Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 6, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6. 19 PAGE TWO THIX DAILY TAB IP 40 The cSdal newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University cf Njrth Carolina at Chapel HOI, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving. Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chanel HilL N. C under act of March 3, 1S79. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. 1939 Member 1940 Fhsocided Cole&de Press National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pmhliibtn RsprritvUtit A ZO MaOMON Ave. NEW YOMIC N. Y. CM Martin Harmon Morris W. Rosenberg William Ogburn Larry Ferling Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Edztosiai. Wbitebs: Ed Bankin, Don Bishop, Bill Snider, Frank Holeman. Rzpostebs: Bill Bhodes Weaver, Louis Harris, Doris Goerch, Dorothy Coble, Zoe Young, Grady Beagan, Bucky Harward, Dick Young, Campbell Irving, Gene Williams, Sanford Stein, Philip Carden, Vivian Gillespie. Columnists: Adrian Spies, Johnny Anderson, Mack Hobson, Ben Roebuck. Technical Staff News Educes: Carroll McGaughey, Charles Barrett, Bush Hamrick. Night S poets Editors: Leonard Lobred, Fred Cazel, Orville Campbell. Desk men: Edward Prizer, Bob Thomas, Sylvan Meyer. Sport Staff Enrroa: Shelley Bolfe. ' Bxfgsetzss: William L. Beerman, Richard Morris, Harry HoHingsworth, Jerry Stoflf, Jack Saunders. . Circulation Assistant Manages: Jack Holland.. N Oma:: Bradford McCuen, Larry Dale, D. T. HalL Bushiest Staff Local Advertising Managers: Jimmy Schleifer, Bill Bruner, Andrew Gennett. Local Advertising Assistants: Sinclair Jacobs, Rufus Shelkoflf, Tom Nash, Jack Dube, Buck Osborne, Steve Reiss, Leigh Wilson, Bill Stanback, Bob McNaughton, Landon Roberts, C. C. Brewer, Morty Ulman. Durham Advertising Manager: Bill Schwartz. Collections Manager: Phil Haigh. Collections Staff: Morty Golby, Parke Staley, Mary Susan Robertson, Mary Ann Koonce, Elinor Elliot, Millicent McKendry. Office Staff: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Nathan, Oren Oliver, Bill Vail. For This Issue: News: CHARLES BARRETT Sports: FRED CAZEL OUT-OF-STATE Graduation Bugaboo Again The January issue of the Alumni Review points out a sit uation which vitally concerns North Carolina industry and Carl Goerch's State Magazine, through its letter-writing Colonel Yadkin, reiterates the question raised by the Review.. In the winter and spring of every year representatives of large national concerns visit col leges and universities, interview job-seekers who will receive fall and winter quarters. . Naturally, each student can not be interviewed each week, and the twenty interviewers are instructed to contact new stu dents each week. Many of you have already been approached by the interviewer. Contrary to the opinions of a small minority, the Daily Tar Heel student opinion survey is not an effort to build up a fol lowing for particular candidates but it is an effort and we should be successful to present the opinion of the student body the opinion to be obtained from MAID OF ORLEANS HORIZONTAL 1 Famous French soldier girL 0 She led the French s to victory. 13 Eye. 14 Freedom. 16 Grief. 17 Having no head hair. 19 Fruit. 20 Salamanders 21 Parts of school years. 23 Plural pronoun. 25 To exist. 26 Right of pasturage. 30 Food container. 31 Tribunal. 32 Chambers. 33 Biblical priest. 34 Coins. 35 Flavor. 37E1L 29 BrawL 41 Data. 42 Go on . (music). 44 To dibble. Answer to Prerions Pnxxle JNNAl bOgBk NANCE TSraC 46 Pertaining to favoritism to relatives. 50 Secreted. 51 Lacerations.' 53 Tree. 54 Long poem. 56 Dyeing apparatus. 57 Grotesque trick. , 59 Arabian. 1 This is called the Maid of Orleans. 2 She was convicted cf . VERTICAL 1 Position. 2 To make a speech. 3 Talented. 4 Either. 5 Elaborate meal. 6 High mountain. 7 Corded cloth. 8 Wolframite; 9 Tellurium (abbr.). lOKight bird. 18 She was a , or visionary. 22 Manor houses 24 Distinction. 25 She was at the stake. 27 To foment. 23 Festival. 29 Goddess of Discord. 30 Mountain ' pass. 36Fish. 38 Big. 40 You and I. 42 Rector. 43 Publicity. 45 Breakwater. 47 Window part 43 Hops kiln. 49 Demonstrative word. . 50 To employ. 52 For. 55 Logger's boot 56 Exclamation. 57 Form of "a." 11 Uncle. 12 Footlike part 53 Company. 15 To embroider CO Per. ... ''iT'JdTW ' "to t) jil t r :- r" ' 3 s zTjzrpr- ' t-v: 3 3 r ? (L 2 5 " ' i . vw I w w 36 j fe: j ft g 3g irpOF" so"" k I 1 1 w I 11 1 I . sheepskins in' June, and sign up a legitimate, varied sample of the best talent available, leaving for North Carolina industry the remaining graduates. "What's alarming," says the Review, "is that the vast major ity of the interviewing repre sentatives are from organiza tions that will take their recruits out of the state, perhaps out of the South. It all is a part of the South's business of exporting its trained manpower. North Caro lina raises them, educates them, and then allows business organ izations to come in and carry off their best trained graduates." Regarding the matter from a student's viewpoint, we of course cannot blame him for his choice when a large national firm offers a position. But like the other pub lications, we admonish North Carolina employers to awaken to the situation, to offer positions and salaries in line with stand ards elsewhere, and to hold North Carolina's trained youth within the state. the whole group. Politics and the activities akin tnereunto nas oecome a major subject on the campus, with the two major parties organizing al the time for the annual spring po litical frolics. Recently, inde pendent organizations have en tered the field to "democratize campus elections." The issue has been clouded. Before we cease publication for the quarter, results on the poll regarding third parties will be announced. And we will con tinue the poll up to election day. To those skeptics who accuse falseness of purpose, we merely point out the quick demise of the ill-fated "Literary Digest," which lasted only a few issues after predicting that Alf Landon would dethrone Mr. Roosevelt in 1936. There'll be results week ; watch for them. every SURVEY Poll Of Student Political Opinion "Morrison Holds Slim Mar fin" was the headline in yester day's edition. . Dr. Phil Carden and his crew of statistical experts, now on the payroll of the Daily Tar Heel, announced the results o,f the sec ond week's poll, a scientific sur vey of student opinion. Carden, who does the tabulat ing and supervising of the week ly questions, has had experience in this work conducting the stu dent opinion survey for the As sociated Collegiate Press, a fea ture we have supplied during the today 10:30 Freshmen meet advisers. 12:00 Coed swimming. 3:00 Coed basketball game, Pi Phi vs. ADPi. 4:00 Freshman boxers meet in box ing room to have Yackety Yack pictures taken. Coed swimming. Coed basketball game, Dorms 1 and 3 vs. Chi Omega. 4:15 Bull's Head tea in the staff room of the library. 4:30 Informal tea at Spencer hall. 5:00 Woman's Athletic council meets in the Woman's association room in Graham Memorial. 5:30 Meeting of varsity and frosh fencing teams in Tjn Can. 7:00 Weekly recorded concert in Graham Memorial lounge. it s a pity. . . BY RUSH HAMRICK By BILL STAUBER, Guest Leap Year Mickey Warren, senior Chi O who divides her time between perfoming the duties as secretary of the senior class and waiting for the army to camp under her front window, got restless February 29, took advantage of the spread fame for displaying two f rat j pins at the same time, has broadened) her field. Latest reports have it that Charlie Wood, sultan of swing, is now j using said pins for suspender buttons . . . Olivia Rhodes who brought "ahs' from the Jamboree audience with her ballet dancing has reversed ' her form and has now got "The Billy Campbells to Swinging" . . . After the break with Court Dawson, Helen Plyler turned her affections to one Mr. Ogburn whose class notes now consist entirely of ! extra day, and wired her uniformed Helen's "John Hancock." Mr. Dawson lover in West Point asking him to marry her. She received the following answer. 'Hell hath no I will." . fury like a woman s scorn. Oh, Romeo Jeanne Connell, stray Greek, who has been chased by everyone except the janitor in Grimes dormitory, but whose heart really belongs to a Duke student, a childhood playmate, was on the re ceiving end of "a saxaphone serenade at 1:30 in the morning. The occasion was Jeanne's birthday; the song, "I Dream of J eanne with the Light Brown Hair." Remarked one coed who was awakened by the moanful sound, "That's a helluva way to dream." Stark Realism Mr. Hobbs, of the Carolina, not the Charlotte Hobbs, professor of law in the commerce school, told the follow ing. It was concerning a lad wno was taking a quiz in the law school. The question was, "Define a corporation." The answer given by the lad was, "A corporation is an artificial, invisible, intangible being whose soul cannot be damned and whose rear cannot be kicked." Would that I were a corporation. A la Winchell The success of Winchell's Sunday evening program lies not so much in the gossip he dishes but, as, in the way he dishes it out. His figures of speech, his out-of -breath attitude which makes the slightest bit of gossip assume nation-rocking importance, and, most of all, his rapid fire delivery makes it what it is. Try it yourself with these tid-bits. Flash Frances Buckelew, who gained wide- is now waiting in line for his turn with Ernestine Noe . . . Bela Orton, whose I love with a recent alumnus hit the iocks last fall, is now that way with Bob Knickerbocker. Lately, she has attended Bob's classes with him. In the meantime, spring has brought the alumnus back. The Chi O's say she's in love. The question is, "Who with?" . . . It is generally known that two pro fessors on the campus are spending sleepless nights since the return of an ex-waitress. Tae a Deep Breath Johnny Jordan, newly elected cam paign manager of the Rameses party denies the story in the Tar Heel that he ;has never done anything. Said Johnny, "I used to be superintendent of the Winton Baptist' Church Sun day School" ... For those who doubt t he sincerity of the Rameses party, an nouncements will be made this week end . . . The odds are 100 to 1 that! Reddy Grubbs, who moved to Lewis dorm to get away from politics, will (Continued on page 4, column J) BIRTHDAYS (Students having birthdays may get free tickets to the movies by sailing by the boxoffice of the Car olina theater.) Arey, William Floyd Bass, Larry Lucas Broadf oot, Winston , Cochrane, William McWhorter Hall, Sarah Bellamy -Hardin, Eugene Ramsey Kallman, Stanley Jay Newton, William Simms . Pearce, Eleanor Rebecca Saunders, Charles Lawrence Slicer, Douglas H. FR 0 Al 174 COLLEGES ... cam 621 smart young women this year to obtain Katharine Gibbs secretarial training. Today's employers demand technical skills in ad dition to college education . . . and the demand for Gihbs graduates with college back ground exceeds the supply I Special Course for College Women opens in New York and Boston September 24, 1940. OPTIONAL AT NEW YOBI SCHOOL ONLY same course may be started July 8. prepar ing for early placement. Ask College Course Secretary '' "T?r-CTTT T"C i i . . . j .w. u nxMuet ot j placement information, and il i lustrated catalog. j BOSTON. . .90 Marlborough St. NEW YORK. . . .230 Park Are. CATHARINE GIBBS McCIamroch To Read Poems Of Robinson Profesor R. P. McCIamroch will read and discuss the poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson at the Ball's Hi4 tea this afternoon at 4:15. The tea are held weekly in the staff ro c; the library. 1 ONLY fileer comHnirr C S ba3e interior and cellophane exte rior, keep nicotine, juices, flake oat ot mootn.. No breaking in.' No tongue bite. Breaks trp hot . i - gmOKC, nenwv mild, healthy .v I I mCT HUB MEDICO HLTESIDSSIOiniG. moKXY CAM BUT ccMaiu nuctt rti ncmcs rint mcus emr rats tct 4 tUCK Ml A lADY-'VJALKS'THQ PLANK! A CECIL B. 08 MULE Production f FREDRIC MARCH J Cm f tiuOmz OMatntt In PcrciMtml'i rearsa sJary f the pket wf savd tii nctin Thun4fing from the nest IhriSiing pog cf our history . . . ringinj with lh doth of steel on steel . . . comes the heroic romance of Jean lafirte, the Pirate, and the flaxen, haired girl who conquered his unrvly heorr. A PsrsMtist PIttirs vltl a cast at tksasaals iaelaIaf A5&a KsffSt GRAHAM WiSgr tmm Also NOW PLAYING PICK THP ATBt? MUSICAL NOVELTY rim incji l acs "moments of charm TODAY and THURSDAY MOW, . AFTER ALL THESt YEARS THE WORLD-FAMOUS ADVENTURE STOR FILMED FOR THE FIRST TIME . . ! Just as you've alway" dreamed it. . Tarn-backed with all the odd sights, strange scenes, out-and- out adventure thrills that made the story a sensation. Don t dream of missing it. Lw5 - 1 1 1 " Tk tew if tlV f ilNll-SSbeSjS ..terriSe shipwreck al V "arret raft riscul f v I Tini Picture ...!lL TIIAMS' mmmJTmm"l"l' ' . " "" ' nn-ml !?Ili0r,1AS riTCHELL. EDNA DEST FREDDIE DARTKOLOMEiy-e TERRY. IULDURN mi HOLT OASY nonnv niiiMAti a-nB, ..... r 3' - ifagrm s i ns i ning rrccuCuSCl Also CARTOON SPORTLlpHT
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 6, 1940, edition 1
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