Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 24, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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Saturday, September 24, 193? Page Two THE die Datlp av Ipeel OUR TIMES By Don Shoemaker the movement. The tone of the protest is The official newspaper of the I'ubii- rominiof o TKn r,f TXon cations Union Board of the University . . ,.- of North Carolina at Chapel Hill nmger's brilliant wortc on the where it is printed daily except Mon- Human Mind. To' quote: "This mas,' and . Spring Holidays. Entered is, not the first time that the Words and Music as secona .ciass matter ai me P"" Koris nnrt Snna ists. Pnpifita 1TV. rA,i fflnl nf r.lno1 Will "NT r. rmrW act I ' ' I xxa liquid uauuiu, vvuu vvuuiu of March 3, 1879.. Subscription price, ana tneir conege proiessor allies see India free of her British op- $4.00 for the college year. Offices on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. have attempted to prevent, and pressors,- is at it again this have actually prevented murder- week. The world press was full ers and Other Violators Of the nf Mr. Oandhi's crastrnnnmiVnl unas. ij. riose, jr ...jkuilui loTTr af: i, Geo. W. Wilson ......Mgr. Editor T V V l . 7 "7. J V, r,eoemon against. e rngiisn sens. . . . x miu iiwu tm wum, ims wee.K nnrl mnnv rpflrters resourceful and able gang of opened their urban chronicles to enemies with ample funds are discover startling streamers - t W m -. . m T I mstillinc subversive doc-1 tici a xmTTT tjxttitxtg TYPAnrnr m -nrn tu -ur Ml n,m-, " umm Jjuuiiiu x'iii nff a sf,rmr.ii . t. t. HntrhisoTi. tnnes into tne minas. :. . . . a FAST" and Rimil ar mpssao-Ps widespread assault is now being With Jimmy Walker and the made on the sanctity of mar- f Prrv hnnt VHsaspy fnyo-ntpn XS. J- F NVMiW UAIulVt WA. -L. A. - V Will R. D. McMillan. Bus. Mgr. Assisting for this Issue: Editorial Otto Steinreich,- L. L. Hutchison, Joseph Sugarman, Donoh Hanks, J. H. Morris, Morrie Long, W. O. Mar lowe. Don Shoemaker. Bob Barnett, J. F. Alexander, Lonnie Dill,-E. C. rias-e and sacred familv rela- fWA TVTdV,ofrv.o ofQT; Pat, n,o,'r, I T1. T3 Tor4- T,tc. " "c Aaua vixia oicuo iuiui aaxii tions . . . With great success in fft rhamninn thp rnnsp nf biVo-Pr. I M w. o leading colleges for women. . . . ana' better news. The "Mahat- . . .. . , . . . . ma, wmcn is not a given name Daniel, Jack; Bessen, Vermont Roys- ter, Frank Hawley, Claiborn Larr. Saturday, September 24, 1932 etc Mennmger describes this ex- but means one of a class of cited statement as being the de- sages or adepts reputed to have With the establishment of the 'usin of persecution under the khowledpre and powers of a high- neaa oi uissociauon, wnere uie er oraer tnan xnose oi ordinary main consciousness is aware of men, is as-his title indicates, no one of several ideas but mis- man's fool. Educated in En labels and' misunderstands it. ' It land in conformation to the very is symptomatic of mental di- principles of civilization which sease. he is-alleged' to detest, he is easi- Paganism and Communism are ly atile to re-assume his native Public Administration Students to the Rescue school of public administration here, , the University of North Carolina acquires another .mas ter tool with which it will help to shape the future government al advancement of this state. dream in the minds of loyal terms; used vaguely and com- habitat and attract sympathy of Mnrth rnrnliniarK? But onlv prehensively. to cover all f prces the virtually ignorant. The lat- ' tC 'tW; oHp tn which terrify and mystify be- est Gandhi show doesn't give the aaa fpir pliprkhpd vision- real cause they are, not understood'. Briffsh authorities ' any qualms A - - The terms have been used' iff the for Mother IiidTa. Gandhi,; as xf W;'c; oArvi oi same3 siense all over the yjiiiy win uitu cuiuui in educating, the future - public administrators of this state to Via rlnfloa wViirTi fhpv will hft fiV StUU! ' hn'i. m 'ttiC emfldymr a TOutojT of this government in return gives him ' portant will it open the, eyes' of bW Kgarderf fte ample opportunity to stage his North Carolina's coming citizens -;vtA?r r" "t.- i J..i? v. , iLS U tlon. Cleai frtttf uT infOrma- !A New Era tion will auicktf dissipate . the An item provided by the As- Trffi"r' a terVi'f vfni del'usions wliieh have sociated Press in the mid--weeks The lack.of this type of edu- 1" reTCals ,e iltanmatin cation ; heretofore is, no doubt, ' one of the causes for .the pres- world, long als he adheres to his early m Jlingianay on tne uonunent, principles, is a ieatner in me w'ffie. Onenf, and;"6f course, viceroy's cap. He pacifies his thrbuhou't this hWtibnV Attacks niiHibhs' oi followers1 and the Dr. T. J. Wilson, dean of admis- to be well known, found that he sions, and Dr. Francis F. Brad- was sometime confused with shaw, dean of students, an- another celebrated writer Char nounce that "freshmen this year les Edward Russell." are apparently better prepared As a student in the University for University work than usual." Phillips Russell was editor of Educators are rapidly ascertain- The Daily Tar Heel. -He con ing curricular heeds of the first tributed much material to cam- year men and the latter strive pus magazines and publications to equip themselves to cope with and was always keenly interest- requirements. Advancement is ed in literary subjects and pur- rapid.,- suits. ' Worked" on Observer Phillips Russell Says In 1904 lie plunged into re- North' Carolina' Rich portorial work oh the Charlotte In! Literary Promise Observer. After two years there (Continued from first page) he went f 6 New York where he sell's Franklin is what so many of the ndw biographies are not; a deep and scholarly production, the result of long years of pa tient research reaching back to the time when the author, as a boy in Rockingham, North Carolina, ran on a school biog raphy of Franklin and conceived an admiration for the statesman, which resulted in the biography of Franklin becoming in a way, a life-work. If it seems to be long to the new character of bi ographies," it is because the North Carolinian has patiently gathered a vast amount of ma- come to' eiist in tlieif bfaih's. injws reveals some illuminating Nrf iVd1 with iWs how they, lived, inv'the ' : : - - I 1 U J J . o 4. JT hpvn pl vision's, tprrifvinef. dis-ll V- the story, tells municipalities in this state torted place where TT- JnnlAn tATPPS HYP AT. MOTiC TllHVlTly1 llTiOIl r " - 1 , - -v - , . - nlan of government from yeal4 their ' innocence will be. .(imcWy rKr' , ... - Vv. rru 'tow fa.f iy srore.' Lominon enines were to yeaiv the majority of pubic disappointed. The very fact . . Wr4vdn, A content to that students can talk freely and p jr-j wifhnnt rPRfrnint nf currents UA ru A74( ethicai and philosophical ideas Clayton,one-half gallon of whis r, tr,vt th aim key, seventy-five cents, one doz- that "insidious forces," bought ;en round of buttons, twenty-five and well paid for, are at work R.W.B. ... personal recdfds a"fe'ket.: is nothing pretentious ahou tKe! place nor the bwnef, and no vis- officials have been leave the system1 the same as they, found it When former President E. K. Graham established the depart ment of rural social economics, he made the statement, "Its business is to teach North Caro lina to North Carolinians ; hot the North Carolina of day before yesterday but the North Caro cents". Such an item should provide meat for. some Anecdota Ameri canai 6ut more than all else, it reveals the startling lack of luxuries which our forefathers possessed; and the amazing amount of money expended in UlUOC VIC O 1U1 OUllllO, bllu We won- that facts concerning the author became available, for despite his courtebusness , he frankly refuses to talk of him Ekinsr Football For the Student On the premises that Univer- Ima . of day after tomorrow."' sity football contests are staged That same might be said Of this primarily lor- tne auuews nan? . ar v.rtV T4,t,oe.A -rViVii ticmatiner and students witness i,: 1 insiA'i 3- .xiJiV,rri,a Voif: OrtaW1crfrioc thought a necessity. . .. . . , . , , f kw,;ai der lf'times nave changed. To- rTAc4rt3 Trip- r 1 r tta ittav Stadium tnfs vear. the student xuic jcoiciuav, aiiu nave vui- t ; .. r T . .jij. j. . lcfoW oof bodv and the DAILY TAR HEEL c' "- v.x lieu uuu tuc jcaoi auvub tuc oiauc ; " " - " , ; .1 -j: j' . l,-. . dav after" tohiortoW are. led to wonder whether some rauiUS P"" &wves' udy diwr tomorrow. . . . . .. . . - , . . Iwk,, -Piii'fn WitK thp Rohnol of niihliP ad- satisfactory arrangement can be sf-v 1-, - auu v ciiiVsio iV ciiauiv miu -m cumbeht to keep in touch with li- KUVCllUUCUli - . i . ii 1 .ft, J ten or fifteen years hence. But new leoerai tax . levy, wnicn ' u- I 1 ministration tiefe at the Uhiver- devised to prevent, cpnflictsin ana omii k lifio seatmsr arrangements oi out-oi-1 v" .n.: i..:' ..::.i nw t.ovq afi sfndpnfa tVip the cinema, the circulating lCdl J.UI. LliU KJ tC O gUVCX Xillldl 1 j , ; . , i. stretches to nermit studenfa ex-' ine s news m ms suouruaii the Legislature to pass a law re- emption from1 taxation otf tic- newspaper. Alcohol has no place xne legislature to pass a law re j .-, . .... nW Kp farm "Rvprv ounce of u,v,"r, oil fflmoic Kets. ii xnpv occudv a sneciai " cure a degree from the school of section, may be misunderstood rgy must be exerted to prop administration of the University by patens. Last yeW tickets erly manage vast areas of cot ; j v.m wr snM for faiilnt fmnaiii And ' S"" tobacco.-. The ai wuct iu liviVA wiiivc i 1 : i . , ,1 j -i i j xa If something of this sort is many were . evicted by irate ' "e not done . immediately there is alumni and interested patrons ot , 7 , Z7?Z: -little doubt but wnat the towns, cities,- and , counties, and, - yea even the State itself, will be bankrupt before students from may "be avoided this year, it is thP T JniVprsitv wlio sonant nri- care" of his livestock. Today- he vileges over', the studerit btfdy. sPends his money for these lit- In order that such a situation ue necessities tnat give mm laxatiOn from his strenuous la- asV-.t-hflfrlirf lrit fnr Dors; yesusruay muuigcu m tins new buuui can uaive uyci i -" w i , - ii ' : ' '" '' V' Jll I Vi a' ci-rQaot Viii. ioenarl cfiifAnt-o-. an I aiCOIlOl. tne reigns -juaging irom tneii,-Liv:; opcvv.o uoutu omuvu, ou - . ''!-'.'. ' ' ' ... ...- r I II i Jl J. J J. recent deficits reported m. these pi iner speciators may noilF-the Frosh different divisions of govern-move, into tne stuaent section Education for college fesh- ment. .... ana taKe over seats wmcn may advances even over Period oe more cnoice tnan tneirs. btu- nT1;a T?rpaimpn thia vpqV TV Ion ill TTirnriianVk I A rm-f-c titzs TT?''fiiollxr Vqka -F-nm I- . . ' . . . ' iuvi(vui i;6ivuv utuwj nvio vu iucui; uciucu uum wprp crivpn niacempnt tests in In High Places section -to section in some games RTlfytf9i, matnpmatW Rnanis Three hundred leading citizens last year and then tickets were F renc an(q an examination on oi tne Latt; ox iNortn- Carolina vn iui m onwno wvu general l. w. various tests m became cumulatively alarmed at pass books were supposed to ox school preceded those tak the raganism and Communism cover. en on the Hju Tests were more -that is regularly being dispensed If tickets are , not provided, difficult sections more strictly from professorial seats of wis- many interlopers who have pay- limited and everv effort made dom m tneir beloved university, ea tne ticKet tarm pius tax win u.Q. jnsure g00(j gr0und work in This alarm became articulate in seek places in the student sec- xt. pacentials Several vears a manifesto to the Goyernor de- tion and may only be evicted n such niacement reauire . v ... I ii . - i i j .l.-j. i w . mandmg measures of correction, tne student can snow ms "CKet ments were virtually unheard of. oo oiixer ana unquanned were to tne seat, xnts lsa icquuc- t certain portions of the document ment will eliminate some' of the designating his special seat wil that leading papers throughout difficulty confronting the Stu- further clarify the situation. the nation carried AP reports of dent, but the addition of a ticket D.C.S. was snven a beauty to counteract tne routine tne press. His. duties with the dullness into which our lives pres multinlied and he served have tended to fall in the past in. many capacities : ( as assign years." nieht man. special writer, re- H?aving built for himself a porter, on make-up, copy read- reputation for writing, Phillips ing, and at times he did literary Russell, or Charlie, as he is reviews. known by, his friends, speaks Not hing- been' in New York with authority oh the' subject i0ng Russell yearned to visit oth- nearest his heart.- or ne came er- citfes and iearn more of the bick here last fall' and took the wori, oA metroDolitah newsna- mah-sized' job of teaching . the Tni dgsi led: hint to1 ac-: fundamentals of writing; hot un- ce t work both in phil'adelpnia tn ne was master ox many ox tne aud Chicago. principles, id the gtudenfs' iiV the rpTo rw-iQiii. University. sell, always adventurous, wife In; a siinhy cottage here, where pfetically no fuiid and accom between classes and official du-; paned by a friend in the same ties he may study, read arid con- condltion, left for Europe. Cori tiriiie t& write, the biographer; sntly on the move, they did author and teacher, born in natever joos presented them Rockmgham; North Caroliria, seives to tnem ih th places has' prepared to live. on en- where- t stopped. In July Ming' his' home'-one is impressed thev wan hiking from Paris to wnh ifs;simpleriess; jlri' a single 1,1 ,. eh'riL They corner of the eptioX f66rt?- isl England on the day al ,h o-sho There stdi entered the jnear tne wmaow is a smaittaoie rWorld War; RUSH was de land above it- are' shelved and p i- :n a J Gferrilail spy but was gebiV hole wherelW letters,: yoo affer proving tnat ;maiiuscriptf arid the writer h was onlv anderinff Amer ican. (. . (' ; - Begins " ritin' 6ibgrapliies It was9 duririff' this visit abroad itor needs cbmplairi about the which. asted for fotir andr one. hospitality he- is certain to 'half vears, that material was dis- accorded tnere, mrormaiiy .ne overfed which led to writing the . J J -11 . i? 3 i . I ' - entertains an guests ana inxor- biography 0f Benjamin Frank- many ne greets tne passers-oy. WhiW ?f Paris a niimhpr It was with , some difficulty of letters and documents were j - n.tj J. ... 1 1 wnen tne time . came ior 'ai,-a dj..-frtmitVihBa. T. luuuu auu 11 v111 fiivsor i ic x 1 f o u this interview, h o we v e f , nt;uj a ttt; It Was published in 1925. One year later Russell's second biog raphy JbTm Paw? Jones: Man of Action came off the Dress. A self or his accomplishments. , In mYe. The FumUer was publish- an attempt to learn more 01 tnis ed. jn, 1928, iNortn oaroiiman wno; nas trav- About the time of the anDear- eled much arid written more, anee 0f Ben Franklin biog it .1 1 1 1 tnere was omy one . avanaoie ranips ram into rnnsmVimn source from which to gather .in- prominence in the United States. tormation concerning, mm 4 per- previously America's presidents sonany. , a: visit to tne norary and notables had been moulded revealed , that. Louis Graves, into perfect characters by Amer March 1929, had this to say con- ican authors. No faults, or cerning "Charlie" in The Alumni flawg if any had ver before ueview.oi tnat date: . snnwn im in Tia wat-v a-p "Phillips Russell opened his ranhers O w7 A. V A T T ' said.- "it mierht sppm .fhnt there that he was going to be a phiniVjg Russeirs remarkahlp 1 1 j 1. il.. - ;; . writer; snut ms eyes, ana same biography of Benjamin Frank- into a ounu sieep... vvnen ne i: belonffed to this rlasa nf 'M,, awoke and considered the mat- h,i ,.4;;. tlr:-L- 7 I ---- --------- -- -- - - stiuctive oiograpny,. ana was a ter 01 nis career agam, ne was product of this new movement. still 01 tne same mina, ana irom This is far frbm the case, Rus tnat day on ne never wandered. , Born in Rockingham "His- first published work was a report ol a visit to an orphan asylum. It came out in the newspaper in his native town of Rockingham, North Carolina. The most discerning of his fellow citizens saw in it a quality that marked it as quite different from the ordinary school boy compo sition. The orphans that Char lie Russell nad in tne story were not the inmates of ah ,. asylum ; they were creatures of the' flesh and blood. Thus early he ' re vealed the beginnings of talent that was to blossom forth, thir ty years later, in a biography that won praise of critics the world over for its vividness and insight. "When he wrote the piece about the orphans, and for a long time afterward, he was Charles Phillips Russell, or C. P. Russell, or to his friends Charlie Russell. The name of Phillips Russell was- adopted when the young writer, coming trial on the staff of tenal "fyer before pubhshed and to this rich harvest of facts has brought an unusually hu man and humorous insight into the problems of life." This, you will understand, does not keep Russell from be ing a warm admirer of Benja min Franklin, who, he holds was not an unconventional charac ter, but probably the greatest man, all round, the JJnited States ever produced. "Whatever, line of science or industry you fol low," says Russell, "you will find that Benjamin Franklin bulged large in it. In politics, inven tion, electricity, music and even in such subjects as ventilation and printing, he was not onty the greatest man of his time, but one of the greatest men of all time." , So,- as his friend has written, Russell "never wandered" from his field of work and has devot ed his' entire life to it. He has contributed to magazines both in America and abroad and has done several- short stories, ; the first of which was The Trou6aT dor and- another notable story,' One Hay. He has written two" small' volumes of verse, Floiv ings and Meat and Honey, and ai one-act! play named", A Coiirse in Piracy. He is author of Roads of Doubt, American Literature' in France, The Best Epigfdnl matist Since Oscar Wilde, the Chimney, ited tig ex, arid other" articles and stories. Polo Spilfs-v Hedrftftriifef JACK HOLY in,. Also - . Andy Clyde Coniedy "This Sporting Age" ..Paramount Pictorial fAROLINA . Now Praying Special Mbrning Show 10 A. M. Announces The following actions 1:6 the shelves- of its rental library: The Sheltered Life .'. :Elleri Glalsgo The Laughing Pioneer .:........Paul -Green Peking Picnic -..Ann Bridge . The Gods Arrive ... .....v Edith Wart6h and More-Merry-Go-Round The Book Shop with Tradition in the "Y" Magazines Books Carolina Handcraft s v
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1932, edition 1
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