Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 18, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE DAILY TAR HEEL Saturday, February lg, The official newspaper of the Publications Union Board of the - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. En tered 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 on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. . Chas. G. Rose, Jr.... Geo. W. Wilson, Jr.. R. D. McMillan, Jr.. ; Editor Managing Editor ..Business Manager Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoemaker, chairman; E. C. Daniel, Jr., John Alexander, Edith Harbour, B. B. Perry, A. T. Dill, Vergil J. Lee, V. C. Royster, W. A. Sigmon, Robert Berryman. CITY EDITORS Bob Woerner, Bill Davis, L. L. Hutch ison, W. R. Eddleman, J. D. Winslow, T. H. Walker. DESK MEN Nelson- Robbins, Donoh Hanks, Carl Thompson. FEATURE BOARD Joseph Sugarman, chairman; Nel son Lansdale, Milton" Stoll, Irving D. Suss,. Eleanor Bizzell, George Rhoades. SPORTS DEPARTMENT Claiborn Carr, Bill Ander son, J. H. Morris, Lawrence ompson, Morrie Long, Crampton Trainer, Lane Fulenwider, Jimmy Mc Gurk, Jack Bessen. REPORTERS James B. Craighill, Raymond Barron, at the illusions of security which they had for merly -entertained. B.B.P. A Hot Dog Stand On Every Wave Captain Hugh Duncan Grant, British meteor ologist who speaks in Gerrard hall Monday night on "Wings, Weather, and Seadromes," is work ing toward the realization of one of aviation's choicest dreams. He is now in America as con sultant to the Armstrong Seadromes Airways Company, which, as its name implies, is under taking the fantastical feat of planting a series of floating steel islands approximately 350 miles apart in line across the Atlantic from New York to Europe for the commercialization of trans-oceanic air traffic. Extensive air ' transportation, aerial jaunts over the -Atlantic, luncheon in New York, din ner in Paris may not be so far in the future.as some of us skeptical souls believe. Nevertheless, the. proposed enterprise of the Armstrong Com pany reads like one of Jules Verne's or H. G. Wells' imaginative sprees. The floating air- VIT ill- By Don Shoemaker Magic We believe it was Teddy Roosevelt, the famous Hon hunter, who said "It's fun to be fooled it's more fun to know." Or perhaps he said something about "you can fool some of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time." At any rate, you may have no ticed the epigram on the current Comprehensives Give Students Responsibility (Continued from first page) - more tutorial assis'tance by as signing a certain number of can didates to different instructors for directed study. It is expect ed that this will further decrease the number of failures in the various departments. - The general opinion among faculty members is that these examinations have helped to break down the irresponsible at titude of the students toward their courses. They agree that as long as a student thinks of an ports will have six acres of landing deck for Walter Hargett, James W. Keel, D M. Humphrey, 0Qfov Vmrhnrs fnr Atlantic flvprs nnrl it is esti- T? -V - C. Po no TV ill i t- TTo rvriYi Totrzi MAeinf "Do! ii rrV I i iWVWVA V A 1 lUUlU AACAXXXXXXt. A J-S t T iUUOlVl IVUlVifcii I , ' . 1 1 J I I w w-t--. Allsbrook, J. C. Murphy, Jack Lowe, George Steele, matea tnai tney win iihuu; pus&iuie x iwcuij- pack a week. Has never smoked ... iuiicc, utcm. tniir. tn Tmrrv-siTC-nour man ana uasbtJiiuer bci- auieiusdicuauo. . " individual instructor as tne sole left hand corner is a portrait of .udgQ Qf what heig to do in that a grinning gentleman supposed- course the tendency of merely ly smoking a Camel. He is, an gettT)g by is developed. But informant states to us, one J. O. with the entrance of compre Bender of Indiana. But Mr. hensive examinations the pro Bender, chosen for his affable fSgor and the student become Business Staff vice between America and .Europe: CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Thomas Worth, Mgr. highly significant to progress that the advocates 0F7CSTAfFr PVGra3k Ass'V Bsw 8L; of the scheme persist in calling our "airdromes" i A m h Ko-rrnnmc I r I lor firm Klcrt Tna I Whh Acs't WJ- . Collections Mgr.: Agnew Bahnson, Subscriptions W. B. Robesc stead Maupin, , LOCAL ADVERTISING STAFF John Barrow. Ass't Bus. Mgr.; Howard Manning, Advertising Mgr.; But- Ocean is cluttered up with hot dog stands? ler rrencn, jsiey Anaerson, oe mason, J. itaito rar low, Buddy Upchurch, Woodrow Massey, Charles Tom linson, F. W. Smith. smile, smokes Old Golds, when partners and develop the basis he smokes. And then about one w-0fiiQi ,,.?--. a conferences. Not Merely Fact Quiz According, to a report made by Dr. Fred J. Kelly of the The peoples' representatives LiuxuiiiC& ovr inRaieio:h are p-etting along U , J ....x.... filling stations." Is it too much to asK, witn i . , . . nnsspsspd nf that v. T1 Mgr.; W. B. Robeson, Want Ad Mgr.; L. E. Brooks, I W:OC3 nr. nnv hnrlcwardnPSS. that the move- T .,f . .x,:-u ana an actlve Supporter Ot tne Armistead Maupin, J. T. Barnard. , mecunax, ux nuixxux mnu, COTiaolid ation movement of the mont ho Phppk-pri hptore a neriecuv eouu Auaiitic j j. . , , , greater university oi iNonn note. One day last week, But far be it from the Daily Tae Heel to ine for recreation .thesolons ji .-u'., vr,foma rryr onr L Jaxe utiviseu u reveal uie cimnges uepiuie wnaicvci Uioouuta6vo - trooucea a resolution caning ior progressive era. Tlie University is fortunate in the appointment of a committee having , so distinguished a .speaker as Captain UQ reqUeSt a fellow named Tib- - . -11 j I Grant; his talk will undoubtedly oe nigmy inter- bett to address the senate. The esting to-those who attend; and the project with committee. scurried around the which he is connected proves that after all it's halls of the capitol building look- not such a long way from Sunday-supplement ing for Tibbett. Someone to reality. People even laugnea at thought that perhaps the whole ' ... -x.: CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: W. R. EDDLEMAN Saturday, February 18, 1933 Almost a Progressive At last North Carolina has a progressive- or so we are informed. The age-old question science which has wracked the best minds of the Senate Columbus. A.T.D. as to what is a progressive has at last been set tied with a conclusiveness that borders on dog matism. The Greensboro News yesterday car ried the related in a story that nine senators who considered themselves forward-looking re cently held what amounted to a formal caucus, in the students' attitudes and their power of drawing infer ences rather than to test merely their knowledge of the facts of the course. It is along this line that an effort, is being made to develop the system at the Uni- With Contemporaries business was a joke and that the bill referred to Tibet, an Asiatic mountain section or perhaps A Great but what was really a conference, and definitely Educator ' -established themselves as being progressives, TTArrv WonHhnrn r.h asp nrpsidpnt vf Vi TTri, surrounding themselves with an air of exclusive- versity of Illinois, has been elected chancellor anyhow) . We understand that ness that precluded the rights of any other sen- 0f New York University and will take over his this is a common practice for the ators to lay claim to the title. . new post at the close of the current scholastic legislature whenever-a theatre Just what constitutes a progressive is not, nQr year. Dr. Chase is to succeed Elmer Ellsworth or screen star is in town. They .ever has :heen nnitp Mear. Rpnntr f!anTwn fnr rRrnwn who as head nf the New York'-institution 1 once had Anna Held, we are instance, has at times vociferouslv exclaimed for better than twenty years, has built it un told. It was a long time ago. that while he himself is a progressive, La Fol- so that today it has the largest enrollment in lette and Norris are radicals, and as a conse- the country. . quence of his ravings, the latter two blackballed A Massachusetts and Dartmouth man. who be him from their . group. Our own Honest Bob, came a member of the University of North Caro- bemg a freshman, was not invited to their first iina "faculty when he eot his doctorate at Clark. Started by Hibbard Addison . Hibbard, former "tibets," a half dollar. But they I . . , , 1noo finally found out that Tibbett , v i. . was an opera baritone. Mr. Tib-k . . ,. . , . . A , hensive examinations m the bett was to arrive the next day. He did . . . graciously agree to University. This resulted in the speak (it was a publicity tour, , , . , ,. , , , . , . board passing a regulation to re quire senior students in the com merce school and the college of liberal arts to take this examina tion. The only exceptions made were the A.B., LL.B. students and those who receive an A.B. education. This is because Student Leaves After Immigration Rulin (Continued from first peg?) . -m -m if per, then dean oi tne grad scnool, in whicn letters Dr. Ra. per promised Fukusato a schol arship for study at the Univer sity. He became further inter ested through advice of his pro fessor, S. Kitasawa, a graduate of the University and who ob tained a Ph.D. degree from Johns Hopkins. Fukusato was unable to avail himself of the opportunity at that time, but in September, 1931, appeared with a letter from Dean Raper, which he had kept in his possession since 1916. The offer of a scholarship was promptly hon ored by. University officials.' Very Popular Student According to Dean W. V. Pierson of the graduate school yesterday, it is doubtful whether any student in the University has ever received more indivi dual attention than Fukusato. Every effort was made to assist him in complying with the mini mum requirements laid down by the immigration officials. By courtesy of faculty members, he was permitted as much latitude as possible and was allowed to conduct his investigations and report his findings in conference with the professors. Fukusato was a familiar cam pus figure. He was at a slight disadvantage here in that he was the only Japanese student on the campus, but during his brief stay, enjoyed the compan ionship of many American" students. It's astonishing to observe what a sensation it creates when a professional diplomat says something that sounds like com mon sense. McGill Daily. Assassin - Radio, not as precise as "the I newspapers, returned a varying report, of the attempted Roose velt assassination down in Mi- the former do not take their A.B. until they have studied law for a year and the course in direct ed teaching takes its place in the education school. The comprehensive examina tion has been incorporated in the meeting but it was given out that he was listed Dr. Chase quickly rose to a conspicuous position fmi the other nisht. We heard as a progressive and was prominently mentioned at Chanel Hill. He was resident there for elev- f 6r future membership. Lrl vpnrs a rprinrl rhrrincr whiVh this lmivprsitv ' V w w b w , . -I AX&AkJ Jk VjLj A. A t II I I T, U. M 111 1,1 IV. Just -what outstanding evidences of progress- won its national and international standing. The rprung lf ne.w m f 1S reg"laM curricula of the leading colleges iveness have -exuded from beneath his stolid sur- creativeness and the liberalism which the coun- , , ' " . and universities throughout the face is shrouded in mystery,, unless, of course, try came to associate with the University of r.w W1C "t, opposition to prohibition in conservative Tar North Carolina were the fruit of Chase's outlook f . ' a sexmemdii iwmeu Aaur- Hpplia ,temAtinAllv-m5iVp ot,p twm,Vp qt1h ,m,ra(rp - mer' vr WUDier rauoier, was On the whole, however, to be a progressive one He has been at Urbana for only two years, and akwas alsTreported ontheS . ne nas nau lo ie uiuu5 umuitxco, uui ue xu jured isit as well as various by- the accusations which we have hurled at our evidently mastered them, since he was the unani- standers and little children. One uewcBi seiiawr such was 1101 aniuiig mem. mous choice as Dr. Brown's successor, and the 4. ji. xi... C4.:n -r u ,-4- 4- 1; . .. . , . icaami, nau it uiau uie onii, xai it xxum us iu mstuiudge gum-1 c election was made alter a tnorougn ana leisure- assassm was fifteen feet from the presi- mermgs of progressiveness, however fa.nt, in ly survey of available men for the poS1tion. Sure- dent.eiect, another that he fired iy ims 1iew jiaigiaiiuer wnu wun opuxo m nv x..-- c-urt11iiOT. v:n0 T t 1 j TT J n1- Jl 1 T - I . - I " uxivuxuvx. I C411UUO neres a nana to xionest i3oo,Nana we nope ne South, who has had his trial in the Middle West, heroes, of the hour including makes the grade! V.C.R. ; nninnplv nrpnarprl for thp task of Eruidiner a i t 0 xYnaxm puiiceiaaii, a woman grade ! Another Shot Heard 'Round the World A colorful spectacle the President-elect smil ing at a sympathetic throng, milling, shoving to get a closer view of the man of whom great things are expected. Cheery shouts, laughter, - hope. Six , angry snaps of a nistol and the in great metropolitan college. The many Southern- the stands, a news camera man. -. -1 s iv y-i I ' ers who regretted ms going irom iNortn uaro- and two radio announcers, were lma do not doubt tnat he will rise to tne neignt designated in the "on the pot" of this' noble obligation and opportunity. broadcasts of the two principal Birmingham Age-neraia. . . radio networks. T K.nnKPITPlt O TV! O rlrarl mon9 The "datW bureau" is a flourishing institu- History tells us that in at least K 1 e major concen irauon, ana sixteen m cnnrsp? country within the past ten years. Aside from being em ployed in schools which have a combination of reauirements and electives similar to those of the University, it is being used in connection with a series o honor courses. In the latter type the students are left free to cnuuoe Liien courses and are permitted optional attendance Several years ago a modifica tion of this plan was begun here but wis discontinued because of lack of student support. At the present time, fifty-two - schools uoc tuiiikixcxicxiaives in connec tion with honors courses, forty- other than the major. OUTSTANDING RADIO BROADCASTS 1:30 Emerson Gill and His orchestra WEAF (NBC) " 2:00 Metropolitan 'OiWa 1 wenty-tnree people were con- Rigoletto Lily Pons WEAF pleasant throng leaps to feverish activity. The tion at Arkansas Polytechnic college. The bu- two instances, presidents who Roosevelt car roars off as if conscious and alive reau nas a scaie 01 prices, ana xees axe m tu- nave utn tecLeu iqnowmg a to danger. Shouts of anger wild buzz of conversance with the desirability of the date secured for single term of their predecessor sation indignation, questions, answers drowned me suDscnoer. men or women anAiuu& tu me navC uwu miuo ur Aiueu. ur win in tumult an engagement must suDmit xoui- names m me jjiieiiumeiiai iuck ox tne Thus nn nfrain'-tno wnrlH ia rouffhlv awak- order of their choice. If the dater gets his first itoosevelts hold out? Garner for ened from its illusion of culture and civilization, choice it costs him twenty-five cents. Second president would be the last Once atrain it is fact, not traditional fiction, which choice costs twenty cents, third costs ntteen straw. - t, , , 1 . . . 1 1 - shouts for recognition. A man in whose, hands cents and fourth choice tne oargam price ot Twenty-Three in Tnfirma Mes nower to change the political nolicv and atti- ten cents. VManoma uauy (iv. z.r XT JL V tude of an entire nation, and as a result the 1 1 world, is at the mercy of an unknown malcon- "I deplore the lack ot intelligence as compared fined to the infirmary yesterday, (NBC) . I - t'i 1 n iv a 1 Lent. YViiat aveixis uux4 uictim reinieinem, uuriwiixi uie uvci-puuuvnuu UA unwii, m ximwiva, vxi.xi xnuisuay. inese ;ou isnaiil Jones nvnTi smootlvpolish when the life of our country's pre- says Dr. Edward u. bisson, protessor ot pnuos- were uonn u. Lewis, R. C. Page, W ABC (CBS) . . 1 1 1 1 s 1 iaiI 'Ii T TTT -. 1- I eminent figure depends upon the elticiency of an ophy at Keed college ano tormer president ot tne Jr., j. vy. ueilmger, Richard A. 7:45 Street Singer WA"Rr .. - - . . - .1 1 J- TTT I VAT I XT -. J T T -w I ' eight-dollar second-hand pistol At what cost University 01 iviontana. . aano Argonauz ix.s. narriH, jr., j. 5. Jackson, J. E. (CBS) . --A . - I TTT 1 -J T I 'are we maintaining democracy, ireedom for all b A.) waiurop, j. u Gregory, Eunice 8:15 Boston Symphony WT7 . - I l-r -T- . I ' - What price life, liberty, and happiness when the uviae i-ope, George O. Steele, CJ (NBC) . - . 1 , I - . . - -r - . - U 1 T- T I lioerty anu nappiiiess ux x, uegeiiexate maj xc- onvervvaie xxum tne iLaniuxu umvexsiiy uin- m AJiaun uidig, dr., ' y.:iiU. lieorffP' Olsen n-oV. quire the life of a President and as a consequence Ung room continues to disappear although police Edith Wladkowsky, D. G. Bra w- Ethel Shutta Gus Van WEAF destroy the faith of millions. periodically comb fraternities for the missing iey 1J- mard, t. lx. VVolke, (NBC) . . - -i I ... , l TTf TT NT-J T T-r . - . . I uccurrences UKe uiese are ixu iuss. xxxc articles, oome oi tne taoxeware iias oeen 'Uis- I j axcxxx nxxgui, x. i ll:()U Inmharrin n r n ' . . . 1 . .TT -I It, . I - of great value. They serve to revive and stimu- covered in the dining hall of a New England col- v- onr, John Innes, Robert WABC (CBS) late, the mmds of sluggish tollowers, to mane Mege, and some in china. Swarthmore Phoenix &oluin x- xu- temple, Jr., u M. 11:30 Paul Whiteman rimb them ponder, to make them stare with wonaer (N.S.F.A.) uromarue, and John Drake. WEAF (NBC) The Little Shop Featuring Bradley Sweaters $1.95 and $2.95 TO from JIM TULLY'S Smashing Novel 1 y-.r .T,.-..vii'.'.,.v.v.'.,.'.v.v.'..-.-.---5. (fcut I'm here to tell, that lovin' i women makes LAUGHTER IN HELL!" With Pat O'Brien.Merna Kennedy Berton Churchill, .Gloria, Stuar Also Comedy Review NOW PLAYING
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1933, edition 1
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