Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 22, 1939, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 1. ! i I t i HoH i i ! Cdtto! Edit.. J ; Spoi I; ; I IATB . I Lil S ! ':, :; i Last: ' im Ul !: 5m" a j. leas 1 Lib I: mrasc ..; s so o I - Bad consei -jj. tells v as a c;:j: " Foi l nent ; j clarif I libers f; purs Bu stude j tunit ; gainfj j -and 1 j . And j; of fe ll of tl ; ; time. ; twopl alikf dene! I obvi; . i !! quit ter, of i r ciel me: at On . 3ec . cai I shi SU fe? po 1 to ml PAGE TWO . The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel HIH, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C-, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. Business and editorial offices: 204-207 Graham Memorial Telephones: news, 4351; editorial, 8641; business, 4356; night 6906 circulation, 6476. Allen MerrilL Will G. Arey- Clen S. Humphrey, Jr. Jesse Lewis- Editorial Board " Voit Gilmore, Tom Stanbaek, DeWitt Barnett, Walter Kleeman,. Ray mond Lowery. Reporters Morris Rosenberg, Jim McAden, Carroll McGaughey, Jesse Reese, Bill Rhodes Weaver, Donald Bishop, Miss Louise Jordan. Columnists Laff itte Howard, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Adrian Spies, Elbert Hutton Technical Staff Cm Editor: Charles Barrett Assistant: Miss Carroll Costello. News Editoes: Martin Harmon, Ed Rankin, Bill Snider. Night Sports Editors: Fred Cazel, Gene Williams, Rush Hamrick. Associate News Editors: Edward Prizer, Ben Roebuck, Bob Barber. Feature Board Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Sanford Stein, Louis Connor, Larry Lerner, Sam Green, Harry Hollingsworth. Cub Reporters Louis Harris, Miss Doris Goerch, Miss Dorothy Coble, Jimmy Dumbell, Miss Jo Jones, Arthur Dixon, Charles Gerald, Fred Brown, Tom Dekker. Sports Staff Editor: Shelley Rolfe. Reporters: William L. Beerman, Leonard Lobred, Billy Weil, Richard Morris, -Jerry Stoff, Frank Goldsmith, Jim Vawter, Roy Popkin. r Assistant Circulation Manager: Larry. Ferling. Business Staff Technical Manager: Ned Hamilton. Durham Advertising Manager: Gilly Nicholson. ' Assistants: Andrew Gennett, Bill Brunner. Local Advertising Manager Unit 1: Bill Ogburn. Assistants: Rufus Shelkoff, Bill Schwartz, Bill Orr, Allen Headlee, Grady Stevens, Jack Dillon, Tom Nash, Warren Bernstein. ..-,. ...... t . Local Advertising Manager: Unit 2: Bert Halperin. Assistants: Bob Sears, Alvin Patterson, Irv Fleishman, Floyd Whit ney, Morton Ulman. Office Managers: Stuart Ficklen, Jim Schleifer. Assistant Office Manager: Bob Lerner. . : ' Office Staff: Mary Peyton Hover, Phil Haigh, L. J. Scheinman, Bill Sterin, Charles Cunningham, James Garland, Jack Holland, Mary Ann Koonce, Lan Donnell, Dave Pearlman. ,. - . For This Issue: NEWS: MARTIN HARMON SPORTS: GENE WILLIAMS o Call To Arms Student bodies in colleges and universities throughout the ' nation are being probed by . various organizations and move ments to concentrate their' attention on the political world, to find a philosophy of action, and then to act on behalf of democracy. Among these organizations are the National Student Fed eration of America that recently distributed for signatures the "Re-Declaration of American Faith," intiated by Dorothy Thompson, Herbert Agar and Hamilton Fish Armstrong as an admirable parody on the orginal declaration in opposition to the spread of totalitarian doctrines. Another among these organizations is the Student Opin ions Survey of America that, last week, found student apTv proval and disapproval throughout the nation almost equally . divided on the question: "Do you approve of the United States selling planes to the so-called democratic countries and not the so-called dictator countries?" The struggle of intercollegiate student organizations is to actively awaken student interest so that it may carry in fluence and prestige, may unbiasedly solve political problems " threatening the unstable status quo, and call to intellectual " arms students of the nation anxious to preserve democracy. . - These various movements, including a number of others . whose mail fills our desk each day, have recognized that, in order for the democratic ideal to withstand the subtle threats of the ambitious dictators, positive action of the people who '.."take the pleasant state" of affairs for granted is unquestion-?- ' aoly necessary. We see the principle of positive, rather than negative democracy at work on the campus no less than on the international scene. Campus participants so vitally interested in this re-awakening for democracy are found in forums, Town Meetings, campus organizations, and class rooms. For Chapel Hill to be a leader in the wider national movement, the call to the intellectual arms cannot be ignored. No Discrimination A recent letter to the editor informed out of state students that their welcome would be a more general one if they show ed greater restraint and less haste in their efforts to revolu tionize the domestic affairs of the University. This letter was the result of a controversy issuing from the Interracial Discussion group held last week. Some hot-headed statements were exchanged of state students feel that an unjust slur was cast upon them by the distinction thus cited. In all fairness it seems only right to say this: within the student body there is no discrimination made between in the state students and those from out of the state. The Univer sity is none the less dear to those students who come from beyond the borders of North Carolina ; .they have chosen their Alma Mater because they thought it was the best school, not just because it was convenient or cheap; because they wanted what Carolina had to offer, and consequently they are as much entitled to a voice in the affairs of the Univer sity as any native born student. When they come here they .Editor Managing Editor Business Manager .Circulation Manager T by both sides. A great many out THE DAILY FROM ALL PART! By WALTER Prize name for a column "Cher- chez La Fluzie," from the De Paulia , The Tech Echo wants to nomin ate Herr Joseph Goebbels as the next dictator of Turkey . . . A. T. Van Court writes the basketball stories for the Daily Princetonian ... A mock 'dictator day" at Hunter college re sulted in a one-word student news paper . . . the lonesome jetsam float ing in a white sea was "CENSORED" . Oregon State college has just re ceived a stuffed moose from, appro priately enough, the Loyal Order of Moose . . . Franklin and Marshall col lege expects a certain number of apples . . . they include in tuition charges the fees for the four major dances. A few stories are going around by the fairly new Mrs. Hal Kemp. From the Ring-Tum-Phi come these: In the first place Miss Brenda. Di ana Duff Frazier, the much-publicized debu tramp from NYC is the sub ject for both. Mrs. Kemp asserts that Brenda was far from being a glamour girl when she went to prep school. As a matter of fact her ankles were so big that she had to have several operations on them to cut 'em down to normal, the result being that she has a scar on each leg resembling a perpetual seam in her stocking. And they always photograph her sitting down, because she is too tired to get up. And then there is the time that Mrs. Hal met Brenda in "21": "Oh, there's Martha," said Brenda, 'Tell me, what does the wife of an orchestra leader do?" (Slightly down the nose) "What does any wife do?" quoth Mrs. Kemp which silenced B. D. D. F. Or should , have. The Critograph contributes this essay selection: "When we go camping we must keep the place neat, we must be very Hail And Beware By HENRY NIGRELLI Professor Garrett once asked a freshman to write a paper on "Lenin;" the young lad went out and fter plowing through several encyclo pedias, he emerged with a disserta tion on linen. John Creedy sent Mr. Pugh a val entine which bore the following in scription: "Will you be mine, my valentine?" Creedy added to this, "I love you too, you..........." A coed was heard Sunday after noon in conversation with another: . . . and I kinda wanna go to the show. It's such a pretty day, I hate to study." . . . Doris Goerch says that her ambition in life is to have fun class-room boner: "What does the law do to a man who has killed his wife for being unfaithful to his wife? . . . it is difficult to distinguish between the state prison in Raleigh and Mere dith college . . . Marshal Suther (transfer from Hampden-Sidney) is reputed to have one of the best minds Ion the campus . . . Sam Morton (of Graham Memorial Grill) must be get ting better looking since so many new girls have begun to frequent the Grill . .'. it is rumored that our Bob Madry is being boomed for assistant comp troller . . . Margaret Evans and Charlie Lerche are more in love than ever ... Dean Pierson, who recently j appeared on the UNC Round Table broadcast in Raleigh, has been getting fan mail; he says that he is having the time of his life . . . Bill Pearson is gaining support . . . don't forget to pay Mr. Evans by Feb. 27. For those who have not read The New Yorker : International gossip: Hitler was assasinated in Hamburg in November or December of 1935 and the man now appearing in his place has been one of four carefully selected doubles a great deal of Chamberlain's confu sion at the Munich conference was a direct result of his sudden realiza- il i il - 1 1 J u i lion xnau me man ue uuu ueiiuuga fmit-Vi VioVii-n 1rvcpj-1 Irwvm in tnp care- fully darkened room was not Hitler at become students among students, not out of state men among Tar Heels. , . , We hold no brief, pro or con, for any statements made by either side during last week's discussion, but we do acknowl edge the right of every student on the campus to have an equal-voice in the affairs that vitally concern and interest him. The University is not only a centre of. learning, but an exponent of the principles of democracy that grants every student the same privileges, without regard for locale. TAR HEEL KLEEMAN careful to put out the fire. This is God's country. Don't burn it up and make it look like hell." , A dog came into the classroom at the start of the period. The professor, E. A. Aherns, of the U. of Illinois, saw the dog sitting, down, remarked, "Well, we can start now. At least there is one intelligent person here." A few minutes later, the dog got up, yawned, and stalked out of the room. Syracuse university has proved that the college man does not read what he signs. A petition was circulated at tne urange institution, apparently ad vocating the abolition of p-rama for seniors. But 115 men and women signed it with the following phrase at , the end, "We, therefore, as witnessed by our signatures below, agree to serve voluntarily in a Georgia chain gang for five years at hard labor un less the administration agrees to our demand for elimination of final exams for seniors by January 10, 1939." FLASH FOR E. CARRINGTON: A movie operator at Oregon State college not only rates his movies in his advertisements, but charges ad mission on the basis of his own ratings. Here are the ratings used: "hotter'n a fire cracker, super-colossal, just colossal, not so hot, and stinkeroo." Two originalities: The U. of Cin cinnati student who calls his Ford Ca naille because it coughs all the time, and the Yale student who triples the monthly allowance by raffling it off at fifty cents the chance, with ' no complaints. Self helpers at the U. of Texas put themselves on call for over 85 differ ent occupations, including tight rope walkers, cheese makers, cotton buyers, and funeral home attendants. Why go to college? all ... a laryngologist (of the best) says that Hitler's throat condition was of such that the man could not speak in public for as long as ten minutes. Stalin is reported to have nine doubles and Mussolini three (note: I have three, but you would never know it) . . . many Parisians seem to think that Roosevelt's promise of aid to the democracies will restrain Ger many from any belligerence until he leaves the White House ... after that the New Dealers can also expect Mars to move in . . . Chamberlain is still wondering where the former Ger man colonies are . . . the Russians are doing research on blue blood. ' A freshman and a sophomore last night took the skeleton out -of the Med research room, directly past the med library where students were -studying, and left it hanging outside 112 Saun ders with the English professors. One of them called the police and said that he was an English prof who was being "scared stiff" by a skeleton and to please come to his rescue. When the police arrived, the lights went out. For further details, read your local. An Englishman asked a Paris book seller for a copy of the French Con stitution; he was told that the shop did not deal in periodical publications. Cloaked hypocracy is one of man's evil traits. Moral: Beware of those to whom you give confidence. Et Vice Versa . . . "professors" Saturday.' BIRTHDAYS TODAY (Please call by the ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) George Washington. Silverstein, Eugene. Stigelman, W. G., Jr. Wells, H. N. Winstead, W. A. McKernan, Mary K. - Minton, S. S. Morgan, Rubie Juanita. Mullican, Frances R. Olive, W. W. Barker, Virginia. Bounds, Howard. Gans, G. E. Davis, P. H. Happy birthday Gawg University Party Names Soph Slate (Continued from, first page) ville. There he was president of his senior class, basketball captain, and sports editor of the Mooresville school paper. He was president of the high school debating -club and vice-president of his junior class. His other athletics included football and base ball. " At the University Alexander has continued a busy schedule of class and extra-curricular activities. He managed freshman football, played basketball, and will be out for base ball. He has been active in work for the Freshman Friendship council and ! on the freshman dance committee. w. t MARTIN Martins' election to the student council would continue the student I government work he has carried on since his matriculation here and pre viously at Needham Broughton high school, Raleigh. The student council aspirant was a ' member of his high school student council fbr four years, serving one year as president of the student body and student council. He was also a member. of the State student council. Martin's interests extended to tennis, boxing, dramatics, publications, glee club, linguistics clubs, debating, Hi-Y, and honorary society. He is now serving as president of the Freshman Friendship council and member of YMCA deputation teams. He is on the freshman debate council and sqaud, and on the class executive committee and honor council. CHARLES REECE Reece,, vice-presidential nominee, had a high school career somewhat parallel to that of Alexander, his run ning mate. At R. J. Reynods high school, Winston-Salem, he was presi dent ' of his senior class and vice president of the House of Represen tatives in his high school student gov ernment. His athletics included foot ball and track. Reece is an honor council member, class dance committee member, and secretary of the Freshman Friendship Council. He participated in cross country and wrestling. WIIITAKER The secretarial nominee, Whitaker, was active in student government at Goldsboro high school, serving ; on numerous committees, participating in dramatics, and working on school pub- lications. He also played football and tennis. Here he is a member of the Freshman- Friendship council and the Phi assembly. Hobbs, who rounds out the tieket as candidate for class treasurer, served as vice-president and later as presi dent of his student council -at Selma, Alabama. He played football and basketball, took part in Hi-Y work, and was "class lawyer." He is chair- man oi tne iresnman ae Date council and member of the Di Senate. Phi Votes Against Reduction Of Fee (Continued from first page) arms and munitions to foreign powers by the United States. Sloan wanted the Phi to go on rec ord as' being in accord with the policy that the United States sell arms and munitions only to democratic nations, thus holding back the advance of dic tatorship as much as possible. This bill was finally passed by the narrow margin of 10-9. Mass Arrests, Book-Burning, Armed Ter ror Loose In The Streets The Savagery Of The Nazi Persecution Of The Jews Laid Bare. Amkino Presents Friedrich Wolf's -.'i?.ISPB'88'IS v;.'iaMlL.SK fill A Crushing Indictment Of Nazi Terror (Produced by Lentilm, Leningrad U. S. S. R.) HOURS OF SHOWS 1-3-5-7 and 9 P. M. TODAY ONLY PICK THEATRE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 13 Interfrat Council Releases Rules (Continued from first pzgt) ties providing permission is obta:-M from the executive committee of council at least two days before 2 party, and a report shall be ir.ae the party at the next meeting cr t counciL Conduct at such affairs st be orderly at all times) . " (3) Failure to abide by the abev. rules will incur penalties set by til council. ' Administration of the las wf: v taken over by the Interf ratereS council which will act as a cort t hear all cases involving infraction of the rules passed by the bx!y PENALTIES The pealties provided for by the r.e laws are as follows: (1) Punishment for the first r,v. lation shall consist of in the ievyir.j of a fine upon the offending f rattrnity ine line snau not De less tnan ?io nor mors than $25, the exact amount q each case to be determined by the con ciL (2) For the second violation by any one fraternity, the council sh&a force the fraternity to suspend rush ing during the next ensuing rush per. iod for a period not to be lees than two days nor more than one "week. Tie exact number of days in each case shall be left to the discretion of the council. (3) Punishment for the third via lation of these laws by any one frater nity shall consist of the turning over of the fraternity in question to the Student council. Further action, puni tive or otherwise, will be taken by that body. " The new code also provides that "Each year will constitute a 'clean slate' insofar as the violations are con cerned. In other words there can be no 'carrying over' from June until September of old infractions." Peterson To Give Cue Exhibition (Continued from first page) have been made concerning the amount of exercises derived from playing bil liards, Peterson said that he travels an average of two miles during each two hour demonstration and that the exercise gained from this, both men tal and physical, is of great value to him. Champion, for a number of years, Peterson, has made movie shorts and i been the subject of countless articles on the subject of billiards. The trick shots in his repertoire are numerous and include a shooting blind-folded, backwards, and in many unorthodox positions.' ' He is being sponsored here in order to get an idea of, the interest in bil liards which now exists here and to make more widespread interest in the game. Admission will be free and the public is invited. Juniors Will Elect Marshals, Hop Leaders (Continued from first page) Dawson, Ed Rankin, Jim Davis, Phil Walker, Bert Halperin, Buck Gunter, Nick Patterson, Harry Driver, Doro thea Raoul, Walter Wall, Foy Eober son, Mac Nesbit, Jim McCallum and Minetree Pyne. The weekly attendance at American motion picture theaters is estimated at 90,000,000. E. Carrington Smith please note. ALSO BETTY BOOP CARTOON Paramount Novelty
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 22, 1939, edition 1
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