Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 19, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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Saturday, November 19, 1932 Page Two THE i i ; f; tfte S)aiip Car leel The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union Board of the University of North Carolina aft Chapel Hill where it is printed daily except Mon days, and the Thanksgiving, Christ mas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $4.00 for the college year.v Offices on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. Chas. G. Kose, Jr. Editor Geo. W. Wilson, Jr....Mgr. Editor D. McMillan :..Bus. Mgr. Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoe maker, chairman; E. C. Daniel, Jr., John Alexander, Edith. Harbour, Mayne Albright, B. B. Perry, A. T. Dill, J. M. Joy, F. A. Northrup, Peggy Ann Harris, Robert Berry man, Vergil J. Lee, V. C. Royster. CITY EDITORS Bob Woerner, Bill Davis, L. L. Hutchison, W. R. Eddle maa, Otto Steinreich. DESK MEN George Malone, Phil Markley,-. J. D. Winslow, Nelson Robbing. FEATURE BOARD Joseph Sugar man, chairman ; Donoh Hanks, Frank Hawley, Carl Thompson. air over Kenan stadium or tioned group will agree that sal whether it hangs dejectedly in aries in excess of one hundred defeat let us remember that we thousand dollars a year are are gentlemen and sons of Caro- ridiculous. The same facts hold lina. A gentleman takes his tri- true as to inheritances. Few umph quietly and his defeat people believe that they should gracefully.; A Carolina man is a not exist, but they would ques- gentleman.- O.S.S. tion the practicality of sums ex ceeding a million dollars. Amounts in excess of those men tioned could be turned over to form of higher Music in The Balance - The fate of North Carolina's laoorers m bid for recognition in the march wages, used by the government of cultural progress hangs in for unemployment insurance, old fv Mnn rpr,n nnnnnir.4. nf A.-ua age nensions. or used for the North Carolina State Svimmonv furtherance of education. here December 2, will give to the No one wishes to be told what people of the state an opportun- industry he must go into or how it v. to decide unon the future of har he must work, yet . some the onlv organization of 'its kind form of planned production in the country. North Carolina miglit go a long way toward cor is the only state in the Union recting self-evident errors of to- possessing a state symphony day- composed of amateur musicians .There are in existence, at pres drawn from the entire state, ent, examples of both capitalis but it would seem we have set tic and socialistic systems. There SPORTS DEPARTMENT Claiborn the style. The symphony has are many weak as well as strong c-arr, xzui Anaerson, juck. xae&seii, , . Lawrence Thomnson. Matt Hackett, been m existence only SI J. H. Morris, Crampton Trainer, months, yet even in this short erroneous principles with proven SFeT onf ??5' neriod it has done much to stim- ones ? L.M.J. XXUgU J-HXILC, Vail Y CUU, UIJLUIJUJT J.U.V-- I ulate a wider interest m sym phony music within the state. From Delaware comes the news that a similar, project has been Gurk, Jack Lowe. REPORTERSB. R. "Weaver, Ray mond Barron, James B. Craighill, Walter Hargett, T. W. Hicks, James W. Keel, Nelson Lansdale, Robert Hammer, Irving Suss, Clarence pegun. Hartman, Eleanor Bizzell, Elizabetn Cultural music in sympnony conceits nave ux- Busmess Staff fered a decided set-back durinsr OUR TIMES By Don Shoemaker and interest Bottles The Syracuse Daily Orange -ManigtrTI0N DEPT'Tm the Past decade due to the influx has gone.and spoiled all our en- OFFICE - STAFF F. P. Gray, 'Jr., of the so-called "popular" music, thusiasm for the football game Ass't Bus. Mgr., John Barrow, Ass't The power of this popular music this afternoon. "There were," aSk 'tt is on the wane nowever and as says the Orange, "more empty Manning, Adv't Mgr., W. C. Jones, Paul Whiteman, famed King of whiskey bottles - found in the MBF Jazz' said a few weeks ago, stadium after the Colgate game derson, Buddy Upchurch, J. Ralto "modern jazz is taking a decided than there have been for the past Farlow, Joe Mason. . . trend towards classicism. The llCollertMlrfe'c PP16 are again clamoring for 2,500 bottles 'were found in and Webli, ,, Agnew i.Bamson, L. E. music with depth and real beau- around the big oval. Last year P. Phif er, J. T. Barnard. there were between 500 and Saturday, November 19, 1932 Win or Lose A Gentleman V x )t Cfjcss placer "The Game of Kings, the King of Games" , By Paul J. Miller. Jr. RALEIGH CHESS CLUB INVADES CAROLINA Initial Fall Tourney The average Carolina man has h .000 --less' The : information never- neara - a true sympnony Wva cmhorexl bv a snorter from " w wj J. concert, s His nearest, association the men wh0 ciean the stadium. with classical music has been ht?nr tho snlce of the Oranae re- I through the high school orches- Lorter were -nrettv much " " ' lit i' l A- A battle will be waged today tras and bands, an unfortunate wr0Urht up about the whole between the football teams of situation since the performance business. We can imagine the two of the South's and the na- 0f most high school orchestras rep0rter lingering -in the stad- ' 4-1 lAAimV T7AVC1T1 fC I nOCO I 1 wnt .4-4- Irt -k . l-w i- Ct - 1 ilAI. . - LiAjii o lcctuxxi uii.ivci.oxiico. x uue uui uucx me ucai inuuuuv,- 1Tn aftpr last Saturdav s firame two mstitutions have m recent tion to musical appreciation. Nor untn everyone had gone home, years become the keenest rivals are the people of the state much an(j then rushine: down to quiz in every neid 01 enoeavor eou- better on: than tne college stu- Qfodinm cleaners His storv cational, scholastic, and athletic, dents. - nf the o-ame must have been: Two years ago the senior . The initial concert of the sym- In the midst of a wildly clink classes of Duke and Carolina phony in May showed clearly :n mass 0f frenzied whiskey presented a beautiful trophy, a that the state is eager for bet- bottles unofficially estimated at pair oi suver goal posts mounted ter music, yet it lanea to mi tne 2 500 Colgate battered its wav on an ebony base, to alleviate depleted coffers of the Symphony LQ a ieo victory over Syracuse the tenseness of feeling which Society. The December concert here today . . ." I i 1 1 T A. 1 1 I n ,1 1 il 1 A. I JF was at tne time eviaent Detween 01 tne sympnony is its last hcvaL- I I A. X M.11IV n i mi. a -i I - ii 111 tne scnoois. ine tropny wnicn cnance and witnout tne support a ia n ,1VCS ar,a tvaf is received by the winning team of the entire state"it cannot but there are too many Franks in is emblematic of that old prize fail. It is an achievement which the University for anybody's taKen Dy Dioousnea, tne actual deserves a neipmg nand. its m goalposts. fluence in other states has al Since that time relations be- ready begun, and it would be a tween Carolina and Duke have disgrace for North Carolina been steadily improving, and as should the idea of a state sym- thereupon four other indivi a result of the two scoreless ties phony fail in its native state. duais.waiking near our friend's which have preceded today's V.O.K. -RVrmV turned around and re game, feeling among the student sponded with a like "Hey." One bodies of the competing teams Let's it developed, was Frank, a jani- lsmost intense, i loday s sun Compromise tor. another i Frank was a law will set either upon a stadium in our world today we have, student and the other two filled with supporters . of both fundamentally, two - classes Franks were undergraduates. schools wiiO'tiave a mutual re- those who have lost sight 01 our friend says that he was too spect and maintain a leelmgot pride,' .initiative, and personal surpriSed to make a comeback. RALEIGH CHESS CLUB - . will encounter the Carolina Social. Chess Club for the first competitive match series to be played by the Carolina team this fall, Friday evening at 7 :30 o'clock, Graham Memorial Chess room. V The tournament is open to the public. The opposing teams consist of seven players, respec tively. Each player engages in three matches. Playing time is twenty moves the hour. Any chess player at the Uni versity may be considered eli gible for the Carolina team; however, all candidates must be present tonight at the local club's meeting to prove their avowed abilities. ; ICA SIMULTANEOUS CHESS TONIGHT Six tables of simultaneous chess -will be played tonight in the Graham Memorial Chess room. Each table may have five consulting players championing White. Paul J. Miller, Jr., will be the defensive black. Roose velt will toss in the ball at 7 :30 sharp. Hoover will hold the towel as usual. - . ICA , J. A. Martinelli, . of Indian apolis, Ind., writes that he is de sirous of engaging in some cor respondence chess game.; Will some of our players kindly "take him on?" We refer m correspondence chessners to Dr. W.' C. Win chester, P. 0. ; Box 813, Santa Fe, New Mexico, who is director of the Extension Chess Promo tion League, the E. C P. L.; and to R. C. Van De Grift, Tourna ment Director, North American Correspondence Chess League, 9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, California. ICA HERR KIEBITZ v In every college you will find DANCES CONTINUE THIS MORNING AND EVEMxq After a successful dance ia the Tin Can last night the cli max of the week-end's f estivities will come tonight with the Fall German dance which' will take place in the Tin Can' from 9:00 until 12:00 o'clock with Charlie Boulanger providing the music. There will also be a dance this morning from 11 :30 to 1 :15 in the Tin Can. Charlie Boulanger and his or chestra, who have been engaged for the complete set of dances by the German club, first became casting at the Park Central hotel and Yengs Restaurant in New York City, Bringing the latest sound' equipment, Charlie Boulanger has as special fea tures two radios soloists, Miss Virginia Lee and Cole Coleman. Freshman Picture Taken . I n l 4-T i t 1 this species. It will never be- weu miuwu Liiruugn nis broad- come extinct as long as the planet Earth churns through the void and the two-legged mam mal called man, generically Homo sapiens, trods the turf. A matter for the variety of Kiebitz, who disturb the game of 1 others by interruptions and superiority of chess knowledge, seems opportune as initial rule for beginners and amateurs. House rules of the year 1583, in a Berlin hostelry, give some idea how the tribe of Kiebitz was punished in old Berlin. They read thus: "Whoever persists in gazing over a busy player's shoulder until the player becomes flushed with fright, shall be driven away immediately and shall be called Kiebitz. Whosoever may glare at the board of two players and is overcome by his passion for giving one of -them a hint by niotions of his eyes, or prattle of his snout,: he shall be ..fined thirty pennies of good coin, or a crock, of malt-beer for the com mon good.. Then he shall be driven away. But he who thinks him-self so. overburdened . by wisdom that he must .. give ad vice to the players, shall have his muzzle pummeled and .his cap driven over his ears, - for. he is an ass; in addition, he shall be beaten and thrown into the street." The Gambit. The chapel period was cut short yesterday in order that the freshman class picture could be taken. Chapel was dismissed after the devotional and the an nouncements. The freshmen then met on the steps of the law building. Four pictures were ; taken. One was an entire group picture and there 1 11 were . three smaller groups ranged according to. names. ar- Bel Duke The Hill Dry Cleaners PROFESSORS FACE TWENTY PER GENT SALARY DECREASE good. Walking past Phillips Thursday morning he saw a friend of his across the street and shouted "Hey, Frank." (Continued from first page) he entire eight months at wenty per cent or over fewer months at a higher rate. In either case the saving realized by the University will be the same. The total maintenance fund of the University is made up of the state appropriation, income from endowments and other sources. The most remunerative of these other sources are the fees and dormitory rentals. This ast class of income varies each year, and this year took a down ward turn necessitating the sal ary cut. good natured rivalry for each other or a mass of bitter human ity looking across the field at their hated and despised "enemies.-. . . !. Should the latter condition re sult, irreparable damage will be done to the movement for bet ter relations between the stu dents of these two great centers of higher education in the South. What little bitterness may re suit from today's game are like ly to become actual grievances of tomorrow, and all hope for amity will be definitely blasted. Let us in the broadness of our vision forget the petty hatreds kept smouldering in the hearts of generations of Carolina and Duke students for so many years,: and welcome our neigh bors with a. real cordiality and extend to them the- hospitality to which as our guests they are due. "Whether with today's 'dying sun the flag of the University flies triumphantly in the clear freedom and those who still just waved a hand feebly and hope to retain those once ideal- smnk 0ff down'the street. istic qualities of a time-worn Quards monetary system. If we were We feel that the great Ameri to delve deeply into the actual can football public ought to be hopes and beliefs of both classes set right about this "dumb we would hnd them basically the guard" business. In an editor- same, 'l ne - nrst class, lor the ial argUment over the Princeton great part victims of well known extra point in the Yale game, discrepancies of our present sys- an Eli varsity guard, one Allan tern, have placed their hopes on Converse, writes to the Prince the only apparent avenue ot es-, tonian: "I venture the state cape radical socialism. The meiit that the Princeton kick for other class, winners m a game extra point was wide of the of both chance and skill, have mar 1 saw it fail from ah squared their jaws and prepared optimum position; others in my to fight for the game that has Tuition corroborated mv onin placed them above the present ion heard Billings himself average or above the highest at- acknowledge the score should tamable average unaer a i"- have been seven to six . istic system. Among the youth of today you Venizelo's reported determin will find verv few who would be ation to use military force to willing or anxious to be plunged prevent a return of royalism into ) a ; system r where personal should the Greek people vote for ambition or: initiative Could not it, reminds one of the man who have both its chance and its re- said if people didn't want free - v 1 T it J 1 .1 1 1 4 l . . ward, it is nere tnat opinion aom it snouiq oe iorcea upon differs. Most of the af ore-men- them. Chicago Daily News. Whitehead were both with Jesse Bonstelle's famous company in Detroit before coming to the Players. Sam Pearce, stage manager and actor in the Jit ney Company, was in the Yale School of Drama, and actively engaged in the New Haven Lit tle Theatre. He appeared in the production Booth Had Missed and when it closed ioined the Jitney Players. Shepherd Strudwick, alumnus of the University and prominent in the Carolina Playmakers was with the Jitney Players for three seasons affpr hex Wf xv J..a. v Chapel Hill. 1 1 NEW ARRIVALS - at the Young Men's Shop ? SUEDE JACKETS Unusually large selection of ' McGregors, Albert Richards, etc. ; 3.95 thru $9.85 CORDUROY JACKETS and ZIPPER COATS $2.45 and $2.95 Blue Flannel ENGLISH TYPE JACKETS $2.95 Drop around before or after the game and see these un usual bargains. We Young Men's Shop 126-128 E. Main Street DURHAM I TWO DRAMAS TO BE PRESENTED BY: JITNEY PLAYERS (Continued from first page) with the Jitney Players. Others with the Jitney Com pany are Lee Crowe who was under the management of Wil liam Brady, and has played in support of Claudette Colbert and other well known actresses; Barbara Benedict who was with the Theatre Guild; and John Maroney who has played with Ina Claire, and Margaret An-glin. Ellen Love, a Vassar girl, and Phyllis Flanagan, members of the company, sing and act, and Miss Flanagan is an accomplish ed musician, playing both piano and cello. Harrison Dowd, recently, ac claimed in a London, revue, ap peared at one time with Estelle Taylor in the movies, and Charles Kradoska, who has played with Greta Nissen and is also a dancer, have important roles in the Jitney casts. Helen Morrow and Royden We BELIEVE in Carolina They Will BEAT DUKE e Little Shop FANCY ICES PHONE L-963 SHERBETS ' "Ice Cream Sfecialists" Durham Ice Cream GompanyJng. FAST FROZEN "BLUE .RIBBON". ICE CREAM Made With Pure Cream ' Duram, North Carolina Good to Eat at all Hours' BLOCKS PUNCHES
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 19, 1932, edition 1
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