Page Two
Clie Sailp Car Wtt
The official newspaper of the Publi
cations Union Board of the University
of North Carolina at 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.
Offices cm the second floor of the
Graham Memorial ' Building.
Chas. G. Rose, Jr................ Editor
Geo. W. Wilson, Jr...-.Mgr. Editor
R. 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. J oy, P. 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. Eddie-
man, Otto Stemreich.
DESK MEN George Malone, Phil
i Markley, J. D. Winslow, Nelson
Robbins. -;. -
FEATURE BOARD Joseph Sugar
man, chairman; Donoh Hanks, Carl
Thompson, Milton Stoll; Irving D.
Suss. ; .
SPORTS DEPARTMENT Claiborn
Carr,' Bill Anderson, Jack Bessen,
Lawrence Thompson,' Matt Hackett,
J. H. Morris, Crampton, Trainer,
Morrie Long, Lane Fulen wider,
Hugh Lane, Van ' Webb, Jimmy Mc-
Gurk, Jack Lowe.
REPORTERS B. R. Weaver, Ray
mond Barron, James B. Craighill,
Walter Hargett, T. W. Hicks, James
W. Keel, Nelson Lansdale, Robert
C, Page, George Rhoades, Phillip
Hammer, Davis Spiers, Clarence
Hartman, Eleanor Bizzell, Elizabeth
Johnson, W. B. Greet, Dave Mosier,
Raleigh Allsbrook, Sterling R. Col-
lette. - 1 ' - . -
Business Staff
CIRCULATION DEPT. Tom Worth,
Manager.
OFFICE STAFF F. P. Gray, Jr.,
" 'Ass't Bus. Mgr., John Barrow, Ass't
isus..Mgr.t W . is. Kobeson.
ADVERTISING STAFF Howard
-'- Manning, Advt Mgr.; W. C. 'Jones,
Adv't Mgr., J. W. Callahan, James
Mehaffy, Butler French Esley An
derson, Buddy Upchurch, ; J. Ralto
rarlow,,Joe Mason.
COLLECTION STAFF Randolph
Keynelds, Collection Mgr., Joe C.
Webb, , Agnew Bahnson, L. E.
Brooks, Armistead Maupin, Robert
Jf.' Pmier, J; T. Barnard.
Wednesday, December 7, 1932
Hosanna
" When December rolls around
each year the time comes to note
in these columns little munifices
to humanity : that will 'make
Christmas bigger and better. We
are thankful for many things
We are thankful that' "present-
day youth is ten tinies as cour
ageous, chivalrous, and brave as
the youth of yesterday" (Sir
Wilfred T. Grenfell). We are
pleased that little Latvia only
owes the United States $111,000
this December 15, and that she
might pay it.
We give thanksgiving that
"Marriage" is the subject of a
college body parley to be held
this year at Wesleyan Univer
sity, feeling, indeed, that some
one should be looking into the
marriage question for a change.
We take particular delight in
the discovery of the Association
of Unemployed College Alumni
that "diplomas cannot be eaten."
We are amused and gratified
to hear that the co-eds of West
ern Reserve University think
that "someone else would be bet
ter fitted for the job" when it
was suggested that Rudy Vallee
judge a beauty contest at that
institution. . ' We are thankful
that Russell T. Sherwood has
been found and now wonder
whether J ustice Crater shot Ar
nold Rothstein. We are thank
ful that seventy-seven pupils at
Hugh Morson high school in
Raleigh made the honor roll dur
ing November, and that Profes
sor Albert Einstein will be al
lowed to enter the United States.
D.C.S.
For a
Cooperative Bank
There seems to be a crying
need in Chapel Hill for a bank
which will render courteous ser
vice to students of the Univer
sity. The , existence at present
of a banking monopoly is deplor
able, for, 'even though Chapel
Hill has a small permanent popu
lation, the continual existence of
students attending the Univer
sity throughout the year makes
necessary some depository where
students can maintain active ac
counts. As a matter of stric
business, it is obvious that stu
dent accounts are of no conse
quence to a bank, that is, there
is no profit involved. It is in this
way only that one can explain
the conspicuous lack of courtesy
which is in evidence at the loca!
bank. Only because of the law
which prevents a bank from re
fusing small accounts does the
locaJ house accept any student
accounts at all.
It would seem, then, that the
situation calls for immediate
remedy. There is need of a bank
or trust company which would
be willing to handle small stu
dent accounts for their conveni
ence. A nominal sum could be
charged for service rendered
Better still, a cooperative bank
could be formed of University
men existing solely for students,
their accounts and loans. At
present, the loan end is handled
by the office of the dean of stu
dents, while the deposit end is
allowed to drift as it may. Need
1
less to say, local business men
would rather handle checks on a
local trust company than on a
multitude of banks in towns,
large and small, in various part3
of the country.' Such an arrange
ment would allow, students- to
transfer their accounts from
home banks and would consider
ably lighten the burden of the
Y. M. C. A. Book Exchang
which seems to be at present one
of the few places where a stu
dent's check is honored without
suspicion. B.B.P.
The Child Is. Father
Of the Man ' 7
The first series of formal pub
lic inaugurations ever conducted
in this state were held last Mon
day, and they presented to the
public the first open move made
by the Institute of Government
in its effort to improve the pres
ent status of state government.
The Institute of Government,
headed by Albert Coates, prof es
sorof law at the University, was
organized not only to stimulate
an interest in governmental af
fairs, but at the same time to
offer some means for the train
ing of the younger generation in
means and methods- of govern
ment.
The long list of distinguished
names that partook in the main
ceremony in Raleigh, among
whom were Chief Justice W. P
Stacy arid Governor-elect J. C. B.
Ehringhaus,' indicates not only
the sanction but the encourage
ment of North Carolina's pro
gressive leaders. Yet encour
agement alone never brought
success. The goal of such an
idealistic dream can be reached,
if ever, only by beginning at the
beginning. In taking under its
wing the North Carolina Feder
ation of Students, the Institute
lias begun withlts right foot for
ward ; but an endeavor to inspire
the aged-in-the-wood politicians
with patriotism without1 instill
ing it in the youth has the ap
pearance of futility.
Under the backing which, os
tensibly at least, the Institute
possesses, sometnmg 01 good
should certainly be accomplished.
The Institute working in connec
tion with the Public Administra
tion department of the Univer
sity and similar departments
elsewhere could accomplish far
more than by putting on a show
in Raleigh. V.C.R.
New Fields
To Conquer
Alabama's trips to the coast,
Georgia's prowess against Yale,
Duke's scheduling of Ohio State
and numerous other a intersec:
tional games played by southern
earns have led many friends of
the University to wonder why
this school does not participate
in competition beyond the sphere
of .the Southern Conference and
the Big ' Five. There are real
advantages to be gained by en
gaging teams from other sec
THE DAILY
tions that we are entitled to en
joy. To begin with it undoubt
edly, makes the. University bet
ter known throughout the na
tion. Right or wrong, there can
be no denying that many col
leges whose names are on every
tongue gained their fame by vir
tue of no scholastic excellence,
but through their elevens. One
sign of a school's greatness is its
ability to rise from an institu
tion of sectional importance to
one of national renown. The
field of sport is one that exerts
a tremendous influence upon the
American people and is a per
fectly worthy medium through
which to gain the recognition of
the entire country.
This suggestion is offered
with a certain amount of humil
ity born of our record this year.
It is in no way a hint that our
present ' competitors are . un
worthy of us. The teams we
have played are those of fine
schools and are composed of real
sportsmen. Contact with them
has been of value and enjoyment
to Carolina. But we might en-
joy a broadened contact by drop-
ping various southern teams for
a year and substituting in turn
teams from other parts. One
mtersectional game a year would
not endanger our friendly rela
tions with Conference teams
and would greatly broaden our
contacts elsewhere.
Whether we might hope to de
feat teams of other sections is
immaterial. iut we would en
joy winning, and there are many
elevens of our own strength in
the . east and elsewhere that
could furnish us with keen and
equal competition. Intersectional
games will bring the University
increased , recognition and will
furnish our players opportunity
to oppose men from other parts.
And it will bind with the whole
some cement of sport, friend
ships with colleges throughout
the nation. So why not step out
of our little circle and join our
friends of the Southern Confer
ence in their campaigns to
strange territories ? J.F.A. .
The Midnight
Hour
(Annual Edit)
Midnight sessions are among
the most enjoyable experiences
in college life. No class room
discussion can possibly take the
place of the friendly, rambling,
soul-revealing sort of argument
that most of us carry in bur
memories as the choicest part of
our undergraduate days. Count
not that time lost, which is stol
en from studies, and dull, pro
fitable education to drag discus
sion through interminable wind-
ngs while the room is filled with
the atmosphere of philosophy
and tobacco smoke, arid the
hands of the alarm clock, which
is to ring at seven, slowly move
around to four o'clock in the
morning.
That is the time when friend
ship is tempered and tested,
when toleration and fair-mindedness
are taxed to the limit,
when Utopian schemes are ad
vanced to reform religion, col-
ege politics, or the social sys-
tern, "mat is tne time when
generous or impractical im
pulses have full sway, when man
meets man without the deceiv
ing mask of manner and custom,
on a basis of complete accept
ance and equality. That is the
ime when a man forgets that he
has always considered it im
modest to expose his own feel
ings and beliefs, arid when he
speaks the thoughts that are in
bis mind with full assurance of
understanding. That is the time
when friends are made whom we
mean to keep through life.
Finally, the conversation lags
With
Contemporaries
and dulls, arid the host shows by
TAR HEEL
nods and yawns that he is sleepy,
and ne opens tne aoor to say
"Good night" with a lack of po
liteness that at any other time
would surely arouse resentment.
One then takes his feet off the
furniture and dumps the ashes
frnm "his rririA nn thfi floor, de
parting to leave the cool night
wind to blow away the tobacco
smoke, and the host to snatch a
few hours sleep before daylight.
The midnight hour is the sup
posed mythical education that
onft fffita from heart-to-heart
contact with his fellows. It is
the course in human psychology
which is not based on scientific
laws nor book theorems; it is
the period of broadening ones
mind, intellect and most of all,
sympathy. If there is one thing
in a college education that the
commuter misses, it is that learn
ing acquired from midnight
hours of discussion, confiding
and confession. It' is that hour
of life with one's associates that
should make the parent and the
students themselves realize what
they are losing by living at home
away from the atmosphere and
I contact 01 trie numan ieenng 01
the College.- Columbia Specta
tor.
Employment
Among the A.B.'s
;- A survey just completed
through questionnaires returned
by 1,233 of the Nebraska Uni
versity's 1,310 1932 graduates
provides a detailed picture of
the way the world treats the fin
ished product of modern educa
tion" in ' this day when jobs are
scarce arid' people still get hun
gry three times a day.
Of 766 men and 467 women
replying to the ' questionnaire,
37 per cent have jobs. By'itself
this figure is hot very impres
sive. But when it is corisider
ed that some2 116 now taking
graduate work here or "else
where and the women who make
no attempt at a "career" are
counted among the unemployed
it is apparent that Nebraska '32
has fared reasonably well for
these times.
Other interesting facts which
are brought out in the returns
are these: ' 1
Of these who have jobs, 31
per cent were members of a f ra
lemiiy or sorority wnne m
school. Of the total graduating
class, however, only 21 per cent
were Greeks. The Greeks it
seems had the best luck job
hunting.
The Phi Beta Kappa employ
ment figure was '38 per cent
only; one per cent greater than
the average for all those reply
ing. ' ' r ;'; " "
Of those graduates now mar
ried, 41 per cent have jobs. A
wife, it would seem, is a greater
asset in job hunting than a P.
B. K. key.
Men had 8.5 per cent better
success than women in getting
work.
Finally : Graduates prepared
for one of the professions found
jobs more plentiful than ' did
those educated ' in the "general
cultural" curriculum. Daily
Nebraskan.
Wednesday, Dec. 7
9:00-10:00 Edward A. Mac-
Do well, American composer, me
morial concert from Carnegie
Hall; Mendelssohn Glee Club,
New York Philharmonic-Symphony
orchestra; Louis Gruen
berg, pianist. WEAF.
12:15 Lopez. WEAF.
12:30 Ted Weems. WJZ.
The world's biggest shortcake
the pride of Lebanon, Oregon
held 135,000 berries. Why, oh,
why, couldn't we be short like
this cake? Weston Leader.
PATRONIZE OUR
ADVERTISERS
OUTSTANDING RADIO
BROADCASTS
Group's Choice Based
On Graduate School
(Continued from first page)
veloping Research in the Field of
Jurisprudence,' by Dean Roscoe
Pound of the Harvard law school,
and "The Chicago Plan and
Graduate Study," by Dr. Robert
Mi Hutchins, president of Chi
cago University. After each of
these meetings, the association
publishes a journal of its pro
ceedings. The organization, formed in
1900 under the leadership of Dr.
Charles Eliot, president of Har
vard University, and originally
composed of fourteen univer
sities, has grown until now
includes twenty-nine institutions
twenty-seven in the United
States and two in Canada. In
the United States the members
are: University of California
Catholic University of America
University of Chicago, Clark
University, Columbia University,
Cornell University, Harvard Uni
versity, University of Illinois
Indiana University, State Uni
versity of Iowa, Johns Hopkins
University, University of Kan
sas, University of Michigan, Uni
versity of Minnesota, University
of Missouri, University of Ne
braska, University of North
Carolina, Northwestern Univer
sity, Ohio State University, Uni
versity of Pennsylvania, Prince
ton University, Stanford Univer
sity, University of Texas, Uni
versity of Virginia, Washington
University, University of Wis
consm, and Yale University. In
Canada, those belonging are:
McGill .University and Univer
sity of Toronto.
DAVILA'S CAREER
VERY INTERESTING
(Continued from' first page)
Doctrine, the topic of Iiis speech
tonight, lie has enjoyed a very
colorful career,' having been the
leading 'figure in a revolution
which in 1931 made him presi
dent of the Chilean republic for
a few months.'
.j , -1.1.:'
Last night he spoke to Univer
sity students on the subject
of "Inter-American relations."
This meeting served for the
regular gathering of Epsilon
Phi Delta, the Cosmopolitan
club; and the International Re
lations club, which utilized the
occasion to hear Dr. Davila dis
cuss problems in which they are
vitally interested. The graduate
school through Dean W. W.
Pierson gave its commendation
to the lecturer and recommended
the entire course of lectures and
discussions to all students in
terested in political science, in
ternational relations,' govern
ment, or economics.
Genius of
Torture !
In his Palace of Mystery, no
mind could withstand its
secrets . . nor the Ori onto I
daughter! . , - U0i
The Picture of 1000 Thrills 2. " '
and Shudders! ' i'&-&s &r&A
BORIS KARLOPP .ffe'. '
Lewis Stone, " ' M V
Karen Morley, Chas. lit
Starrett, Myrna Loy Siv
Jean Hersholt ' W ft-
&4 mi P I
OTHER PEATTmpo
Thelma KtU Coneij, "Show Business"
w Z Talk-Bey Boop cartoon
-CAROLINA pm
Wednesday, December 7, 1932
GRANVILLE WILL
INTERPRET MANY
FAMOUS PERSONS
(Continued from first page)
Wishfort, from The Way of the,
World by William Congreve.
Following a ten minute inter
mission will come the second
group of interludes which are as
follows: Uriah Heep, from
David Copperfield by Charles
Dickens; Asano, a stage direc
tor, Uda, Prince of Sakamoto,
from The Fluttering Hands by
Kawataki Mokuami; Ivan Iva
novitch Tolkachov, the father of
Spite .o Himself by Anton
Chekhov; Nero, the Roman Em
peror, from Quo Vadis by Hen
ryk Sienkiewicz, the Lord Chan
cellor, from Iolanthe by Gilbert
and Sullivan; and Andre, from
the Final Call by De Lorde.
Quick Change Artist
Each selection forms a com
plete picture and is prefaced by
a short description of the play
during which the requisite
make-up is completed in view of
the audience and the scene is
then played with special light
ing effects.
The whole series of persona
tions is unified by a brief, stimu
lating talk covering the value of
the drama of life.
This event is a part of the
work of the Student Entertain
ment Committee, and it is the
final occasion of the year. Stu-
dent entertainment pasteboards
are good for entrance into the
show.
PLAYMAKERS BILL
FOUR NEW PLAYS
FOR PRESENTATION
(Continued from first page)
frontier and in which the scene
of the play is laid.
Four on a. Heath, written by
Foster Fitz-Simons, is a distinct
contrast to the typical realistic
plays of today, being a fantasy
in which four of the principal
characters are hanged men.
In the last presentation, Stum
bling in Dreams, George Brown
deals with the natives of Tin
Pan Alley, New York, in a real
istic setting and in vivid verna
cular of their kind. The song
which Brown wrote for this play
of the same title will be sung in
the Playmaker's production for
the first time on any stage.
Composition Conditions
The regular fall quarter exam
inations for the removal of com
position conditions will be given
at 4:00 o'clock Thursday in 111
Saunders. Students are remind
ed that no prepared theme is re
quired before the examination.
mcrvta