Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 7, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pe Two Tuesday, November 7, 1935 Batty tar Zeel The c facial newspaper of the Publications Union Board cf the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act cf March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.0fr for the college year. Claiborn M. Carr Thomas Walker. Marcus Feinstein..... ; -Editor 31anaging Editor ..Business Manager - Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Virgil J. Lee, Jr., chairman, John F. Alexander, A.- T. Dill, Vermont C. Eoyster, F. Pat : Gaskins, Milton K. Kalb, William H. Wang, Robert B. Bolton, Ben C. Proctor, H. Nelson Lansdale, John B. Lindeman, Jean S. Cantrell, W. R. Eddleman, W. C. Idol, Jr., Don Becker, George Malone. FEATURE BOARD Joe Sugarman, chairman, Raymond Barron, Bill Marlowe, Walter Terry. CITY EDITORS Carl Thompson, Phil Hammer, Jack Lowe, Bob Page, Irving Suss, Bob Woerner. DESK MEN Nick Powell, Walter Hargett, Eleanor Bizzell. . SPORTS DEPARTMENT Bill Anderson and Jimmie Morris, co-assistant editors, Morrie Long, Ralph Gialanella, Smith Barrier, Milton L. Scherer, Andrew . L. Simpson, Tom Boat, Jr., J. W. Conner, Alex Mark. EXCHANGE EDITOR W. C. Durfee. REPORTERS Don McKee, Don Wetherbee, John Wig gins, Carl Sommer, Harold Broady, W. W. Boddie, Reed Sarratt, Jim Daniels, Bd Goldenthal, Paul Teal, . George MacFarland, Edwin Kahn, Francis Clingman, Emery Raper, Norman Adelman, John Eddelman, Mar garet McCauley, George Stoney, Margaret E. Gaines, ; Ralph Burgin, Sam Willard. : Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MGR. (Sales) Agnew Bahnson, Jr. ASST. BUSINESS MGR. (Collections) Joe C. Webb. OFFICE MANAGERS L. E. Brooks, James Barnard. DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE F. W. Smith. LOCAL ADVERTISING STAFF Butler French, Esley Anderson,, Hugh Primrose, Melvin Gillie, Phil Singer, Robert SeinicS. CIRCULATION MGR. Ralto Farlow. CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: JACK LOWE Tuesday, November 7, 1933 North Carolina is dry, and North Carolina will stay dry until the legislature does something. We don't think that the legislature , will do any thing at all as regards prohibition in this state. There is a host of people who will vote for repeal on the strength of their beliefs in states' rights ; the majority of them will strongly uphold state prohibition on the strength of their convictions against personal rights. The sentiment of the electorate is predominately dry as regards them selves and their neighbors. Our politicians know this. They know that they will lose votes from the militant prohibi tionists if they should attempt to repeal the Turlington act. Since the business of the poli tician is vote-getting a deplorable business at best we feel sure that our honorable legisla tors will sit back and let the Turlington act ride until hell freezes over or until Clyde Hoey has a change of heart, which amounts to the same thing. So our lovers of spiritous liquors must con tinue to patronize local bootleggers, getting re lief from Dr. Berryhill. Let us hope the Steel Bridge will in some way help us . out after the conservative state of Virginia has shown herself to be more modern than North Carolina. J.B.L. Speaking The Campus Mind cause they just hate to owe money. In short, they are the college nuisances, the persons who, when they open your door, cause you to close up your possessions, and to remark with a certain de gree of relish: "Ink? Oh, Tm terribly sorry. - Just used the last bit I, have to fill my foun tain pen." MAN BITES DOG By Lonnie DUl Books on The New Plan The changes of curricula proposed by the fac ulty and now under discussion are and should be matters of vital concern othe students, since in the final analysis it is they who are most concerned and who will be the most affected by any such change. The faculty, particularly desires student opin ion on the proposals and for this purpose the Di senate and Phi assembly are meeting together Tuesday evening. It has heen suggested that the Unionj forum might meet to discuss the matters involved in these suggestions. As feuch changes are to be made for the con venience of the students and at the expense and sacrifice of a great deal of labor by the faculty the least that the students can do is to attempt to give an intelligent opinion regarding the faults of the present curricula and the needs for reform. To give an intelligent and practical opinion on the faculty recommendations the stu dent should have some knowledge of what other colleges such as the University of Chicago have done i in similar circumstances. Students are urgecj to inquire for such information at the library where a special shelf of books on related matter has been collected. Noivv is the chance for those students who have continually found fault with the organization of their courses to make their findings valuable by siiperimposng upon them constructive sug gestions. W.R.E. , Unfounded Fears . The plan submitted by the faculty committee for reorganizing the present curriculum has been much "cussed" and discussed at faculty meetings and among students. As with any new idea opposition has already appeared. The students seem to fear that it will mean an in creased limitation of choice in the first two years. This fear, according to our understand ing of the plan, is unfounded. The members of the faculty who oppose the plan feel that the advantages existing under the status quo will be lost without there being any assurance that a gain will result from the new plan. The new plan, as all curricula should be, is built to give the student the greatest possible opportunity for a real education consistent with the resources of the University. The object of the plan as we understand it is to acquaint the student with each field of learning and to allow the student, after suf ficient training in fundamentals, to develop his talents in the field most suitable to him. Each department will be given a fair chance to demon strate to the student the benefit -to be gained from pursuing the course of study offered under its administration. This "new (leal" if made should be a square deal; and really, what de partment has the right to ask for more? G.H.M. The Impending Repeal Vote It makes little practical difference to the sov ereign state of North Carolina and the citizenry thereof which way. tne voting today goes. We will either jump on the band wagon, or we will bark at the turning wheels in a vain attempt to register our disapproval of individual rights. Decadent and Don't Know It Editor, the Daily Tar Heel: One of the most flagrant manifestations of. the incompetency and infantility of the staff of the Daily Tar Heel asserted itself in this Sunday's edition of that paper, in which the announcement of the Carolina team's victory over State was accorded extremely large head lines. It has long been the opinion and con-r tention of many that those who comprise the aforementioned staff are incapable of turning out a publication in accordance with all sense of intelligence and proportion. To assume that a victory in a football game is more worthy of note than any other college event that has taken place this year is basically fallacious, but ad mittedly in keeping with the entire policy of the present Daily Tar Heel. When it was first announced that changes in the college curriculum were being considered, no such glaring headlines decorated the front page. To assume that a curriculum change does not as vitally affect the college as a football game is obviously to err. However, we may also add that this attitude is well on its way to permeate every aspect of campus life. The gradual decadence which is facing this once excellent institution is merely another evidence of the destructive powers' of such an attitude. When Carolina was faced with the prospect of a disastrous football season, cries of woe were heard from all sections, but when, on the other hand, Carolina actually lost some of its most renowned and learned pro fessors, no such gloomy attitude on the part of the students was manifest. The answer is self-evident. Carolina, once proud to be known on the basis of its academic achievements, is now making a direct volte face. Carolina now wishes renute on the basis of its endeavors on the football field, and the Daily Tar Heel seems very kindly disposed toward furthering this condition. R. H. With Contemporaries The Dormitory Nuisance (Louisiana State Reveille) They are in every university and in every dormitory, those chronic borrowers who forget to return. Thev are the nprsnna whn n v x- fcF T (1AV V VI buy things themselves, who go through college using other persons' soap and other persons' stamps and stationery. They are the co-eds who bring a little box to get "just a speck" of your best face powder, or ask for just a whiff of your $10-an-ounce per- lume. They are the boys who would like to borrow a tube of shaving cream or toothpaste, and will pay you back as soon as they get a chance to run into town. They are the ones who borrow your can' opener or your alarm clock, and a week later cannot remember borrowing it, but if they did wiey sureiy must nave returned it." A month later they usually find the article beneath a pile of papers, or in a corner of the closet, and re turn it grinning, without apologies, declaring mat it was tneir roommates' fault. They collect a pile of your magazines in their rooms, and lend them out to their friends, with a word about being sure to return them because the responsibility of. someone else's property weighs "so heavily on the mind." They relieve you of a dime or a quarter ask ing you to please remind them to pay you be- Now Really Appropriate Two new boom towns in Tex as , and Nebraska, named res pectively New Deal and Blue Eagle, are enthusiastic exam ples of the popularity of .the Roosevelt administration, but the naming craze has. begun to extend even to individuals. The number of offsprings whom fond parents have dubbed Franklin Delano has taken a decided upward trend, and from Lawrence, Mass. comes the news that a "mother who wit nessed an NRA parade was forthwith inspired to name her latest baby girl Nellie .1 Rose -Angela. But from the old home state comes this all-inclusive patriotic gesture: A son was recently born to Ed Banner, head waiter at the Blue kidge Hotel In Mt. Airy, and you guessed it the kid has been christened Star Spangled. - High, Wide and Hansom William H. .Hamilton just couldn't get in a taxicab with out having his hat crushed in and an uncomfortable feeling that the top of the taxi was rest- ing-r well, practically on his ears, . The remedy for this de plorable tendency, decided Wil liam H. Hamilton, who, by the way, is a former officer of New .York's Guaranty Trust Co., meant nothing less than to im port his own taxicab. And so he did one of those old-fashioned cabs from London which, if not exactly stream-lined, at least allow plenty of head room. No more crushed toppers for William H. Hamilton, who may be seen on occasion driving in his antique about Gramercy Park. . But this department at least thought that financiers lost their hats in the stock mar ket, not in taxicabs. Small Talk To Billy Arthur, who is now pounding out a daily column on the New Bern Tribune, we're indebted for another side-light on the wet-and-dry issue. The diminutive former cheerleader, who evidently shares our fond ness for reading second-and-third-page news items, com ments on the fact that the Ger man authorities have put a ban on this summer's song hit, "Lazy Bones," because it encourages idleness and there fore is contrary to Nazi ideals. "Which all," adds pocket -edition Billy, "might give the drys an idea to suggest the abolition of 'Sweet Adeline' because it encourages something or other. the news and seems to have been consigned to the category of the one that got away. An expedi tion; armed with cameras to photograph "Amy," as it has been affectionately called, re turned empty-handed of evi dence: The latest Associated Press dispatch, which brought this reassuring news to . suffer ers from D. TVs, mentions, how ever, .that the expedition was 'headed by Archie Wills, Vic torian newspaperman and fish story expert." Apparently even an expert at it couldn't make this one plausible. REPORTS MADE BY STUDENT WELFARE GROUP AT MEETING (Continued from first page) spoke to the group. He stated that more collections had been made this year from loans than last year. , Recommendations that fresh men students out for boxing be excused1 from gym during that time were sent by the . Admini strative Board to the faculty to be considered. The Administrative Board of the Division of Student Wel fare meets twice a month . and makes plans to promote the work of student agencies, affecting student life. The work of- the board embraces all University relationships other than the formal instruction in class rooms. Student Board Members The student members of the board are Harper Barnes, John Acee, Vergil Weathers, Joe Sug arman, iJack Pool, Haywood Weeks, Irvin Boyle, Edwin La nier, and Claiborn Carr. The faculty members of the board are A. W. Hobbs, Mrs. M. H. Stacy, D. D. Carroll, C. T. Woollen,' R: B. House, W. S. Bernard, W. M. Dey, English Bagby, H. F. Comer, W. R. Berryhill, R. B. Lawson, R. Al Fetzer, J. 21. Saunders, Mayne Albright, and F. F. Bradshawi LOMBARD AND RAYMOND STAR IN "BRIEF MOMENT" "Brief Moment," co-starring-Carole Lombard and Gene Ray mond, will be shown at the Caro lina theatre today. "In the picture, a filmization of S. N. Behrman's Broadway stage play, Miss Lombard plays the role of Abby Fane, cabaret oiugci, ctxiu im) liiuiiu um rule of Rodney Deane, rich and idle SftTi n ervn nl 1 v nrnminonf -fa tyi i ly. . -w gf xf w w-ww kjA&v ii tj Monroe Owsley, Donald Cook, Florence Britton, Arthur Hohl, Reginald Mason, Theresa Max well Conover, Irene Ware, and Herbert Evans, ; TRANSFERS RANK HIGH Dr. C. S. Mangum, dean of the- jnedical school, received a letter- yesterday from Dermot Lohn, a graduate of the class of '32 who was .transferred to Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, reporting that all four of ttie students transferred from the- University to Jefferson in '32 had ended their junior year in the upper half of their class. BUY FROM BLUE EAGLE STORES REWARD Bunch of keys lost between Graduate club and high school: Return to Bill Harris at Grad uate club and receive reward. - R. R. CLARK Dentist Office over Bank of Chapel Hill PHONE 6251 Freak of the Week Girl Who Heard Coyotes Bark Sings in ' Opera, Reaches G Sharp . Headling in Durham Morning Herald. More or less a howling success, say critics. The One That Got Away The prize fish story, of all time is a tall tale concerning a monster sea serpent over 80 eet long, reputed to have reared its ugly head somewhere in the vicinity of Seattle, Wash. But like all fish stories, the sea ser pent has recently faded out of I " C "V W DO OtM MIT I 4 V - r 'ti lt I J- ?M HERE'S FOR YOU! HAVE you the energy it takes, to take things on the run? Eat Shredded Wheat! Just step into your favorite campus eating place anywhere, any time,'and Shredded Wheat will be waiting for you. Wait ing to fill you with all the vital. TTbenyom see Ni Srm Falls en ShrtddetFwbeat. elements found only in whole wheat... the proteins, vitamins, x, minerals, carbohydrates and bran your body demands for natural energy. For Shredded Wheat is 100 whole wheat with nothing added, nothing -. taken away. ; Order two of these golden brown biscuits for your next meal. They're ready cooked, ready to eat. And real money-savers. Just pour on plenty of milk or cream and top with your favorite fruit. An energy food something you'll like something' you'll Keep on liking! THE VITALLY DIFFERENT FOOD J.""1' Wt P mmm pn. - hmk. i - . is y o c n hi mnn u i - I Lza A product of NATIONAL BlicUTT COMPANY "Uneeda Dskers-
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1933, edition 1
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