Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 16, 1930, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL Friday, May 16, Ip. Page Two c -- - Published daily during the college year except Mondays and except, Thanks giving, Christmas and Spring Holi days. - The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscription price, $2.00 local and $4.00 out of town, for the college year. . ers. And, too, the -television and other modern inventions eliminate the telephone and oth er conveniences attached to bathing. What is to become of the bath tub? We wonder. Offices in the Building. basement of Alumni W. H. Yarborough, Zb... Editor Jack Dungan JJMgr. Editor Marion Alexander . ...Bus. Mgr. Hal V. Worth. ..Circulation Mgr. associate editors B.C.Moore J.C.Williams K. C. Ramsay CITY EDITORS G. E. French E. C. Daniel, Jr. J. M. Littlb Henry Wood Elbert Denning Sherman Shore W. A. Shulenberger J. G. Hamilton EDITORIAL BOARD J. Holmes Davis, Jr. Moore Bryson Joe Jones Frank J. Manheim E. F. Yarborough Henry Anderson SPORTS EDITOR Browning Roach assistant sports editors Jack Bessen Hugh Wilson REPORTERS, Jack Riley Charles Itose J. P. Tyson . . Hugh Wilson Harold Cone Howard M. Lee Willard Hayes Phil Liskin R. W. Poole Glenn V. Wilkins Sam Silverstein George Wilson Tommy Thomas B. H. Whitton Dan Kelly Nathan Volkman Everard Shemwell William Roberts Craig Wall C. W. Allison Alan Lowenstein Billy McKie Aaron Bloom C. A. Renn Dan McDuffie C. C. Jackson BUSINESS STAFF Ashley Seawell Tom Badger COLLECTION MANAGERS J.C.Harris. T. R. Karriker B. C. Prince, Jr. Stuart Carr Donald Seawell : Budget Suggestions ,The recent regrettable, but perhaps neeessaryy action of the state legislature reducing by twenty per cent the funds allot ted to the University brings forcefully to the attention of faculty and students alike the problem and necessity of dis covering some means whereby the present rigorous budget may be further pruned and con tracted. Even after considering the facts that other state-sup ported schools of this state and many others will also receive proportionately less allowance, that general business conditions will tend to lower prices, and that increased alumni support may perhaps be forthcoming, it is clear that we must begin im mediately to investigate poten tial sources of revenue. Probably the most equitable, j if not the most lucrative, ad justment would be encompassed by increasing the tuition for out of state entrants. It cannot be considered discrimination to de ny to those who contribute noth ing, either directly or indirect ly, to the taxes of the state, the benefits received therefrom. And even if the out-of-state en- church or in Swain hall. It would be possible to bring such men as Commander Byrd to either of these buildings and it would be possible to bring some really excellent musical pro grams. The number of enter tainments might be cut down but the quality might easily be enhanced. After all is it not true that one dollar is a mini mum sum to pay for one really good program much less sev eral. I dare say that any of us would pay this small sum to hear Commander Byrd any where. . Some have said that it is not fair to charge all the Students m the School of Liberal Arts and the School of Education the one dollar fee per quarter when there is no building large enough to seat all of these students if they should all desire to come. Swain hall will seat approxi mately 1400 students and there are 1070 students in the School of Liberal Arts and School of Education combined. Therefore, the plan is technically honora- jble and more practically honor- not so generally desirable and I will admit that it is necessary to bring features to the campus which will interest the average man since the average man has to pay. However, I believe that there are many things of true cultural value which are capable of inspiring this so-called "aver age" student. In short, I am confident that if these programs are continued next fall great pains will be taken to bring fea tures to the campus which will be thoroughly cultural and of the highest calibre and yet have inspirational (interest) value for the average man. We sim ply cannot afford, especially at this critical period when articles of despondency are appearing every day in the Tar Heel, to lose one of the few active and vivid expressions of art in the life of a University student, for after all, a great part of our education is received through these exalted methods of person al contact namely, by the eye and the ear. M. P. Kerr Craige Ramsay, Salisbury ; Jacob Benjamin Schneider, Brooklyn, N. Y.; John Grey Slater, New Bern; Bud Elmon Smith, Benson; William Boylan Snow, Asheville; Samuel Ed ward Spitzer, Yonkers, N. Y.; Frank Parker Spruill, Jr., Rocky Mount; Albert Irving Suskin, New Bern; Henry Car- rison Thomas, Charleston, S. C; George Dewey Thompson, Golds boro; Harold Ezekiel Urist, Flushing, N. Y.; Dean Augustus Ward, Zirconia; Burgess Ur quhart Whitehead, Woodville; Champ Winstead, Roxboro. HOUSEKEEPER WANTED Read Tar Heel Advertisements. Two in family. Good home for right party. Address Mrs. H. L. Hicks, 617 Arlington" St., Greensboro, N. C. DAI WEB'S a i.if mo yo tb -nay bl est tyU ia wt-VM&f laments. Zepiyr-weifckt R:a Cott vu 4si&ad for coiiefc. mas tad wob. " Thi new model, trU kxmcloth.'w ub )TiKf3 by Sawy r' fnaov process tad combine &rteet stre&&& -with rephyr t lih TKit cost ve&lu only 20 ounce. A mt isrment for anuce viu, H.r,I. SAWYER & SON East Cambridge :: s M&a. able still in view of the fact that an oi xnese students, ior var ious and sundry good reasons, will not attend every perfor mance. Therefore, there' will be adequate room for outsiders that is to a certain reasonable extent. - Finally, can we afford to take another backward step at a time when the University is be- GRAHAM SPEAKS AT INITIATION OF PHI BETA KAPPA rollment be decreased by such! ing condemned and underrated (Continued from first page) William Hampton Maxwell, Jr., Granite Hill, Ga. ; Beverly Cooper Moore, Greensboro ; Jes se Strickland Newsom; Frank Church O'Neil, Henderson ; Rob ert Aubrey Parsley, Wilson ; w ALWAYS CALL FOR AVER. L ICE CREAM Y. "Made Its Way by the Way Its Made" FOR SALE BY EUBANKS DRUG CO. , - " SUTTON'S DRUG STORE - Manufactured by Waverly Ice Cream Co., Inc. 320 Holland St., Durham, N. C. Friday, May 16, 1930 The Good Old Bathtub With modern day advertising the bathtub is threatened with; becoming obsolete. Of v course there are 4 those who cling - to their Saturday night baths, but bathing is without doubt a pop ular custom now. It is a far cry. from the days when ladies and knights were sewed or perhaps soldered into their clothes and when it was considered unhealthy to bathe often. Legend has it that bath ing was not a popular practice at that time. Perhaps the ser vants didn't -relish the idea of carting water from the moats, heating it and then having their efforts rewarded by receiving a bawling" out from the master because the water was cold. But man progressed. The proverbial Saturday night bath became the aversion of little boys and possibly the grown ups too. T- We can't imagine any one getting-any fun from at tempting to bathe in a hand tub before the kitchen stove The water was likely to get cold and then, too, wearing clean flannels wasn't all a "bed of roses." Clean flannels have habit of itching and sitting through long church services in those days must have been tor ture. The passage of time has made flannels and Saturday night baths obsolete; .: Daily or multi- daily : baths are the practice along with fewer clothes. Per haps that's the reason for so much bathing. Anyway, we must have our bath. Science has contrived to make it a pleasure instead of a duty The eye and ear are pleased. In terior decorators use flowers and gold fish to make the bath room the beauty spot of the modern home. One listens to the song of the canary or the music of the radio now. A tele phone is a necessity. Visitors are told that Mr. Blank is hav ing his bath and cannot be dis turbed. The bath has replaced business trips and conferences. However, science threatens to take the bath away. Thousands are becoming addicted to show action, we make bold to assert that exclusion of what isknown as "the foreign element" would! meet with little disapproval of the student majority. A second possible step lies in the curtailment of Extension Division activities. This de partment " of the University, which has grown within the last few years to equal the older part, while highly beneficial and desirable, yet should be the first of the two to bear the brunt of an extensive appropriation de crease. Since it is, in fact, ac tually a secondary part of the institution, its welfare should be secondary to the efficient functioning of the University proper. , A third alternative, to which no doubt it will be found neces sary to resort, is the raising of general tuition fees. This, we believe, since it would place a greater burden on the more than sixty per cent of self-help stu dents on the campus, should be a last resort. But probably the best plan would be the inauguration of higher scholastic standards for entrance and for continued , at- tendance, with the end in view of r eliminating that class of para sites in the student body who come here without the least idea of really acquiring some degree of learning (not Degree of Learning) . An untold amount of the tax-payers' money might be saved in this respect, and oppor tunities to bona fide scholars at the same time increased. .'M. L. for having been forced to take so many drastic ones. It is, of course, regrettable that Swain hall must.be used to accomodate j the large gatherings but is it not far better to use this -building with all of its draw-backs than to be defeated in the moral sense of the word by doing away with one of the few things on the campus which has brought the Fine Arts in active form into the. lives of the average students? Any University can to a certain extent keep up a text book reputation but the University of North Carolina has prided itself on being an active institution. Aside from the research departments the living forms of Fine Arts on the campus have done more to cre ate a nation wide reputation for us than anything else. Can we, who pride ourselves so much be cause of the really constructive and extrenuous work on the part of both professors and students in the field of writing and play production, afford to scoff at or at least ignore the forms of Fine Arts which others have created and wish to bring to us? Only through the inspiration which we receive on being thrown into an atmosphere of constructive, active, work of others in the field of Fine Arts are we able to create with an in creasing amount of originality our own art forms. I will admit that some of the programs offered this year were filllXv ES3ABUSHEO J' & i"WHJt KBKOeCr BUS" Readers' Opinions 1 CONCERNING ANOTHER BACKWARD MOVE Recently there appeared an editor i al to the effect that Student Entertainments should be discontinued the first quarter of next year because of the lack of an adequate building. Even though the" New Auditorium will not be completed until ap proximately January 1, 1931 and even though this fact will neces- suaie ine exclusion oi. some numbers which obviously could not be presented in the Metho dist church, it will be perfectly possible to bring thoroughly worth while programs which could , easily be presented in this ffe IP EVERY ITEM Oil ASP SHELVES lias won its claim to your table, because of Its purity, its goodness and its peer less flavor. A&P buyers, who buy for you, accept no food for our stores unless the quality meets the higb standard for which A&P Is famous . . . and . . . all our prices are substantially low. ENJOV B0MUNQ TON1QHT OQfiNi NIGHT Durham Bowling Center Orange Pekoe or India Geylon TEA K B S BOUQUtri UK RAISIN SANDWICH Alb. Sf)e WHOLE MILK , CHEESE , (3 Quaker Maid CI Oven Baked 2 cans Fancy Alaska IE No. 1 tall can PAN LOAF 18 oz. wrapped . PULLMAN 21 oz. loaf wrapped TV?" Fancy Creamery Fancy E i - :- . ;v- j ViViiJiljfcJ UU. LIU i . i 1 TtTi Cut Fresh From the Tub lb. G Post Toasties or KeUoggs SE?im UflaEiec 2 pkgs. Eg AAP Pure Grape Juice Pint Bottle y Lu p Ldbby's Apple Butter 5 No. 2 Cans Del Monte or Libby Bartlett Pears Large Can .Del Monte or Libby Royal Anne Cherries Large Can MEAT SPECIALS .. . Choice Chuck Roast .... " ' a. , Sausage Home Dressed Hens Large Virginia Croakers 6 Kirfgan's Bacon Rined and Sliced 25c lb. 15c lb. 18c lb. 35c lb. l-4c lb. 33c lb. Palmolive Soap Lux Toilet Soap ... .... 3 cakes 23c 3 cakes 25c Pale Dry or Golden SUNNYFIELD GINGER ALE 3 Bottles 25c Small Bottle Deposit JTfDC -IPAC'OIFOC TE4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 16, 1930, edition 1
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