ji 1 ------iij i - V Pca Two;,; Gije Dailp. Ear $tel Published da:l; 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, $4.0.0 for the col lege year. , , ,; Offices in the basement ef Alumni Building. . ., . ' W. H YARBOROUGH. . Editor JACK DUNGAN! .Mgr. Editor H. N." PATTERSON.. . .Bus. Mgr. H. V. WORTH. Circulation Mgr. EDITORIAL TAFF City; Editors J. M. Little rW.1 A. Shulenberger William McKee , : : E. C. Daniel George Wilson Ben Seville Peter Hairston G. E. French Editorial Board Beverly Moore. Associate Editor J. G. Williams..... A.ssociate Editor Charles Pe ,E. F. Yarborough W. M. Bryson Virginia Douglas Wex Malone " Sports Staff K. C. Ramsay.:!:. I:-: Sports Editor Assistants: ; Don, Shoemaker : Jack Bessen Assignment Editor Charles Rose Librarian Sam Silverstein REPORTERS v A. Alston f . i'-.'v- Jim Cox Robert Bett3. , ( ", , F. Broughton Virginia Douglas 7 ' ' Dan Kelly Louise Mc-Whirter"1 .,1- Mary Buie Phil Liskin, . McB. Fleming-Jones w; AmAUsWk Jack Riley -; W. E. Davis Robert Novins Otto Steinreich E. M. Spruill E. R. Oettinger ... Karl Sprinkle ' I. H. Jacobson T. W. Lasley Peter Henderson W.r R. Woerner ; Frank Hawley . , , Alex Andrews Grier Todd T. W. Ashley T. Herring L. L. Pegram E. E. Ericson . Elise Roberts Hugh Wilson George Vick .George Malone A. L. Jacobs BUSINESS STAFF Harlan Jameson.: j. .Ass'U Bus. Mgr. John Manning... Ass't. Bus. Mgr. Al Olmstead. .......Advertising Mgr. Pendleton; Gray.w.,;..-As't. Adv. Mgr. W. C. Grady. ... Ass't. Adv. Mgr. Jack Hammer..:......:.J.......CoZZectton Mgr. Bernard Solomon.:,.:....4.ss,. Col. Mgr. Robert L. Bernhardt Want Ad Mgr. John BsLTtow:L.iL...JSub8cription Mgr. C. P. Simms; i . Frank S. Dale Zeb C. Cummings H. A. Clark Bill Jarman Ed Michaels, Jr. Sunday,-November 2, 1930 In Europe young people are trained to think and in America they are largely trained to re member:" Hamilton Holt. If a "Student Government Week" wasn't set aside once in a while, in a great majority of cases the students wouldn't know they had a government. "The political beach is strewn with the wrecks of those who took the nice things said about them to heart." Mayor James J. Walker. This doesn't apply to the University politics. There were never any "nice things" said about 4he campus politi cians. "It cannot be denied that many martyrs " have been pig headed fellows with only one idea in their heads and that a bad one. Dean Inge. Foreign " - ' . Relations Much attention was manifest ed by a group of students par ticularly interested in foreign relations when the Foreign Poli tics Forum was organized last spring. The Forum was well under way at the close of school lasf year, and it is expected that the group will function' much more effectively this year as definite plans, begin to take Shape. : V V f ;.. ; As the University ; has no school or department of foreign relations, it may be said that the Forum provides a sort of train ing ground for prospective dip lomats and public men; Lec tures on different phases of in tranational relations or related topics are heard from time to time, and. informal discussions PARAGRAPHIAS are held. It is to thr credit of the Fcrum that it was instru mental in .bringing to the cam pus last year so eminent an authority on the League of Na tions and its workings as Sir bert Ames. The Forum is not interested in propagating faith in any poli tical creed or policy. It i3 in terested in problems of foreign politics from the standpoint of the student ; that isit tries to Herbert Ames. We hope that the Forum will continue the work begun last year and that it will have no difficulty in securing adequate program facilities. Members of the Forum are desirous of hav ing new students join them, as the Forum is anN entirely open organization. It is understood, however, that those who are not interested 1 enough to want to add something to the discussions are not eligible. -B. M. Extension Division And Mass Education In high; position among the problems of present-day social existence ' is enlightenment - of the masses. The age when in stitutions of collegiate rank carefully guarded the secrets of education from the masses grows dim because of the veri table avalanche of liberal educa tional ideas which have "taken the day." The tablesare com pletely turned, and the prevail ing attitude toward education is equality of opportunity. Not jonly are universities attempting to instruct the masses within their portals, but extension courses have been arranged for carrying the spark of enlight enment to persons who, for vari ous reasons, are unable to leave their homes. The work of the Extension Division of this uni versity is doubtless conspicuous enough to be considered typical. There is no branch of the Uni versity which has as fertile a field for exploit as does the Ex tention Division. It reaches many persons who passed the school age long before the wave of "education for all" reached its present pinnacle of promi nece. Many of such peosons are teachers in the public schools of the state. Herein is comprehended what is perhaps the greatest service which the extension workers have been able thus far to render the peo ple of the state. Young teach ers (many of whom are college graduates, to be sure) utilize the possibilities of the extension courses in various parts of the state to raise their certificates. This practice very obviously makes for unification of peda gogical principles in " public school instruction. Through the medium of exten sion courses in history, lan guages, literature, and the popu lar sciences, the University Ex tension Division has been the most conspicuous contributory factor in the work of enlighten ing the masses of North Caro lina. The extension workers are herewith congratulated and urged to add more fuel to the flame. J. C. W. WHY SUNDAY MOVIES? To the Editor: Apropos the sentiment ex pressed by Mr. Sheridan in the Tar Heel of October 30 on the topic "For Sunday Entertain ment" The donor of the Uni versity organ and auditorium which is its home had a vision of providing opportunity for utiliz ing Sunday afternoons in a way to add to the educational and cultural experience of the cam pus life in a splendid way. One outstanding factor in this plan which has found general ac claim on other university cam puses throughout America is that the type of entertainment OPEN FORUM - - THE DAILY offered on Sunday in the recital halls is not merely a repetition of what is available every night i during the week. A vote re cently taken among, students of i a western college where organ concerts have become a regular campus feature reveals that a side from their value as musical events, the students attend them in large numbers in order to experience this contrast from the round of week-night enter tainments. , Endeavoring to carry out the desires of the donor, the Depart ment of Music has already an nounced two series of Organ Concerts, one of which is .a Sunday Vesper series, begin ning on the 23rd of November, and running, throughout the school year. The frequency of these : Sunday concerts, as -. a matter of future policy, depends largely on the response accord ed them by the campus. It is felt that these Sunday recitals will provide access to great music without the customary pressure of "trying to teach its appreciation." Fifty minutes spent in this beautiful, intimate recital hall on a Sunday after noon, listening to one' of the finest concert organs in the en tire country, will, hopefully, be come the practice of many stu dents and faculty as the year passes. For this the organ and auditorium were given. , To wards this end the Department of Music hopes to serve. HAROLD S. DYER Director of Music The Campus Snapshot :., By J. C. Williams . Waxing eloquent in juvenile enthusiasm, we look ahead and pine for winter and snowy days. There, is perhaps nothing which Scan counteract a dark outlook so completely as a snow-covered landscape. The local debaters, we under stand, are priming for their coming encounter with the Brit ishers on "Resolved, That the Emergence of Woman From the Home Is One of the Regrettable Features of Modern Society." The subject is a good one, but the season of the year is wrong. As Old Man Winter swoops down upon us, woman is prone to enter the home, rather than emerge from it. ' The gentle creature makes herself- very happy in the winter season by sitting before the fire and lis tening to the purring of the house cat (to which animal she has often been compared, re markable similarity being not ed.) Now that educational em phasis has been shifted some what from the constructional side of the' matter to what is actually going on within the classroom, perhaps a little in side dope on classroom proced ures here on the Hill might be edifying. We vouch for the authenticity of the following: Professor Crittenden (His tory VII teacher) : "Mr. Blank, why did Washington cross the Delaware?" Mr. Black ' (Becoming slight ly awake, and in deep voice) : "To get on the other side, Sir." The other day one of our dame friends remarked to us: "Dear, I'm simply dead after that street car ride." Although we never quite mustered enough courage to say so, we thought "What a logical culmination for a simple life." ; The chief task before The In- venbors of America is that of devising a muffler which will fit TAK HEEL inside of women's mouths. : " There was a man up here the other" day looking for his son. The boy roomed, he said, "around at the BAITED HOUSE' .. - Really, we -wonder which source is the harder to collect money from: Y. M. C. A pled ges, or fraternity pledges. College life is nothing more than a drama. Already we are in the second stretch of Act I of the 1930-31 show. In this edu cational drama the individual student hardly counts at all. If he misses his cue, it is just too bad. If he steps on the trap door and falls out of the entire show, another puppet is groom ed and ready to take his place. Yet this is the machinery which educates us. Chapel of the Cross 8 a. m. Holy: Communion. 11 a. m. Union service at the Methodist church.' 7 p. m. Y. P. S. L. 8 p. m. Special musical ser vice, Mr. Kennedy will play Vesper Processional, by Gaul ; and ; Voix Celeste, by Batiste. The choir will sing "Ho, Every One; That Thirsteth," by Mar tin; and "Faith, Hope and Love," by Shelley. V 4:30 to 6 p. m. Tea in the Parish House. Tuesday Student class at 7 p. m. Methodist Church 9:45 Sunday School. Collier Cobb, speaker. 111:00 Union Service. Dr. Dr. Reinhold Neibuhr. 7:00 Student fellowship hour. Topic: "Jesus, the Friend." ; 8:00 No service. : Sigma Zeta fraternity an nounces the pledging of Robert Blackwood of Winston-Salem. She Played With Fate he Played With Men's Hearts She Ruled A World With The Hod Of Her Head. But She Couldn't Rule Her Own Heart! -.- -:;::;''-' v r V - MONDAY One of the Publix-Saenger Theatres - ) , THURSDAY John Gilbirt in Way for a Sailor" REINHOLD NEIBUHR TO PREACH TODAY (Continued Jrom page one) countries. This afternoon at two-thirty o'clock in the Sunday School Room of the Chapel Hill Meth odist Church Dr. Neibuhr will talkion "Modern Political, Relig ious, and Social Issues." ' The Y. M. C. A., under whose auspicies Dr. Neibuhr will speak, has sent out written invittfnns to members of the three Y cabinets, certain -graduate students and faculty mem bers, a select group from the Duke University faculty, the In ternational Relations club, and the Amphotheron club. These clubs , were sent invitations be cause their, conduct on the cam pusin the past has shown them to be interested in such topics as the speaker will discuss this af ternoon. - ; : r Following his address Dr. Neibuhr will conduct a forum at which time he will discuss any question that may arise along the line of his speech. During the past summer the speaker has been making a tour of Europe, If Our Food Isii't Delicious TEAR UP THE CHECK The Waffle Shop 9,000,000 Consumed Daily DURHAM COCA COLA BOTTLING CO. -in- 7 "DU BARRY with Conrad Nagel William NORMA TALMADGE gives a performance in this spectacular romance which will rank with the truly great portrayals of the talk ing screen. Never has she been more al luring, more gorgeous, more sparkling than as the fashionable, frivolous and fascinating enchantress whom the world 1 considers "Grand High Priestess of Love." A superb entertainment. Other Units , Paramount Sound News V "Sky Scraping," a Paramount TUESDAY Lupe Velez in "East Is West" The love story of Ming Toy sold on a Love Boat then kidnapped by an American boy for love. WEDNESDAY Warner Baxter in "Renegades" Stirring Dratna of the 'i Fighting Foreign Legion FRIDAY Charles Farrell in - 'Liliom" : vuixint lhe Tatf Sunday, November 2, 1930 and his afternoon talk today win concern observations he made of the economic and political con ditions in Germany and Russia. All members of the Y cabin ets are reminded of the fact that their usual weekly meetings will be held on Monday night in the lobby rooms of the Y build ing at 7:15 P. M. Programs of the three cabinet meetings have been arranged, and probably a small part of the time will be given to a discussion of some of the points brought out by Dr. Neibuhr in his talk this after noon. Walter Oglesby and Bill Ryan, guard and end on the Citadel football team, have been dropped from the squad for breaking training. Both Oglesby and Ryan have scintillated in the Charles ton, S. C, team's games. The Citadel plays the University of South Carolina today at Orange burg. Dr. J. P. Jones Dentist TELEPHONES Office 5761 Residence 5716 Office Over Cavalier Cafeteria D3 Farnum ,v.'.v.'.v.'AV -i '' 0 , Cartoon -V" " COMING Amos V Andy in "Check and Double Check" SATURDAY Mary Nolan in Outside the Law" X

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