASSEMBLY
Sloan, Igo, Farris,
And Karpeles Are
Other New Officers
Joe Dawson, rising senior, was un
animously elected to the presidency of
the Phi assembly for the fall quarter
last night at the final meeting of the
year.
Three representatives of the Phi
were elected to office without opposi
tion. Bob Sloan will be speaker pro
tein and chairman of the Ways and
Means committee for fall quarter. Bob
Farris and Miss Marion Igo were elect
ed to the offices of reading clerk and
secretary-treasurer respectively.
KARPELES WINS
Representative Karpeles was elected
to serve as sergeant-of-arms for the
fall quarter over Representative
Smith, who was a; candidate for re
election to that position. ,
A committee of three students in--l
eluding Miss Connie Thigpen, Phil El
lis, and Mitchell Britt was elected to
the ways and means committee. The
unsuccessful candidates were Repre
sentatives Burkhimer, Zaytoun, and
Patrick.
HENDERSON HEADS
MUSIC SOCIETY
Other Officer s
Are Announced
Hubert Henderson, rising University
senior, was recently elected president
of the Phi Mu Alpha honorary music
fraternity.' At a meeting of the fra
ternity last Sunday night, nine pledges
were initiated into the organization.
Henderson occupies the first chair of
the first cornet section of the Univer
sity band, and Sunday was named secretary-treasurer
of this organization.
At the first annual Battle of Swing,
sponsored by the band and judged by
George Simon, he was chosen on the
all-campus band. The new president is
now cornet soloist in Charlie Wood's
orchestra.
Other officers elected were Willis
Carpenter, vice president; Brewster
Rogerson, secretary-treasurer; Earl A.
Slocum, supreme councilman; Al Cost
ner, warden; and Frank Turner, his
torian. Tillett Will Speak
At Faculty Meeting
Charles W. Tillett of Charlotte,
new president of the Alumni asso
ciation, will speak at a faculty
meeting this afternoon at 4 o'clock
in Bingham hall. At that-time he
will offer for consideration a plan
to bring about more cooperation
between the state and the Univer
sity. All faculty members are urged
to be present.
Waynick Will Give
Graduation Recital
At Hill Music Hall
M. H. Waynick, pianist and organist,
will be presented in his graduation re
cital tonight at 8 :30 at Hill Music hall.
Waynick is a pupil of Dr. J. P. Schin
han. The program will be made up of se
lections on both the piano and the or
gan. The piano numbers will include
the following: "Prelude and Fugue in
D Major" Bach ; "Sonata in A Minor"
Schubert; and "Etude in E Major"
and "Valse in E Flat" Chopin. The
second part of the program will con
sist of three organ numbers. They are:
a chorale-prelude, " Alle Menschen
Mussen Sterben" Bach; "Allegro"
Wesley; and "Sonata in C Minor"
Guilmant. .
Makes .Final Plains
Tl j QQ
ragtnir
SOPH PRESIDENT
ANNOUNCES CLASS
COMMITTEEMEN
Batchelor, Reese' v
Hollingsworth Are
Named Chairmen
Committee members for the rising
sophomore "class were announced yes
terday by Bill Alexander, recently
elected president.
George Coxhead was named as re
presentative to the University Dance
committee. Chairmen of the other com
mittees are: dance Lloyd Hollings
worth, executive Doug Batchelor, and
finance Charlie Reece.
Alexander stated .that he had select
ed these boys because he believed they
were capable and could fulfill the re
sponsibilities that their positions re
quired. OTHER MEMBERS
In regard to the other members the
sophomore president said, "I have
chosen some of the outstanding mem
bers of the class to cooperate with our
administration next year. I feel cer
tain that they will make good mem
bers of their respective committees."
Alexander said that the purpose of
the newly formed finance committee
would be to raise funds for class dances
and other activities.
The committees include :
Dance committee: Lloyd Hollings
worth, chairman; Pete Page, George
Spransy, Jack Holland, Albert John
son, Henry May, Jack Skipper, Rid
ley Whitaker, Charlie Pyle, and Jimmy
Greenwood. - f'
Executive committee: Doug Batche
lor, chairman; Bill Croom, Alex Bon
ner, Bill Faircloth, Grady Stevens,
Gwyn Nowell, Ramsey Weathersby,
Manny Levy, John Diffendal, Stanley
Leary, Edwin Ford, Louis Harris, Bill
Ward, Dick Kendrick, Robert Bobbitt,
Raeford Adams, Joe Blake, and John
Sasser.
Finance committee: Charlie Reece,
chairman; Warren Mengel, Pat With
erington, "Booty" Grimes, Arnie Kan
trowitz, Worth Folger, Billy Suther
land, Ervin Bowie, Nelson McAbee,
Edwin Minges, and Bill Lee.
Putzel Urg6s Di
Senate To Unite
In Common Cause
Taking the motto "Agree to differ;
resolve to love; and unite to serve' for
his subiect. Charles Putzel. newlv elect-
m 1 - 9 - v
ed president of the Dialectic senate,
last night urged the senators to unite
in a common cause in deriving from
the senate the fullest benefits during
the coming year.
President Putzel pointed out that if
the senators failed to differ on ques
tionable issues there would be no justi
fication for the existence tf the senate.
He stated further that if we do differ
we can still remain friends thus carry
ing out the second point of the motto.
The president said that in uniting to
serve the senate, the University, and
each other, the senators "would carry
out the. united purpose of living the
fullest lives through service."
Senator Ed Kantrowitz presented a
m . .
proposal for interesting incoming
freshmen in the senate next year. The
senate voted, however, not to disclose
the provisions of the proposal to the
public.
Ex-president . Louise Walker, was
voted a gavel in appreciation of her
services during the past year.
Alpha Chi Sigma
Will Show Movie
Alpha Chi Sigma, national profes
sional chemistry fraternity, will pre
sent tomorrow night at 8 8o'clock,
sequence to the moving picture, "Bake
lite," which was presented , Monday
night in 205 Venable hall. The genera!
public is cordially invited to attend.
Saturday night, four men were
initiated into the local chapter of the
fraternity. They are: Bill Groves, Bill
Reed, Charles (Chuck) Kline, and
Howard Wright.
To Be
Coach Fetzer Will
Present Annual
Patterson Trophy
Final plans for the annual "Awards
Night" to be staged in Memorial hall
tonight at 8 o'clock with Student
Council President Jim Davis presid
ing, were made at a meeting of the
Student council in the Student gov
ernment room of Graham Memorial
last night. Mac Nisbit, chairman of
the" Awards Night" committee, an
nounced late last night the names of
those persons who will present the
various cups and awards.
The annual Patterson memorial
trophy, which is donated by Dr.
Joseph Patterson in memory of his
brother, has always held the chief in
terest in the presentation of the
awards in previous years. This medal
is presented to the University senior
ranking highest with regard to the
following five points: athletic ability,
morale, leadership, sportsmanship and
general excellence Head of the ath
letic association, Coach Bob Fetzer,
will present the trophy tonight to
the deserving athlete.
LAST YEAR
Andrew A. Bershak, one of Caro
lina's All-American football players,
was awarded this honor last year for
showing himself more than qualified
(Continued on page U, column 3)
WOMEN ANNOUNCE
SPORTS AWARDS
Future Athletic
Program Discussed
Miss Terrell Everett,-president of
the Woman's Athletic association, an
nounced yesterday at a meeting of the
Woman's Athletic council that 12 let
ters and 26 emblems would be awarded
participants in coed sports during the
past year.
In bowling a letter will be given
Miss Pat Dickenson, and Mrs. Tud
Kahn, Misses Ann Moore, Anne Buch
an, Anne Martin, Elizabeth Taylor,
and Polly Raoul will receive emblems.
Misses Adele Austin, Ruth Parson,
Elsa Winters, Mary Lewis, and Ber-
nice Brantley will be awarded fencing
letters, and emblems will go to Misses
Rose Knight, Frances Caldwell, and
Jean Breckinridge. '.' .
BASKETBALL
Letters in basketball will go to
Misses Margaret Herndon, Allan Cutts,
Martha Mills, Ann Moore, .. and Sue
Sutherland and emblems to Misses
Mary Lewis, Dorothy Patterson,
Nancy Taylor, Elizabeth Gammon, and
Polly Raoul.
Archery emblems will be given to
Misses Elizabeth Benbow, Dorothy
Patterson, Lucille Gillespie, and Anne
Buchan; in swimming to Misses. Kath
ryn Fleming, Virginia Bower, and
Marian Igo. -
Those who will receive the tennis
letter and emblems will be announced
at the close of the tennis ladder tour
nament, which is being conducted this
week.
PLANS FOR NEXT YEAR
Plans for the athletic program .next
year were discussed. Swimming, ten
nis, fencing, badminton, basketball,
golf, archery, and baseball will be in
cluded on the coed schedule. Each
sport will be under the supervision of
a member of the council.
High School Senior
Class To Present
Play Friday Night
The Senior class of the Chapel Hill
High School will give Booth TarHng
ton's "Clarence" at 8:30, Friday, May
26, 1939, in the High School auditor
ium, Pittsboro Road. The play is di
rected by Preston C. Farrar.
The cast is as follows:
Mr. Wheeler Roy Strowd
Mrs. Wheeler Virginia Clark
Cora Wheeler Sarah Summerlin
Bobby Wheeler
Violet Pinney .
Clarence :
Hubert Stem
Mrs. Martyn
Delia
..! Dan Marks
Norris Snow
Baylor Henninger
Dick Edkins
, Jane Clark
. Marie Watters
Leon Cheek
Dinwiddie
ofSce.