PAGE TVTO THE DAILY. TAR. iHEEL OCTOBER 9, 193 The official newspaper of the Publications. Union 3$oard cf the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Fhere 111 "1 r j -r 3 .3 Xl rTTl, 1 f m fn-w. It 13 pJTaXea cailj except .uioiiuays, sau wio 4 wuuwa&i Christmas, and Srjriner Holidays. Entered as second elass matter at the cost effice of -Chanel Hill N. C. under act ftf Ma-rch 2. 1879. Subscriutien Trice. $3.00 for the college--year., v- 'r, - Robert C. Page, Jr.... Joe Wbb.tiJLi George Underwopd ... .r. ....Managing Editor .:;.:Business Manager Circulation .Manager u y Editorial Staff - EDITORIAL BOARD Phil Hammer, chairman; Charles Daniel, Phil Kind, Don Wetherbee, Gurhey Briggs. 1EATURE BOARD Nelson Lansdale, chairman: Wal ter Terrv. Francis Clineman. Emery Raner, W. M, , Cochrane, Tom Studdert. CITY EDITORS Irving Suss, Walter Hargett. ' TELEGRAPH EDITORS Jim Daniel, Reed Sarratt. DESK MEN Don McKee, Eddie Kahn. SPORTS DEPARTMENT-Jimmy Morris and Smith Barrier, co-editors; Robert Lessem, Lee Turk, Len - Rubin. Flecher Fersruson.. Stuart Sechriest, Lester Qstrow. . ..'.. -., . ' . EXCHANGES Margaret Gaines. -STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Don Becker. r- REPORTERS Bill Hudson, John Smith, J. F, Jonas Stuart Rabb, Ralph Sprinkle. Howard Easter, Law rence Weisbrod, Ira Howard, Raymond Howe, William Jordan, Manny Kirschner, Ralph Eichhorn. . Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER ,r. ...Butler French COLLECTION MANAGER.:.....vm....Herbert Osterheld OFFICE MANAGERS. ....:..Walter'Eckert, Roy Crooks .NATIONAL ADVERTISING.-: Boylan Carr LOCAL ADVERTISING Hugh Primrose, Robt. Sosnick Niles Bond. Eli Jovner. Oscar Tyree (Managers), jm McDonald. Stephen Hard. Lewis Shaffner. William Wilson. . CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: WALTER HARGET Carolina, through his present position has thus been given the solemn and far-reaching functionof gathering up the feelings of the people-of; North Carolina, of analyzing their hopes" and fears and of speaking their aspira tions and their resolutions to the world. .v Never -will Dr. Graham wittingly mis construe what, he believes to be in the pub lie mind of his fellow-countrymen "nor .will he; Aver be .found faithless to his trust to make their sentiments vocal. - v "That hisN speech - was acclaimed as the mani festo of truth that it was, is evident in the state wide approbation that it received. We can add nothing to this appreciation; of it that has al ready been expressed by leading journals of North Carolina. President - Graham's principles not only stand for themselves, but the true lib erals of this state stand behind them, f -. Fraternities Pledge 208; 12 More Than Last Tuesday, October 9, 1934 PARAGRAPHICS "Women Represented in New Deal," says headline. It's O.K. by us just so they don't trump our ace. ' y More than $15,000,000 per year is spent in the United States on futile remedies. Won der what part of that figure comes under the head of cosmetics. It couldn't be that Gen. Johnson wept be cause there are no more uncontrolled busi nesses to conquer? Making the State Fair " ' : : - Yesterday North- Carolina's "great show win dow," the 1934 edition of the annual State Fair, raised its curtains, as it were,' when Governor Ehringhaus led the marshals' parade to start things off. . State fairs are very interesting events not so much for the gorilla-headed woman" in the side show (who, of course, has : hers own sweet ap peal) but more for the review which they pre sent of the progress of the-state since the las exhibition. Cows and pigs and, cabbages and potatoes all have their particular charm and im portance in the fair's lineup because they eol lectively act as indeces of how conditions are and where they are lacking or yielding. The exhibitions' attract all those not interested in the livestock and vegetables apd reports have it that things along this line are better than ever before.- It might be-a valuable suggestion for us to advise that-along witn the frolic you add a little, smattering of inquisitiveness out by the stables or. in by the farmers' booths. Nature's workings, you know, are what make the state fair. "' What the Papers Said With "the" best of intentions to avoid making these columns bear the stamp of something akin to a book publisher's blurbs, we publish a few excerpts from state papers comments on Presi dent Graham's speech at the annual opening con vocation of the University or Virginia at Char lottesville. Our own position in the matter is one of some, pride that he should have received such an ovation for what -will stand out as one of the 'most ringing declarations of human lib erties ever delivered in the Old Dominion. Commenting on Dr. Graham's exhortation to educated men to be alive to the social changes of our generation, the .Raleigh News and Ob server sets forth one of the fundamental pur poses of education as inspired by his address : " The man who uses his education to serve himself alone is no better than the miser who counts only the gain on his gold. Edu cation may be and too often, , has been put to the service of exploitation. There is overwhelming need today for education to serve the enlightenment of a still too dark world. If educated men were to follow the creed framed for them by Dr. Graham this would be a happier state and a happier world. R. R. Clark in the Greensboro Daily News men tions Dr. Graham's defense of collective bar gaining: . : "V ... . He expresses in clear and unmis takable language what nearly all of us pro fess to believe are the rights in a democratic country of all men and women, of all classes . and conditions. That is the ideal of justice. While there is professed, theoretical, ad herence to the standard, it is unnecessary to say that its practical application is quite different. It has been that way, but that a change is impending is recognized by all ex cept those who are so blind they will not see. . The Charlotte News, in the president's home town, takes up the same issue provoked by his speech : ' . . . All ' men may know by hese Char lottesville and other presents of Frank Gra ham that he believes with every fibre of him that .. workers' , have the same right to ; organize in an effort to better their wages, hours, and working conditions as have their ' employers to "get together in a manufac turers association. , - The Charlotte Observer, entitling its comment "Protocol 'of a New Civilization," asserts that Dr. Graham has voiced the sentiment "of the people of North Carolina : Dr. Frank Graham, head. of. the Univer sity by virtue of the influence and prestige thrust upon', him by the people of North eace i Of Mind The attempt, of the Y. M. C. A. to foster a deep interest in war, its problems and intrigues, its effects and causes, and most of all, its utter uselessness, is a worthy endeavor that is well planned and effective. But the fact remains after the first two lec tures in the highly instructive series that the student body is not responding to the offer to participate in the discussion and to share the interest of the speakers. Consequently, while a limited number of serious-minded collegians are taking advantage of the greatest problem in the world, the great majority of the student body rolls along unaware that there is anything at all significant going on under their noses. We can't suggest any means to. wake. up the inert spirits except to start a war ourselves and then ask them what to do about it. But we know that the state legislature wouldn't stand for that, and besides, we are naturally of a peace f ul nature. r We do feel, however, that some one is missing a rare opportunity to get some first-hand information about a vital subject. - If another national crisis occurs, we'd rather have intelligent cannon ,fodder express its opinion than uninformed pacifists.. Nicely Recovering ; : . Administration Alma Mater is again rousing her giant frame from slumber. Progress is in the air. The cam pus is humming with the sounds of manual labor, and slumbering students are roused of morn ings by the cheery sounds of men going to their work. For a time, at least, it seemed as though the farce of Graham Memorial were to be repeated, and that . we should again , have : a gaping, un finished skeleton of a building on the campus, to the sorrow of all beholders. For months, Per son hall has been a melancholy ruin, with weed grown, piled earth, decaying scaffolds, scattered bricks and girders surrounding it: But now the walls are springing up overnight, and ..the 'struc ture hums with activity. Much the same thing could be said about the unfinished tennis courts. .If Carolina is to hold her crown in this sport, there must be plenty, of courts on which to play, not only that the var sity may not be crowded, but also that raw material may be encouraged to grow and de velop. Therefore, the fact that work on the all- weather courts is going briskly forward may be interpreted as an encouraging sign. . - Only one thing now is lacking, to make the triumph of progress'', complete. . The monster athletic field, with the track that was to have been the largest of its kind in the south, and the enormous facilities for diversified games, is'now an undistinguishedmud-hole. The plan was to use this field as a practice football field for the varsity, thus saving wear and tear on the costly turf of Kenan. It is to be hoped that this emi nently desirable project can be accomplished in the near future. , "(CoTVttnued from p&fje one) John RLarsen, JosepK Hunter, Samuel Knight, William , Luris ford Crew,' Joseph Harlee Pow ell. . " . . , Pi Kappa Alpha : Hugh Thom as Conley, Buddy Cox, Eugene M. Yount, William F. Clark; Clyde Jordan, John- v Robert Hawes, Ralph Sprinkle, Charles S. Sinclair, Windsor Rowley. Tau Ensiloh Phi : Leonard Levitch, Herbert Goldberg, Jo seph Murhieh, Aaron May,: Fer dinand Weisbrod. Lawrence Weisbrod, Abraham Gordon. Phi Delta Theta: Ramsay Potts. Herbert Rodgers, Belford Lester, Fred Gramms, Al Elwell, Robert Ellison, John Calvert, Charles Gilmore, Justin White, Wilson Exum, Bobbie Dicks, Bob Baker, Frank B. Rogers, Jr. Phi Gamma Delta : Howard Hussey, Earnest Flemming, T. A. Fulghum, Arthur R. Beebe, Donald C. Ballou, William v D. McLean, C. W. Sutton, John Peacock, Bichard M. Mitchell, William C. Woodward, Paul A B. Reynolds, Robert C. Mclnnes, Frank G. Gooding, T.-A. Apple, Robert R. Henggi. St. Anthony Hall (Delta Psi) : Stephen Bois Hard, Nicholas Cabell Read, Warren Walker, Jr. Delta Tau Delta: Richard B. Currie, William Irving Shores. Lambda Chi Alpha: Edward P. Surratt, Hoke Flynt Shore, Robert Ferando, Richard Flynt, Charles C. Benton, Edmund C. Devits, Charles , H. Reid, Homer Kerr. ' Alpha Tau Omega : John Haw- ley, Archibald Arrington, Eu gene L. Jagar, William Stone Jordan, Ben Royall, Davtjd Smith, Jr.,' William Phillips, James Drew Martin. K. A.: Gatson Stanford, Giles JC. Winstead, Jr., Stuart P. ' McFadden, Robert T. Mc Manus, Adams' Feimster, Wil liam Clem Boren, Jr., Malcolm L. Mann, John D. Yeomans, John Manning, . W. Llewellyn, Tom Hastings Kelly. . Sigma Chi: Joseph Noyes, Lacy Fendley, Tony Jim Carey, Hugh White, Carl Wolfe, Knox Wingate, Barney Banon, Robert Hooke. Sigma Delta: John J. Wells, Robert H. Putney, Jr., Walter Illman, Lytt Irvine Gardner. Phi Alpha : Bert Hauser, Leon ard Loberbaum, Larry Hendel, Richard Brons, Seymour Fast, Joll Lasky, Bertram Potter, Les Kanner, Stanly Sobelson. Zeta Psi: Augusta Hall, Wil liam Wakely, Robert" Ray, Harry Wooten, William Carr, A. M Mangum, David Thorpe, John Snow. ' Phi Kappa Sigma: James Pres ton Wilson, Edgar Lester Green, Ivan Proctor Battle, Donald Lee Yount, Dan Decker, John Albert Blum. eta Beta Tau : Raymond Zau ber, Irving Kalmonoff , Harold Gordon, Morris Hecht, Robert Rosenthal, Fred Tushnett, Leo pold Turk, Marvin Engel. Beta Theta Pi: Stanley Clay poole, James Coan, Thomas JBass, George Graves, III, Frances Ras berry, Robert Watt, John Mc Devitt, Howard Ross, James Van 'Hecke, Watt La Rogue, James Leak, Jack Blythe, James K. Glenn. Chi Phi : Floyd Skinner, Vin cent Montsinger, Winston Perry, M. V. Lawrence, N. D. Bitting, James D. Kirven. Jr., Thomas L. Linn, Joseph K. Harriman. Sigma Phi Epsilon: James M. Parker, Lockwood Sawyer, James Chestnutt, John Pitts, John Davison. , bigma Alpha Epsilon: Alec M. Gover, John Taylor, Harry Stovall, Joseph Young, G. Alex anaer Heard, William Clark James, David Allen, Souther land Brown, Graham H. An drews, Phillip Ballinger, Ran- GRAHAM TO GIVE J MAJOR ADDRESS alumni ubs in NrthCarpUna re. p!4niing meetings'for !Fri- da.y.Mkp '. several ; out-of-the-state alumni groups have ar ranged to meet,'Some of them in Boston, Pittsburgh, . Atlanta, New.Orleans, San Francisco, Jacksonville,, and Philadelphia. The convocation rriaay win use t& chapel period, the 11 :00 o'clock class period, and half the 9 :30 o'clock class hour. The bell, will .ring at 10 :00 o'clock, anhe faculty in academic cos tume will assemble at South building at ' 10 :10 o'clock to marclj to Memorial hall.. : Chapel attendance will be checked' Friday as usual. . A recent scientific survey in: a;large eastern-university showr ed 60 percent of the students sleep through at least three hours of classes each week. Photo Appointments , The following students have appointments to have their pic tures taken for. i the Yackety Yack at Wootten-Moulton's to day: Charles B. Davis, Jr., R. B. Richardson, L. M. Parker, Jr., and H. G. May. All students who missed their appointments last week may have their pictures taken any af ternoon this week. Students are particularly urged not to miss their appointments. A : RICHARD CHASE SPEAKS AT BULL'S .HEAD TODAY 'Wait Whitman" will be dis cussed by Richard Chase this af- ternon at 4:30 o'clock in the Bull's Head bookshop. Dr. R. B. Vance will be unable to appear as scheduled, an nounced Elizabeth Johnson, di rector of the Bull's Head. "Mr. Chase," she said, "is a Whitman enthusiast and we are very for tunate in securing him to talk in the absence of Dr. Vance." Joe Suerarmari, editor of the Carolina Magazine, w$ll intro duce the speaker. ' . dall Berg, Newton Craig, A. H. Eller, T. P. Percy, Thomas Myers, John A. Tate, Jr., Mal colm McDonald, Charles Man ning, Southwood Tison. Sigma Nu : Mike Cummings, Harvey Morrison, John Erwin Ramsay, Morris C. Fitts, Cecil Ernst. 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