Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 20, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
y.r- i -' v1 - . READ EDITORIAL: "BEARING A MUTUAL BURDEN" TAR HEEL SMOKER 10:00 P.M. GRAHAM MEMORIAL VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. C FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1933 NUMBER 83 STRINGFIELD WILL PRESENT SOLO IN CONCERT TONIGHT ' Program Will Be Presented by Carolina Playmakers and Folk Music Institute. Lamar Stringfield, research associate to the institute of folk music, and musical' director of the. North Carolina Symphony society, will make his first ap pearance as soloist this season with the little symphony orches tra at 8 :30 o'clock this evening at the Playmakers theatre. During past seasons Stringfield has appeared here as soloist in programs, presenting composi tions for flute and piano. Varied Program This program is being spon sored by the Carolina Playmak ers in cooperation with the in stitute of folk music. It will be composed of classical numbers, works of living American com posers, and several novelty num bers. Stringfield is the holder of the artist's diploma in flute playing from the Institute of Musical Arts in New York City, where he studied under George Bar rere, nationally famous flute player and conductor of the Bar Tprfi Little Symphony. He has made numerous appearances in, recital both as soloist and in en semble groups. He appeared in Hew York as soloist with the New York Philharmonic Sym phony and in programs of the New York flute club. His String field Trio, composed of flute, piano, and cello, has appeared (Continued on last page) STUDENTS SEEK HIGHER DEGREES Board of Graduate School Ad mits Fifty-Nine Candidates For Advanced Degrees. Fifty-four students were ad mitted to candidacy for higher degrees by the administrative board of the graduate school January 16. No specification as to when the candidates will be ready for the degrees has been made, as this is a matter depend ent upon the completion of the full requirements. Those eligible for candidacy are : Doctor of Philosophy: Viola Chittenden White and F. P. Cauble. Master of Arts: T. C. Amick, D; B. Armold, E. S. Barr, G. W. Blackwell, W. E. Boone, C. C. Cates, Jr., J. Y. Causey, Annie Leslie Chadbourne, H. E. Cole man, Jr., C. C. Couch, J. H. Cowles, C. J. Craven, Letitia Womack Currie, J. S. Frazer, G. E. French, Jr., G. C. Gaskin, R. E. Gee, Jr., Sherwood Githens, Jr.. J. M. Grimes. Jr.. J. W. C. Grotyohann. N. H. Henry, J. H. Johnson, C. B. Kestler, W. S. McArthur, J. B. McFerrin, Jr., P. J. Mil ler, Jr., Vida Brown Miller, Leslie Mary Moss, S. G. Roth, Sabra Lore Royall, C. J. Shohan, W. W. Silliman. Jr.. Elizabeth Anderson Strickland, B. R Thurman, Jr., W. M. Treverton, Sarah Woodall Turlington, J. B "Usry, Mary Linda Vardell, J. G Wall, R. G. Walser, D. D. Wick- ens, Mary Catherine Williams and Blanche Zorn. Master of Science : W. G. Con- trane, Jr., L. J. Felton, O. W Kochtitzky, Jr., J..C. Lift6n,,W T.Logan, Jr., J.S.Morrison Laura Corbett Thomas, E. W, Winkir. and M.-F. Wooten, Jr. Organ Concert Sunday Organ Professors of Other Schools Scheduled to Appear Here in Series of Concerts. Professor Nelson 0. Kennedy will present his fourth vesper organ recital of this season at 4:00 o'clock Sunday afternoon, in Hill music hall. This is the first of the regular monthly organ recitals by Pro- f essor. Kennedy to be presented this quarter. In connection with these recitals there will be sev-. impers0nator, who is to appear eral concerts here by leading or- here in a recital in the Carolina ganists in the state in exchange playmakers theatre next Tues f or recitals by. Professor Ken-! day evening) January 24, at 8 :45 nedy, who has already appeared 0clock. There wm be no admis this year at Duke and at Mere-j-n -haro-p uiui. Lawrence Apgar OI UUKe, JIJ.X. T A J Tk. -I.-- and Leslie Salman of Meredith are expected to appear m ex- change recitals here. ounuay s program cuixai, of a processional by Gaul, three n j ' ?n I chorales by J. S. iiacn, ana two compositions of Guilmant, Sona ta No. 5 and Lamentation. ENGINEERS LEAVE FOR THREE-DAY INSPECTION TRIP Senior Class of Electrical Engineering Department to Make Inspection Trip to Charlotte. The senior class of the elec trical engineering department will make an inspection trip to Charlotte and other points in the virinit.v in t.np TlAar future. The i - j - group will leave here early in the afternoon of January 27, and ' will make the firststop in Nor wood, where the Carolina Light anu ruwex r y - modern nlant which is almost entirely equipped with automat ic material. After inspecting 4-Ui n T!n-nf rrVAllT TX71 I I CVr rVTI , TTT. TJ. to oiia.no lie wiieie tiicy win spend the night. Saturday morning will be de voted to a tour of the Southern Bell Telephone building in Char- lotte, ana oaxuraay aiLernoon the plant ot tne uuKe rower, Company at Kiveroena win oe visited bv the class. Tours of several switching stations are also planned. Tentative plans are being made by the class to make a com plete study of radio station WBT Sunday morning. The group will return to Chapel Hill late Sunday afternoon. Dr. Ball Speaks Today Editor of Charleston News and Cour ier to Address Press Institute in Final Session Today. Dr. W. W. Ball, editor of the Charleston News and Courier, will address the final session of the Press Institute on "Candles in Our Windows" at 10:00 o'clock this morning. The meet ing will convene at 9 :30 o'clock with the judging of a newspaper display in charge of B. A. Low rance. . ' Following Dr. Ball's address, the newspapermen will discuss the live topics of the day. One of the topics suggested is: "Will the newspapers accept beer ad vertising?" ASSEMBLY PROGRAM TO COMMEMORATE LEE Mrs. Charles Lanier, daugh - ter-in-law of Sidney Lanier, famous southern poet, will ad dress the freshmen in assembly this morning on "Robert E. Lee," in commemoration of the celebrated southerner, whose birthday was yesterday. Mrs. Lanier is a leader in the in make Lee's birth- iUUTlilVAV place in Virginia a shrine. national DRAMATIC READER TO APPEAR HERE TUESDAY EVENING Max Montor, Impersonator, Will Present Varied German and English Readings. Leading educators through out flip nntinn have commended thei recitals of Max Montor, celebrated reader and dramatic Mrninr. whn is intPrnnfinTmllv known for his unusuai interpre- tations of drama and poetry, is now on a tour of leading colleges and universities. He comes here from Davids0I1) where he will give a recital the previous night. Among educators who have publicly praised Montor's work are President John Grier Hib ben of Princeton University, Dr. R. A. Millikan of the California Institute of Technology, Dr. Wil liam Lyon Phelps of Yale Uni versity, and Dr. Robert Hern don Fife of Columbia Univer sity. Montor is travelling under the auspices of the Carl Schurz Me morial Foundation of Philadel hia The f oundati0n has as its aim the development of cultural relationships between the United states and the German-speaking countries. In his recital here, which is being amngd by a committee , , , , m' . headed by Dr. W. D. Toy, head of the German department, Mon tor will render from memory selections in German and Eng- lish. His selections in German will be f roni Prometheus by Goethe and Die Kaniche Des Ibvkiis bv Schiller' His selec- ,ti0ns in English will be from HamUt by Shakespeare, Minna Fon Barnheim by Lessing, and L ieutnant Gustt by Schnitzler. Following the lecture Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Booker will entertain Mr. Montor at a small gathering in their home. Montor was born in Vienna and studied at the Imperial Con servatory of Dramatic Art in his native city. He made his debut in Zurich, Switzerland, and has toured extensively in Austria, Germany and Switzer land. His American career be gan nine years ago on .Broad way, and he has appeared on various stages in America in plays of Shakespeare, Strind- berg, Isben, Sudermann and others. . Parker Announces New "Y" Programs Plans are being made by Jesse Parker, president of the fresh man friendship council, to have presented at the weekly meet ings of the group an entirely new type of program. These new programs will include dis cussions led by members of the council and addressed by campus celebrities and faculty members. ; In addition to the changes in programs, Parker announced f rday that themeeting place of the council would probably be changed from Gerrard hall to a room in the Y. M. C. A. The change would afford a better chance for. individual discussion and business transaction. Chi Psi Announces Pledging Chi Psi announces the pledg- ing of Edmond Vincent Hally of jLarchmont, New York. NEWSPAPER MEN HEAR J. H. FURAY AND ASJiEISTER United Press . Official Says That Much of 1933 News Will Deal With Search for Messiah. A happy combination of work and entertainment featured yes terday's session of the ninth an nual North Carolina Newspaper Institute, which got off to a fly ing start Wednesday night with Governor Ehringhaus' address. Yesterday morning the editors and publishers listened to thoughtful and timely addresses W ToWOO TT Tt-o Wy.c?. dent of the United. Press and general manager of foreign ser vice, who outlined some of the high spots in the news in 1933, and by Dr. Albert S. Keister, professor of economics in the Woman's College of the Univer sity of North Carolina, who sug gested possible new sources of revenue by which the state bud get may be balanced. John A. Park, president North Carolina Press Association, was presid ing. The morning session ended in a lively discussion of newspaper topics. In the afternoon there were separate meetings for the weekly and daily groups. Presiding over the weekly group, R. E. Price, of Ruther fordton, vice-president of the North Carolina Press Associa tion, conducted a round-table discussion. He urged more of the weeklies to join the Audit ho i4.: Bureau of Circulation, pointing out that an effort is being made to secure a representative in New York City to secure more foreign advertising for the weeklies. With D. Hiden Ramsay of the Asheville Citizen-Times presid ing, the daily group discussed the same problems as related to their particular field. An impromptu feature of the morning session was a short address by Dean Francis F. Bradshaw of the University, who outlined the highlights of a movement just launched by the University with the view to put ting thrift education in the pub lic schools of North Carolina. He asked the editors to use their in fluence to heln further such a movement. At 4:30 o'clock came adjourn ment, and from then on until late last night the editors were guests of Duke University. Duke put on a program that for in struction and genuine hospitality could hardly have been excelled. Geology Specimens Attract Attention The case of quartz minerals, together with the reptile case and the collection dealing with early and fossil man, has been attracting the most attention in the "new, geological museum, ac cording to Dr. W. F. Prouty, head of the geology department This collection of quartz ex hibits includes over twenty-five varieties of mineral species and is about equally divided between the crystalline and the amorph ous. The names of many gem stones are recognized in the list, such as, amethyst, , bloodstone citrine, chalcedony, agate, car- nelian, chrysoprase, rose quartz smoky quartz, opal, cats eye. hyalite, and prase.5 Twenty-four foreign countries and nearlv everv state in the union are represented by speci mens in the collection. WiU Play Tonight f v. f 'A Wix.v:s:sX)c-: Pictured above is Lamar Stringfield, who will offer a flute solo of Bernard Roger's "Solilo quy" at the concert of the little symphony orchestra of the North Carolina Symphony Society. DEAN DISCUSSES USES OF LIBERAL RELIGION TO MAN Skinner Continues Lecture Series on New Religious Concepts at Inn Last Night. "What can liberal religion do for men and women?" asked Professor Clarence R. Skinner in his lecture on liberal religion at the Carolina Inn last night. The first great service which iberal religion can render is to make their religion harmonious with the rest of their lives. The second great service is progress- iveness. Religion is crawling along behind our material life," Skinner asserted. "Finally,, lib eral religion covers all phases of ife, rather than being confined to simply the narrow aspects of individualism." In elaborating on these points, Professor Skinner said that lib eral religion makes possible cer tain concepts of religion to the modern world which finds it im possible to accept the old literal interpretations. A liberal re ligion gives a "more rational method of religious thinking to tho'se students who have rejected the older doctrines and interpre tations and offers a program for problems of the world," he said. Debate Tryouts Monday Tryouts for Team to Meet University Of Pittsburgh WU1 Take Place Monday Night. Tryouts for the debate with the University of Pittsburgh will take place Monday night, Janu ary 23 at 9:00 o'clock in room 214 Graham Memorial. The subject for debate is "The Can cellation of War Debts.". The Pittsburgh team will debate here January 31. There will be a radio debate with the University of Virginia at Richmond in February. The subject will be "Resolved: That the safety-responsibility plan as revised by the American Auto mobile Association be adopted." DAILY TAR HEEL STAFF MEMBERS GET PASSES Members of the staff of The Daily Tar Heel who received passes for meritorious work last week were: Milton Stoll, of the editorial board, and Robert Page, Phillip Hammer, and Nel son Lansdale, reporters. Two of the reporters had more than 100 inches of written matter in the paper. These passes are award ed every week through the cour tesy of E. Carrington Smith. r'm FORUM ENDORSES NOMINATION FOR VICE-PRESIDENCY Student Representative Organi zation Ratifies Nomination of Dr. Louis R. Wilson. At the meeting of the Union Forum, Wednesday, a resolution to endorse Dr. Louis R. Wilson's nomination as vice-president of the University was unanimously passed. Dr. Wilson was nominated for vice-presidency December 12, by a committee appointed by O. Max Gardner. If he accepts the nomination, he will take office July first of this year. Discuss Entertainment Program Student entertainment pro grams were discussed. E.C. Daniel, president of the forum, gave an account of the nature and expenditures of the pro grams this year and asked stu dent advice for the programs of next year. Discussion of a var sity show was postponed. The text of the resolution, a copy of which was sent to Dr. Wilson, is as follows: "Be it resolved that the Union Forum, the most representative student organization on the cam pus, recognize the nomination of Dr. Louis Round Wilson as vice- president as a fitting resumption of his association with the Uni versity. It is the earnest hope of this organization that he will accept this highly deserved tri bute from those who have known and nrosnered bv his rarA abili ties as a builder, counsellor, and executive." XT A HH X til Hi KK nm i "rrr mvAirrtn rrt PI ANNF1) TONIGHT Daily Tar Heel Staff Members To Make Brave Attempt to Do Awa With Very Dull Care. , Copy, headlines, ads, and type writers, gosh, darn, and other mild words, and perhaps even puns, will be forgotten tonight, at least for several hours, as members of the Daily Tar Heel staff gather in Graham 1 Me morial to enjoy the editorial and business staff's annual smoker. The affair is set for 10:00 o'clock. Committee at Work The smoker committee, chosen for its ability to do marvels sec onds before the deadline, has been working two days in lin ing up an interesting fare, both intellectually and menu-ly. Following the entertainment in Graham Memorial, the mem bers of the staffs will be the guests of the Carolina theatre, through the courtesy of E. Car rington Smith, at a special show ing of a feature movie,. "Mum my." . . The purpose of the affair is to get members of different divis ions of the staff better acquaint ed and to make better contact than can be formed in the bustle of the office. Nineteen in Infirmary The infirmary list continued to hold a high mark yesterday with nineteen confined. Those con fined were Walter Graham, G. H. Dirkinson, R. B. Hardison, L. T. Dildy, Edith Wladkowsky, R. R. Allsbrook, Lewis Barnes, W. S. Puckett, Joe N. Howard, W. J. McKinnon. B. W. Toler. Louise Pritchard, Lionel Melvin, Lee Ballentine, D. A. Brown, J. P. Beckwith? A. K. Froneberger, W. K. Wright, and Tom Walker.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 20, 1933, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75