Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 20, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1935 The cScial newspaper of the Publications Union Tva ' TTtt cf North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed 'daaceptMcndaysf I fciie a-xivxg, vuumwiw uu epnng iiouaays. Entered as second - matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. O, under act of March 3, ion, fcspscnption price, $j.w tor tag, ceuege year. Business and "editorial ofSces: 204-206 Graham Memorial Telephones: editorial, 4351; basiness, 4356; night, 6906 t , P. G. Hammer, editor . . R. C. Page, Jr., managing editor Yf. L. Hargett, W. H. Wi Anderson, associate editors A. R. Sarratt, Jr., city editor E. L. Kahn, assistant city editor " Butler French, business manager Editorial Board ' I. D. Suss, chairman, J. M. Daniels, D. G. Wetherbee, D. K. McKee Feature Writers W. P. Hudson, N. C. Read , News Editors S. W. Rahb, J. M. Smith, Jr., C. W. Gilmore, W. S. Jordan, Jr., ; R. Sprinkle, J. P. Jonas Office Force P. Harward, E. J. Hamlin, J. A. Brown, L. I. Gardner, R. Howe News Release Newton Craig, director, H. T. Terry, Jr. Exchange editors S. R. Leager, G. O. Butler, W. S. McClelland Senior Reporters H. M. Beacham, W. C. Fields III, S. B. Bradley, H. Goldberg . Heelers r iJay before tomorrow By Jim Daniels Now YOU'RE s Tnll-iri-- To write simply "I love you" is not only to describe an atti tude very badly; it is also to 111 .TODAY'S RELIGION To the Editor, ' The Daily Tab Heel: Dr. Graham's stand on eligi- court a certain amount of mis- bility and his attitude. -toward understanding especially for a subsidization are undoubtedly fellow who likes to keep several right, on the idealistic plane ; any it convictions tnat girls in the proper mood. Women out now can ne expect to carry it transcends the insights of its Religion and the Problem of the Ancient and Modern 'Donald H.: Stewart One of the characteristics of predecessors. Contemporary life is usually critical .of the historic- especially young life. A delight in the unveiling of past inadequacies is characteristic of any 'modern temper, if indeed are justly notorious for their it through? ability to take letters too se- It is true that honor cannot riously. Nevertheless, it is be winked aside on 1 the field quite desirable to cause the ef- while prosecuted in the class- feet which the three little words, room. But how are you going so pregnant with meaning, often to stop such things when almost oroduce. every school does the same . - . ... I I J J 1 J TWw ,, : thing You won't get concerted Pays a serious attention to nis- w t vi w action, I'll bet, on the part of tory at all. The 'modernity' of though himself of the red-backed other - Southern : Conference any phase in the world's life is Icodv of Roeet's Thesaurus in a scnoois. ordinarily very conscious of this npiVhbrr,4 rnnm Tlinno-bt ,hp. " seems to me that falsifying transcendence. But therein lies gat the action; he borrowed the evidence on an eligibiHty blank a trap into which it is easy to honk and returned t his - writ- nas extenuating circumstances fail, which when not avoided incr Sitting down, ho thumbed which' under the practise of the ends in unveiling the fallacy of fhAinn w fnnriri fco aay is justmauie. yn secona the intellectuals, and the un R. P. Brewed T. C. Britt, R. H. Reece, Ruth Crowell, J. H. Silvertson, Mar- Proper division and, witti'much thought,that , it obviouy sUspected: incompetence of the M. B. Carr H. D. jorie Usher, Carl Jeffress, Dick Myers, N. S. Rothschild, J. L. Cobbs, J. a., ward, Hamilton McMillan, Yoit Uilmore, n. H. Hirschfield, W. G. Arey, Otto Whittaker Division managers " J. A. Lewis, circulation, H. F. Osterheld, collections, advertising, T. E. Joyner, local advertising, W. , Eckert and R. Crooks, office Local advertising staff N. W. Bond, C. W. Blackwell, W. D. McLean, P. C. Keel , ' x Staff photographer D. Becker THIS ISSUE: NEWS, R ABB; NIGHT, SMITH lip column. . 1 w i 1 ii 1 v w 1 1 f. I I . v ir w r-i 1 1 1 iiiii 1,1 ir: 1 tii v Trrvrr 'tv -ij-i rtin 1 t-tt - moving, read down, tne ' . 0 " 7 ; " , ; luum.wuwu xlj. strict prmcipieu uasia, uui it rpt1sp nf trans- Soon he found a phrase sense cendence of the past by its very If Dr. Graham can carry on, nature fastens the attention of makes- a fellow wonder. j of appealing sound and insufii ciently indefinite meaning. But, all unknown to him, ebster Jt wlU a credit to himself and modern men upon only those had already defined the phrase the-University -.but if he can't, things in which he differs from he selected, "I am enamoured of it's going to prove that the the part. Its bias is distin -tly you, as being aflame with love. dbt- Archaeologists tell us that you m mi - m: m m A can reconstruct the hie 01 a The ramifications I will function as a committee of Past civilization by . examining a-w. I wv -wr -4 a -f Ann -r vA till I t wajf uu uiu viiaugc vui- amerentiative, ratner man or- rent practises is by letting.down ganic. it separates rather than all the bars and just cease fool- unites the past and present. The ing everybody, including your- moral blind spots of an ances- self . The trouble with the coun- tral ethic in business or politics ; WORLD ne ramincations win function as a committee ot - thlii the try today is that nobody trusts the outworn cosmologies of our cttttfmt Ui w? j vvuHuw uifeumMuu utauo ,i piuuiuw : . . - r anvDOdv else, even m tne w nite 00 ahor vn m.f Qt auui.iuuiu.o " - anybody else, even in the WMte rifp. i 01 a nation, DacK- mutual co-oneration amoner co- "1UC" k Itto - tw Mr TrnmroA k xi.. ..7 1 v.i ...i j.j.wuowa u utu lAiiv v w wirir 1 nu 'j n i;uri r rt i nu naur uto it IJJ UUf WUU VX IsXIW liV VT VI C J. eru ttciuiuiugicai suciety, are ui uynanuc nucleus actively sup-1 w no mean extent. The Dolitical nortins- and standing for the under the stove. Who, however, would expect that the ledger of a village laundry might reveal much about the habits of a 'col lege student of the 20th cen- and moral issues at stake will more progressive and worth- have vast import for the stu- while things in campus life, dents of today who will be for- Expension of co-ed campus red to assume some definite life has brought about a defi- tury? But they will, that is, if Alrrtm flma Hnmrna po.nrrli. some future Dr. tiarland takes , tedlv the final bulwark of a de- nate the functions of each of the a mvwgai. accuiu- rnrlen. form of analism. " arid Women's Organizations. xmmwmw w V -t --- -J I rt T 1. 1 1' ' ' '.11 11 preserving all the bad points of In many: ways the co-eds have ommittee,. wno nao w waiK.aii n.A,TWnny, i0 x at. -i i j tne way to tne ena 01 vameron That: . rvnfi Ot trovernment. IS nnt nno rvtror- n-rt tho mon UnlHon . - brought to the fore and will be Fleece brings together the moat for the information, the subject to the critical eyes of powerful men on the campus but this new generation. remains merely an there will be truth from the attention of 'contemporary life White House," Dr. Graham's Thus the items which attain the proclamation might start the centre of the stage are the 'new' state's , doubting Thomases get- items; the life and thought of ting upset all over again.. P. I. R. COLLEGE PRESS Playmakers (Continued from first pagt here in the summer session and" appeared in the production "I phegenia" in Kenan Stadium,. but this is her first role in a reg ular season production of ' the Carolina Playmakers. South Carolinian Mary Haynesworth of Green ville. S. C appears as Elizabeth Rimplegar. Miss Haynesworth was active in dramatics at Win throp College and has acted for one summer with the Theodora Irvine Studio for the Theatre in New York. As Kitty in "Three Cornered Moon" Charlotte Lane Wright makes her first appearance here. She is from Raleigh. Jenny, the comic maid, will be played by Charlotta De Long of Lewisburg, W. Va. She was interested in dramatic work while a student at Randolph Macon. Bedford Thurman, of Norfolk, Va., will appear as Dr. Ste vens, the male lead in the production. Sports Staff Meeting There will be an important meeting of the sports staff Mon day, afternoon at 1:30 p. m. in 213 Graham Memorial. Failure to attend will mean dismissal from the staff. LOST Package containing three un finished yellow linen napkins. If found please return to 12 Cobb Terrace. PERSONABLE STUDENT Ambi tious, available for any need after 3 p. m. Versatile, can drive. Free Saturdays and Sundays. Inquire at the Daily Tar HeeL Patronize Our Advertisers year Daily ChaUemges r .I. washed 116,000 pairs of men's The Faculty honorary .. a-: t to-day get set over against the life and thought of yesterday, and history is discounted . in favor of 'life' (modernity) Thus the deed is done, and the modern temper swings on in its naive complacency talking about its 'freedom from the apron strings, of an outworn past.' Yet long ago it was seen by Zl BC"";7"- " . rT al" ; t" Jawers, 75,000 undershirts, and For year's Stanford's austere one who was himself the great The present-day collegian, order rather than attempting to - . ' , . ... ..a est transcendence of life bv Life. j.i,uuu y . xj. o. i.ax.xi.y iiao uccu iiuxuiiig ujj wn- " r From these fibres. Martians Daily as a horrible blotch on the that ' wise steward bringeth . ' 4r,QiiaH T.nf,cairtYi,c rp iortn irom nis treasures tniners objectively U,e society of wh ch tee used to serve as a group of dropping liteless ; - nw and od., And he who he is a part, will recognize the organization presidents to pro- earth in the year 4,000A D. complained of . mis- saw, this performed what much grave implications in the present mote the welfare of Carolina will concludethat the Umver- SZlLSTaiuJaJStod modernity omits-he kept the mi . e i : -u ii vn nn aco cit-ir nf JnTTr r.QrrvliTia tndpnt. speiiea names xna- Ullb quoteu J f brought up on a diet of anti-mil- effect reforms in University life, itarism and forced to consider The Student Activities Commit- war. Tne SUpernciai issues De- CIUDS ana activities; uuu, uinc& pitjr. ui j.uxhi xixxi, uuuiv - . pnnilihrimn htwPPTi a rriHral ing spread abroad by propa- it meets within the next year must have been a very fierce . sensitiveness to the inadeauacies natural ucaiuic ucwusc uj. mo com ' I -p ij t u t shocks of hair which grew on his the' effect that said faculty could r J" 7'; , , ...... A . . . Z. -l- wiau o ,ar. Mn,nn0 m2 " with the new) , and at the cnesi aue 10 tne iaci max. ne cranda from both sides fade into or two, it will die .i insignificance alongside the death. nf Vip rio-Tif rtf anv nation to assume the role nAROT.TNA . "1C didn't wear undershirts to keep newspaper man can- an unaer of a missionary in spreading its THEATRE own political philosophy. Rather consider that "civiliz ing influence" in this case means only a galaxy of armed men, tanks, airplanes, backed up by noison crasses and bombs : an that Prof. E. Car rington Smith and his famous Franklin street class- same time preserved the heart . , . . nrirl mre nf flip 't.rnp' wliinVi In v The B. V. graauate stall proved to be ir ; . , " . , A him warm in winter the last, straw. t.p ii r;m , ttv ruu scientificly conceived tradition, while. But then they'll recall Tne Daily now throws down t J , ,. t , ' . i - v i . i m r r tr-mn mr . t r-mmir. r-r t o t-i mrm rw mr v - mrsm pattips iti fnr much student .1. . i - -ft -j. j th o-niiTiTof lionrroa VMccujr ireipcwduug liic ,T::r:T znaz xne university was a co-eu .w"6T.r with" the 'new'K aiscussion unuer tiie iauiiuai : 4-i4..,4.: 1 aia -u-i- v. mroiessoriai nonv t.o mmn ptp v ' i. i 1 .j i,T' oi . r. , Unlv so can life and nistorv v m behind the inadequate and un- topic-heads Tnonoply and artlip, . mentioned were write and edit one issue of charging what the traffic will aort of ' f emimne - unmen- PaPer. hpnr" it. ia a wftll-lmnwn factL- :. iTiflnfltifl That woflms tn wpaprvp 7 - I tionaoies. v - - : that the local Carolina theater degeneration witn a coaxing 01 geUthe pictures patronizes the pretty words. In supporting . or decrying this conflict, we must realize the future effect of the spread of fascism with its attendant evil of continual emphasis upon eco nomic imperialism and a place in the sun. We must realize that the student activities, and offers a lot for 30 cents a fling. Thirty cents is a nominal sum and in the long runs gets the student about twice as much as the could at any other place. Man- TWO YEARS AGO TODAY Compiled from the files of the Daily Tar Heel preserve their organic connec tion. But the spirit of any 'modernity' easily misses this fact. For it is the mark of the 'modern' to emphasize the dis- "America Speaks" parateness between his culture Woodrow Wilson once said, and those that preceded it. His Stanford's faculty has rarely had such an opportunity. The Stanford Daily. Public opinion has no vehicle for its judgments, no quick chan nels for its action. Constitu- (Continued on last page) POE'S AUTO Sales & Service Dealer for DE SOTO AND PLYMOUTH Service at Reasonable Prices 117 North Columbia Street Chapel Hill, N. a Guaranteed repair service for any make of car. Brake relinin? serv ice, washing, polishing, aad greas ing. PHONE 6581 f A R O L IN A v THEATRE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22nd DOORS OPEN AT 11 P. M. "Floetenkonzert Von Sanssouci,, An interesting t story of the great German Leader, Fred eric the Great. our A group of students niet and A i . ager Smith obviously has a good recommended suspension of a Ttir.i Z ta I , . - . . . Wiiijr wiicix U 13 ICHCSllCU HI imng, out xw& givcu i classmate lor violating the honor every turn of turn. i?or instance, we isjiuw svtPni . v,0 c,iT,f , ,. , , standards of industrial civiliza- w .i,. l,., taW ...7 -.--w wuv ana cordial and easily attained A u. . aciea accordingly. . .ditor Uarr nndprtandino- tinn rflnnnt bp. thp enitome of: v,tttc -.'-cf . , .. . . unaerstanamg -l - I IflSSHS .1111 KCVCldi 1W I UOb bU anin 1-1 - nltinn i- -CA- I ii. . -,. n - ixouuo cxx acuuu 111 ii. XX UxlL-uaK I Tuhr . " --A - crowd tnem m ms scneuuie ior editorial, calling there is to be an armed defense a -nay showing, whereas Action between those govern and those who are m Definite governed." Wilson has not been of T oo I or nromulaation of that tvne of ;. ia r w itne omy great statesman or " c omer uieauts wuuxuxx , -xx Commitpo . i.rcrox pnnnlifv -1 .r , . , - i,0 -u-a V vj writer wno nas ODserved tne the showfor less than a three- the negTO in NRA. . Don Shoe-Lrvir,. ne,d of an day stand. maker makes one of his rare Ui,rt-;fof;,r ;i,- ... , , , , l uiuiiWrUYC cvxxu. xxuxx-pax -xoail CA- There are disadvantages about speeches, reviewing merits of nrpSSimi nf the nnhlin nniTifn warrants Paving a moving picture palace his magazine before freshmen... an aid toward 'furthering the: in a cuiieg. tuwii, cpxai ur. murcmson suggests nnan- cauSe of representative govern when the students take in every cing public works. . . University ment in the United "States:"' Wax show to the neglect of more im- janitors put under NRA code, ter Lippmann, Theodore Roose- portam. uujecis. xut wucn ue minor, seeded number one, vpIt .Tamec? Brvce and other pha Kappa Gamma, movies are carefully selected by advances, in fall net tourney. . . men 0f equal prominence1 arid Dunham, diminutive importance in the field of gov- . xi ;n .""'' I . ... - -- . in ernment and journalism nave en- mxtmnilims & Co. QUIZ BOOKS STATIONERY culture. We must realize that planning is necessary to insure enduring neace. We must realize that the ideal of peace united action. EUBANKS DRUG CO. Dependable prescriptionist three licensed druggists . in charge , Parker Pens Martha Washington and ' Nunnally's Candies- xirmuvKi The recent organ ! ization here of Al- r UKVYArvU national co-ed leadership fra- the cinema goer (and the local Wally ternity should mark' one of the theater has variety enough for freshman, thrills spectators greatest advances of recent discrimination), a college .movie irosn football, practise, with visioned this need, but until re years; in women's student wel- plays an important educative long runs. . Tau Beta Pi taps cently "American public opinion fare. ' " part.. Our prof essors are ardent six new engineering students. . . w hpen :left almost entirely un- With a membership consisting movie fans and they get some- Graham and Pierson off to meet- exploited arid .'our government, of the outstanding leader, in thing out cf it because '. they ing of Association of American which should take iritd cbrisid- women's activities, the order choose what they go to seer tTniversitiesr ' (Continued on last page) R a ch m a n in o f f Page Auditorium, Duke University, Durham Thursday, October 31, 8:15 P. M. (Tickets $1.65, $2.20, $2.75 (including tax) (All cheaper tickets already, sold) Phone Duke University F-131, Extension 484 - - , r' Write J. JFoster Barries, Duke University, for reservations 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1935, edition 1
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