Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 5, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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MASS MEETING 10:30 THIS MORNING MEMORIAL HAT J, TEAM SEND-OFF 9:20 TONIGHT SWAIN HALL CHAPEL HILL, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1933 NUMBER 12 WWW S M1W A IT; mm ftnr i fti a r 1 I TT. ( HJ if rnr TTHf VT TT If i 1 r - i - A Vf n i J Jf u u Football Team Send-Off Schedule Pep Rally For Tar Heel Gndders Will tie Held at Swain. The Carolina football team, which meets Vanderbilt in its first intersectional game of the year Saturday, will be given a rousing send-off in front of Swain hall tonight at 9:20 o'clock- The team is to leave Chapel Hill by bus for Greens boro immediately after. J. Maryon Saunders, secre tary of the Alumni association, will speak briefly to the students and offer encouragement to the team. Cheerleaders to Attend Chief Cheerleader Ernest Hunt will be in charge of the festivities, assisted by members of the cheer-leading staff and other student leaders. The University band will fur nish music for the occasion. Cheerleader Hunt stated last right that, in view of the enthu siastic turnout for the pep meet ing prior to the Davidson game, he was expecting a large at tendance tonight. The meeting- is being spon sored by the University club. OCTOBER NUMBER OF 'REYM? OUT Issue Features University Day, Registration, and Carolina Davidson Game. The October issue of the Alumni Review, edited by J. Maryon Saunders, was released yesterday. Appearing in this first issue of the year are special features in the new changes in the Uni versity faculty, University Day, registration, and the Carolina Davidson football game. A spe cial section is given, over to the faculty and alumni. Featuring in the first article on the faculty changes is the ap pointment of T. Smith MeCor kle as head of the music depart ment, Dr. W. Reece Berryhill as head of the infirmary, and Wil liam J. Miller as acting dean of the Engineering school. A section is given over to the student union and the act of making the General Alumni as sociation members of the union. The defeat of Davidson by the Carolina football team is taken up in detail in the sport section of the number and considerable detail is given to Carolina's fu ture in the state football race. Coach C. C. Collins writes an article in these pages, telling about the game from the coach's bench. Considerable space is given over in the book to the Univer sity alumni, telling of their re cent accomplishments -in the state and world, and several pages in the first of the issue tell f the happenings around the campus. - . Husbands Have Son Mr. and Mrs. Beri Husbands announce the birth of a son, Herman Hamilton, at Duke Uni versity hospital last Friday. Husbands is a member of the staff of Registrar Thomas J. son, Jr. . . ht jl GROUPS TO FORM CHEERIO SECTION University Club, Thirteen Club, Sheiks And Minotacrs to Meet To gether Tuesday. The regular meeting of the University club will not take place tonight, but is scheduled to take place in conjunction with the joint meeting next Tuesday night of the Sheiks, Minotaurs, and the Thirteen club, sopho more social orders. The purpose of the joint ses sion will be to make plans for the formation of a special cheerio section for the promo tion of cheering among upper classmen at the Georgia-Carolina football game October 14. As expressed at its inaugura tion last May, the University club's basic purpose is to foster a greater spirit of loyalty to the University. The attempt to form a cheering section is included. SCHOOLS SPONSOR PUBLIC LECTURES ON RECOVERY ACT Murchison Begins Series With Talk Tonight on "The Nature Of the Emergency." A series of public lectures on the National Recovery Program for the student body and the Chapel Hill community is being sponsored by the department of economics and commerce with the cooperation of the sociology department and the law school. The first lecture will be this evening at 8:00 o'clock in the Bingham hall auditorium. Prof. C. T. Murchison will speak on "The Nature of the Emer gency." The lectures will be limited to one hour or less. All the lecturers will be fac ulty members except Dr. G. W. Forster of N. C. State College, who has been included because of his unusual qualifications to discuss the agricultural relief measures. He has been serving the Agricultural Adjustment Administration in working out codes for the tobacco sales and other industries. Lecture Schedule The lectures will continue after tomorrow on successive Thursdays at the same time and plaQe. The schedule of lectures after tomorrow is as follows: October 12, "The Industrial Re covery Act," Prof. H. D. Wolf; October 19, "Agricultural Re lief," Prof. G. W. Forster; Oc tober 26, "Monetary and Bank ing Reform and Inflation," Prof. C. T. Murchison; November 2, "International Aspects of the Problem," Prof. E. R. Zimmer man; November 9, "The Ten nessee Valley Development," Prof. T. T. Woof ter ; November 16, "The Constitutional and Le gal Questions Involved in the Program," Prof. R. H. Wettach; November 23, "Philosophy and an Appraisal of the Program," Dean D. D. Carroll. Buccaneer Copy Contributors to the Carolina Buccaneer must have their copy in by tonight at- 8 :00 o'clock. A Song Of Our Own -o AN EDITORIAL Every student in the Univer sity, every member of the fac ulty and administrative forces, and all those connected with the athletic department should make it a point to be present with the athletic department in Memorial hall this morning at . 10 :30. The long awaited Carolina song is to be presented to the student body in an effort to as certain its reaction to the work as written by Kay Kyser, the University's greatest cheer leader. Kyser has presented two tunes for the University's approval and a capacity audi ence is urged in order that some opinion can be reached. Last year much was said about the song committee which met frequently and accomplish- STUDENTS BADLY INJUREDTUESDAY IN CARTURNOYER Carolina Freshmen in Duke Hos pital Following Accident Near Hope Valley Club. Sidney Minor of Danville, Va., and Maurice Hoggard of Lewis ton, University freshmen, were seriously injured in an auto mobile wreck Tuesday night on the private road leading from the Hope Valley Country Club, near Durham. " ; Minor, driver of the car which belonged to his father, Col. S. W. Minor, was the more seriously injured with a frac tured skull. He had not re gained consciousness late yes terday afternoon in the Duke hospital, where the patients are staying. Girls Were Hurt With the two students were Miss Frances Stephens and Miss Maude Dunn, both of Durham. Miss Stephens received a frac tured leg and Miss Dunn was badly bruised and one of her legs thought to be fractured also. Hoggard received contusions and bad bruises. The accident occurred about 10:30 o'clock. The party had just left the club house and at the end of the second sharp curve, the car veered off into the golf course, overturning three or four times. It landed right side up. All were rendered uncon scious. Hoggard, the first to recover, stumbled to a nearby farm house and telephoned the hospital for an ambulance. According to the recovered patients, Minor was driving carefully and fairly slowly, the accident being caused by his un f amiliarity with the dangerous turns. No Assembly Tomorrow No assembly- program is scheduled for tomorrow morning to allow all students who have borrowed from the loan fund or who expect to borrow from the loan fund to meet in Gerrard hall. Avcock 'Meets i An organization meeting of the residents of Aycock dormi tory will take place tonight in Graham t Memorial at 9:00 o'clock. ed nothing. The net result of the group's work was to give in spiration to The Daily Tab Heel to see that something def inite was done. The newspaper has corresponded with Kyser j regularly and the two contribu tions to be offered thi3 morning are the outcome. Carolina needs a good battle song and one which would be original. "Hark the Sound" is our anthem now, but Vanderbilt, Cornell, and others can claim the same tune. Now we have an opportunity to hear and pass judgment on something that would be our own. Anyone with the interests of the University at heart can not allow anything to keep him from Memorial hall this morning. BOARD CONVENES TO CONSIDER FEE REDUOTN PLAN P. U. Board to Discuss Reduction Of Yackety Yack Fees For Upperclassmen. The Publications Union board will meet this morning at 10 :30 o'clock in Bingham hall to con sider the reduction of Yackety Yack fees for members of the upper classes, it was announced yesterday by Bill Eddleman, president. ' According to Eddleman, a sur plus remains from last year's operations to which the board is unwilling to add this year. Con sequently, a reduction of income or a corresponding increase in expenditures is being consid ered. Last year members of the jun ior and senior classes were as sessed one-half dollar extra to cover expenses of the annual and the dances. A reduction of the amount to be used for Yackety Yack expenses would give a lar ger amount for use in the dance program. The board has already in creased expenditures by voting for a payment of salaries to city editors of The Daily Tar Heel and by increasing the budgets of' the newspaper photographic bureau and the Yackety Yack photographic department. A salary has also been voted to the managing editor of the lat ter publication. In addition to the fee ques tion, the board will also consider recommendations from the man aging editor of the newspaper for the purchase of several new typewriters for office use and the addition of other office equip ment. ! McLeod on Council At the weekly session of the student council Monday night, Graham McLeod was chosen as carry-over member from the senior class to take the place of Benton Bray, who did not return to school this fall. Senior Executive Committee Vergil Weathers, president of the senior class, yesterday an nounced that there would be a meeting of the executive com mittee of the senior class at chapel period today in Gerrard hall. ' Archie Davis Orchestra To Flay Pieces At 10:30 PROCTOR CHOSEN AS I. R. C. LEADER Unanimously Elected President at First Sleeting of Tear Last ' Tuesday Xigfct. Ben Proctor was elected pres ident of the International Rela tions club at the first meeting of the year, held Tuesday night. Proctor has served as tempo rary chairman of the group. He was unanimously elected presi dent by the small group that was present. An open discussion on the plans and the program for the coming year took place, and an executive committee was ap pointed by the new president. All freshmen and students in terested in becoming members of the club are asked to attend the next meeting. This year the group will not only consider in ternational problems but also problems of local interest. HENDERSON SAYS THERE IS CRYING NEED FORREFORM Noted British Speaker Deplores Situation in First Talk Here Yesterday Afternoon. "The crying need of social re form and Great Britain's effort to supply it," was the theme of Arthur Henderson in his speech in Manning hall yesterday aft ernoon. "We have too much of the good things of life," said Henderson. "People are going hungry; we are burning wheat and coffee by the thousands of .tons. People are going cold for the want of clothing; yet almost countless pounds of cotton are being de stroyed. 'There are over thirty million unemployed heads of families. With their depend ents, they constitute the amaz ing total of about 100,000,000. Obviously, something must be done." Making a Mistake He went on to say that we are 1 making a mistake in not imagin ing that the unemployed and those on the verge of unemploy ment are beginning to wonder. "Even in the days of Queen Elizabeth, Great Britain had some sort of poor law legisla tion, and in 1911 it was still in operation." The present system of unem ployment insurance and work men's compensation was intro duced by England's great Prime Minister, Lloyd George, as a re sult of a great popular demand for, social justice. Henderson explained that on each work man's card, there had to be af fixed a stamp for every week's labor. These stamps had to be licked by the workmen, and the ! fastidious taste of the aristoc racy was off ended. Workmen's Compensation As Henderson explained the operation, workmen must donate a part of their week's wages to unemployment and health insu rance,, this donation usually about the American equivalent of 40 cents. By this scheme- of legislation, if a workman should (Continued on page five) President Graham Will Be Among Notables Attending Today. Kay Kyser's two contribu tions for Carolina's new battle song will be offered this morn--ing in Memorial hall at 10:30 o'clock. Archie Davie and his band will play the songs for the student body in an effort to test the qualities of the tunes. The Daily Tas Heel received the songs from Kyser Tuesday afternoon and turned them over to John Murphy of Charlotte, University student "who orches trates for Davis band. Murphy arranged the tunes for Davis and the latter had his band prac tice all yesterday in order to be able to present the pieces in a peppy, efficient manner. All the members of the orches tra are very much in favor of the music and those students who heard the songs played last night in the Crescent cafeteria were also favorably impressed. University Officials Dean Francis F.Bradshaw will preside over the audition, while President Frank Graham, R. B. (Continued on page five- ' STATE SYMPHONY TO OPEN SEASON Lamar Stringfiefd WTll Conduct Entire First Program at Duke October 27. The North Carolina State symphony will present its first program at Page auditorium, Duke university, Friday night, October 27. - Lamar Stringfield will con duct the entire program. The soloist on the program will be John Powell, pianist. Powell is considered by the leading music critics to be one of the outstand ing American-born pianists. He will play the piano solo parts in his own composition, "Rhapsodie Negre," which was composed for a piano solo with orchestral accompaniment. Sponsored by Charity League The concert will be sponsored by the Charity league of Dur ham. A capacity crowd is ex pected and in view of this, spe cial seats will be reserved for students at reasonable prices. The members of the orchestra are selected from the profes sional and more talented ama teurs in the state. They will as semble in Chapel Hill three days before the concert for rehears als. The program will be: "Mar riage of Figoro Overture," W. A. Mozart; "New World Sym phony" (in cfour movements), A. Dvorak; inter mission ; "Rhapsodie Negre," (composer at the piano), John Powell; and "Marche Slave," Peter Tschai kowsky. Graduate Club Sleeting There will be a general meet ing of the graduate club Friday evening, October 6, at 8:00 o'clock in the lounge of the grad uate club, Smith building. Grad uate students and members of the graduate faculty are invited to be present.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 5, 1933, edition 1
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