Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 2, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL , y trance advocate paying nex ueuu lu umtcu yLlIC iaallP KLOl J&KKI States, saying that she would be worthy ally tui:4.5 tt; Pnar in any war to come. iS CSSTS H5Sd HiS By experience the United States should be where it is printed daily except ; Monday ana through meddling in the affairs of the old world. teredf S?Sd class matter at the post office of Chapel She gained nothing from the last war; she would Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription gain notnjng from the next. Her help would Prcw ra'SeecondfloOT of the Graham Memorial only be scorned as it has been by France since Building. the last one. Any conflicts arising in Europe Chas. G. Rose, Jr -Editor in future years should be viewed from across the Geo. W. Wilson, Jr ........Managing Editor Atlantic by the united States unless it De ac- R. D. McMillan, Jr Business Manager tually threatened by an attack from an ambitious wg. country.-C.G.T. manorial ouux EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoemaker, chairman; E. C. - i t - i -vt . i T" T The Week Daniel, Jr., John Alexander, Edith Harbour, B. B, he Age Perry, A-T.'Dffl. Vergil J. Lee, V. C. Royster, W. A. Sisrmon. Robert Berryman, F. P. Gaskins. nTV innTTnpy? T?nh Woerner. Bill Davis. L. L. Hutch ison, W. R. Eddleman, J. JJ. V Donoh Hanks, Carl Thompson. DESK MAN Nelson Bobbins. Of Enlightenment? hnfh sides nf ison, W. R. Eddleman, J. D. winsiow, i. xi. wainer, Negro question that has been recently forced uonon uanm. axi xxiuxupsuii. i - . - to the front because oi tne etiorts oi one oi tne feature BOARD Joseph Sugarman, chairman; Nel- black race to enter the University. But it IS son Lansdale, Milton Stoll, Irving D. Suss, Eleanor hard to condone the talk even if it is nothing BizzelL George Rhoades, Don Becker. . SPORTS DEPARTMENT Claiborn Carr, Bill Ander- more than talk of stringing him up or run- son, J. H. Morris,. Lawrence Thompson, morne r long, mng him OUt in twenty-IOUr noUTS II ne Old Crampton Trainer, Lane Fulenwiaer jerome , . . ad nauseum. The TJni J acic ' xsessen. i REPORTERS James B. CraighiU, Raymond Barron, versity is the seat of liberalism in the south Walter Hargett, James w. .eei, uonei The University has retained her intellectual hon- C Pace. Phillip Hammer, Dave Mosier, Raleigh Alls- . , , . . , ,. - brook; jVcV Murphy, Jack Lowe, w. C. Durfee. esty against the onslaughts of reactionary forces. ; Business Staff The University boasts of "Lux, Libertas" CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT-Thomas Worth, Mgr. "Light, Liberty." Then University students do OFFICE STAFF F. P. Gray, Ass't. Bus. Mgr; Ran- not give way to educational mob psychology that dolph Reynolds, Collections Mgr.; Joe C. Webb, Ass't t jk f lynchings and the like! University stu Cnllections Mer.: Affnew Bahnson, Subscriptions """ VA XJ & .,. MgrTw! B.Sson;Want Ad Mgr.; L. E. Biooks, dents may have strong ideas and prejudices on Armistead Maupin, J. T. Barnard, J. L. Sprunt. race subjects most people do but truly en- LOCAL .ymiO STAI ita irt lightened college men arrive at their conclusions ler French, Esley Anderson, Joe Mason, J. Ralto Far-j after cool reasoning; they do not jump at tne Monday, March 27, 1933 Carolina freshman net squad opens season with 7-0 victory over Durham high school team, Freidman, Tar Baby number one man, takes 6-0, 6-2 walk away from Durham's Collins. Chairman of bad check com mittee reports 340 "rubber cer tificates" involving more than $3,000 taken in for winter quar ter up to March 11. Most all are good, however, when final banking difficulties are cleared up. low, W. Smith. CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE : BOB WOERNER Sunday, AprU 2, 1933 same emotional conclusions that used to be ar rived at in an era that is not now considered, as ours is, the last word in intellectual enlighten ment. D.B. With Contemporaries Bouquets for the Student Loan Fund When the Student Loan Fund was first organ ized on the campus last year, it was not antici nntprl that. 'the move would actuallv act as a life saver for the education career of some five hun- In the Minds of Students Is Arising a Belief dred students or more this early. iaa it not Which May Effect a .New urder been for this source from which these students Walter Lippmann's cry for liberation from des could borrow money for their actual expenses tjny at e recent Charter Day ceremonies will here in the University, there is little doubt but strike home in the hearts and minds of Univer- what they would have had to drop our oi scnoui sity students. when banking matters reacnea tneir crisis a iew Tuesday, March 28 Application for writ of man damus of Thomas Hocutt, Dur ham Washington-Duke hotel waiter, for entrance in Univer sity pharmacy school, denied by Superior Court j'udge in Dur ham. Plaintiff notifies that case will be carried to the North Carolina Supreme court. Three hundred and six under graduates make Winter Quarter Honor roll, thirty-three with all A record. Eighteen members of Tar Heel staff among the number, five with A record. Y nominations made in Ger rard hall for coming year with election date set at Tuesday, April 4. Tar Heel baseball team downs Washington and Lee in first S. I. C. encounter by 5-1 margin, as Pitcher Griffith yields but six hits. With The Churches Chapel of the Cross Dr. A. S. Lawrence, Pastor 8:00 a. m. Holy Communion. 11:00 a. m. Service and ser mon. 7:00 p. m. Student forum. 8:00 p. m.-r-Short organ reci tal. Catholic 8:30 a. m. Morning mass. Baptist 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11 :00 a. m. Sermon and ser vice. 7:00 p. m. Young people's service. Lutheran 5:00 p. m. Student services. Methodist Dr. Albea Godbold, Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Sermon and ser vice. 6:45 p. m. Student forum. Presbyterian Rev. Ronald Tamblyn, Pastor 9 :45 a. m.- Student classes. 11:00 a. m.Service and sermon. 7:00 p. m. Student forum. weeks ago. With everything so tied up finan cially as it is now, to have dropped out of school Mr. Lippmann, long noted for his analyses of the economic situation, became a philosopher yesterday and gave the assembly some ideas at this time would undoubtedly have meant that which indicate a revolution in thought. A world ior tne larger pax u ux mem men wUCgc v, drifting aimlessly, with each individual semsniy tion' was over. Nor is there any doubt that if strivmg for nis ends is the very thing Mr. Lipp these students had had to discontinue their edu- mann condemns pleading for an "ordered" ex cation at this time, the state would have sooner istence he struck the keynote of ideal student thought. nature been of more value to the student body, loaded with the burden of bringing about this - n 4.1 n TTniTTA'wai4"TT "CoiVi nimrfoi" lllTTnO" . ..... i t as wen aa me umvcionj. jx Hixvw to order. We have lived througn several perioas these strenuous times that any students are Qf chaog and recognize the important symptoms being allowed to continue their education as a Qf guch a situation With such knowledge, and .,14- J? 4-V. C-t-iiA-n-f- T -von Vi a nraico -frvf 'fTl O . i xesiui ui me KjnAwici, juvcm, a fresh, young viewpoint students can accom- Wednesday, March 29 Senate sets Umversity ap propriation figure at $832,240, an increase of $72,000 over House. The battle now goes to joint committee. Drama Festival gets under way with preliminary contests among high school and college stage troupes. proponents of the idea becomes more pronounced pligh uc ' 1 r J un n 1 T4- .unci iiTiinac'ivriaVvl'.r rno Cif the wisest moves anyone could have possibly United Rev. C. R. Dierlamm 10 :00 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Sermon and ser vice. 7:00 p. m. Loyal League. Sunday, April 2, Closing Of Drama Fete Recalls History (Continued from first psge) The Deserter won first prize in the Dramatic Tournament also received honorable mention in the National Little Theatre tournament in New York the j same year. Many Negro Productions It is interetsing to note that for the third year a play about Negroes produced by a Negro troupe was included on the pro gram, ihe bt. Augustine Col lege players of Raleigh held the attention of the audience with a superb display of their histri onic ability in a play, the out standing scene of which was a lynching. It is not often that an original high school play presented at the festival is of such excellence as to be published in the Core Una Playbook, but Death Comes to Sonia, a play of the Russiaa revolution by a sixteen year old Winston-Salem high school girl, presented at the 1930 festival, attained that eminence. The past festival was well at tended. Although no official fig ures have been issued, the num ber of players participating and the number attending the per formances are expected to be far in excess of the figures of last year, when 119 players per formed before approximately 1,500 play-goers. Patronize Our Advertisers What is the first step? Even Mr. Lippmann the wisest moves anyone couiuxi.ve puux, could fQr -t .g one made last year to have started this fund, and its anmMr i wm and milt an- innumerable advantages become more and more dQ yQu evident as the depression continues. accomplished the remedying of the evils War Clouds of the situation." Hang Low But miracles have a strange way of happen- Most international political commentators ob- ing. An idea is born in somebody's head. An serve that political conditions in Europe are in other and another receives its impact until finally a more tumultuous state than the period preced- there is unanimous agreement. Then one bold ino- tbp World War. Germanv is convulsed in a individual steps out into reform and the rest, minor civil war; Great Britain nears a break concentrated in a single will, follow and complete with the powerful communistic dictatorship of the action by sheer mass. Russia; Italy is still straining under the iron This may be the way our modern intellectual hand of Mussolini; and France sits serenely over revolution will take place. We are nearly unani her underground vaults filled with the gold of mous now in our agreement that something is the world, which is being quietly used to finance wrong. Let one practically-minded person start the small states in and around the Balkan terri- the move toward "order" and the progress will tory. have begun. Not in this century or perhaps Only fifteen years have passed since the Ar- next, as Mr. Lippmann " said, will this result mistice was signed to end the most destructive occur. But occur it will and with it a safer, war the world has ever known; ana aireaay saner worm. uauy fjarainai. countries are flagrantly violating the terms of the bulky Versailles Treaty. Germany was be- LoWer priced Parties .. .. t. i i mg smothered by the overwhelming restriction nd Sell-Outs ... placed not only upon her commerce and arma- The days of elaborate campus parties with ments but upon the liberties of her people. Great nationally known bands seem to be over and, if Britain had no terms which she could greatly we may judge by the box office receipts of the violate; she also paid her debts. United States Frosh Frolic and the Slide Rule Dance, students gained nothing through her losses of millions of have definitely gone on record as favoring less dollars and hundreds of thousands of men ; she expensive parties. The Frosh Frolic led toward could not violate. France, who greedily asked cheaper parties by reducing the price of tickets for more and more reparations and land, was to $1.50, with the result that there was a com the real winner in the war in which the United piete sell-out the day before the dance. So suc- States was victor: nofnl was the Tiartv that Nip. Rlirlp T?ii1a rnm. France made the most of this wide-open op- mittee decided to follow suit and was equally portunity, and setting up many small states successful, having a sell-out after the tickets had along the Balkans, has obligated them to her been on sale for only two days, by the financing of their armies and govern- The popularity of these two dances clearly ments. While she was thus preparing offense shows that the campus will no longer pay high or defense, spending millions, she refused to prices to dance for a few hours to the music of recognize her legal debts to the United States a famous band. Ben Bernie, who played for the and has not yet paid the debt installment which J-Hop, hardly drew enough people to pay the would help alleviate the financial troubles of the expenses. It would therefore be wise for those United States. who are planning dances in the future to profit Only when the countries around her, which by the success of our last two parties and re had heretofore been antagonistic to each other, duce their prices to a level within the reach of came together in a common bond, then did the majority of students. Michigan Daily. Thursday, March 30 Tar Heels taste first defeat at hands of Michigan State travel ing club. A hot, but fruitless last inning, leaves the Carolin ians on the short end of a 6-5 score. Graham Memorial director announces that 15,000 students patronize building monthly as compared with 6,400 average last year. Fifty-seven banquets, smokers, and meetings bring the campus to the . building each month. Plans tor semor week an nounced. As yet no canes, sweaters, beer suits, straw hats, or other paraphenalia on tap. Recommended: Beer suits again. a The Personal Story of a Million Daughters. MSVCKHfe COLIN ClIVE BILLIE BURKE RALPH FORBES HELEN CHANDLER Monday A PUBLIX KINCEY THEATRE At Coming1 Mon.-Tues. April 10 EDDIE CANTOR in "The Kid From Spain" April 27-28 "Rasputin and The Empresa" A Wife on a Holiday and Her Husband on the Run amid the Cooing, Kissing and Caressing That Goes on Beyond the 3-Mile Limit And There's No Limit! "PLEASURE CRUISE" Genevieve Tobin with Roland Young TUESDAY Ralph Forbes BUCK UP! LOOK UP! CHEER UP! . . SING! iJ with MADGE EVANS FRANK MORGAN HARRY LANGDON United Artist Pidun The First Picture Ever Done in "Rhythmic Dialogue". WEDNESDAY Friday, March 31 Unable to overcome the jinx of the boys from the lake dis trict, Carolina's 1933 diamond ! combine drops second contest to Michigan State, 5-3. Twenty-six fellowships, as- sistantships, scholarships, and research appointments in grad uate school announced by dean of school. In the list of 621 ap plications, nearly all of 48 states and four foreign countries rep resented. More than 900 loans amount ing to nearly sixty thousand dollars are made to students so far during scholastic year, dean s othce reports. V The Heart Soni of tha f ' X. GREAT WHITE WAY! f ?! a m St " r THURSDAY Ousts Force Against ClrHbct!nl The apelike monster from the prehistoric world rushes over streets and rooftops, wrecking autos, creasing waxisi Phi Mu Alpha Tomorrow x-xix iviu Aipna, local mnsiV. fraternity, will conduct its regu lar weekly meeting at 10:00 o'clock tomorrow night in Hill Music hall. The meeting is usual ly set for Sunday night but has been changed this week to Mon- day as several members of the j society will be out of town with the glee club. from on idea conceived by EDGAR VIALLACE ' I Friday Saturday J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 2, 1933, edition 1
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