Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 26, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL tlje Batty Car eel Th official newsnaner of the Publications Union Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "where it is nrinted dailv exeeDt Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3. 1879. Subscription Tarice. $3.00 for -the college year. A. T. Dill , Editor Robert C. Page, Jr ......Managing Editor Joe Webb ..... .............l...Business Manager George Underwood.... ... Circulation Manager Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Phil Hammer, chairman; Charles Daniel, Phil Kind, Don Wetherbee, Gurney Eriggs Samuel Leager. FEATURE BOARD Nelson Lansdale, chairman: Wal ter Terrv. Francis Clinerman. Emery Raner, R. B duFour. J. A. Poindexter. Jean Cantrell, Tom Stu'd- dert, W. M. Cochrane. f!TTY EDITORS Irvinar Suss. Walter Hargett, Don McKee. TELEGRAPH EDITORS Jim Daniel, Reed Sarratt. DESK MEN Eddie Kahn, Sam Willard. SPORTS DEPARTMENT Jimmy Morris and Smith Barrier, co-editors: Robert Lessem, Lee Turk, Len Rubin. Fletcher Fersruson. Stuart Sechriest, Lester ' Ostrow. EXCHANGES Margaret Gaines. STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Don Becker. 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, Charley Gilmore. JlButler French Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER 1 COLLECTION MANAGER. .Herbert Osterheld OFFICE MANAGERS Walter Eckert, Roy Crooks NATIONAL ADVERTISING.--. Boylan Carr LOCAL ADVERTISING Hugh Primrose, Robt. Sosnick, Niles Bond, Eli Joyner, Oscar Tyree (Managers), Bill McDonald, Stephen Hard. Lewis Shaffner, William Wilson. Attendance - ISensabaufirh Sneaks And Actmty Tnesdav Afternoon iSiaturaily we all get a great kick out ot seeing Maw Vnrlr ntirp a long list oi activities aner our names in me Yackety Yack. It supposedly marks one as an English Professor to Speak at AUDITOR ATTENDS RALEIGH MEETING Peacock Accompanies Sherrill to Accountants' Convention. active person on the campus, a leader, a stu dent who finds time to enter into interesting outside activities as well as those coincident with the regular class work. Or so it should. But those who merely join clubs, cabinets, Bull's Head Bookstore. George F. Sensabaugh of the University English department will be the principal speaker at i j XT. j x j. j! A, i nt the regular Bull's Head lecture, x rr..nJnn .-.- n A -ill mniTitnininrr a TnrrmTfirm with fhnsp.l lueaudJr llw:iuwu groups are students who are minor chiselers of "wur' "r.T., J a sort. They fail to attend the meetings of the J,Qnnson' or,,VoHrtr,c w -"o,rt t,J rector oi me DOOKsnup. belong and, by their very inactivity and appar ent lack of interest, they do campus organiza tions more harm than good. But when pictures are taken of various campus groups, these stu dents who almost never attend the meetings are the first to flock to get into the picture. That is nothing more than pure falsehood. One sure way to answer the problem with a solution would be for those students to become lf thege intellectuals 1 1 j - oi -- riu vij r.iv 4-l 4- reany active m meir groups, xxie urn xuie mat Traufm and Hart hav attracts many to assume the roles of campus big b of outstanding SUCC6SS. snots wouia in tnat way oe aignmea witn esto their credit. Kaufman was ambition instead of covered with speciousness ana posing. di- Professor Sensabaugh will read selections from the current New York success, "Merrily We Roll Along" by George S. Kauf man and Moss, Hart. The play is a satire which shows the origin and growth of the pres ent day "intellectual." It deals in part with the university life and Hart wrote "As Thousands Cheer" to which Irvin Berlin added the musical score last season. Mr. Sensabaugh is in close touch with the contemporary CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: IRVING SUSS Friday, October 26, 1934 PARAGRAPHIAS The Phi Delts may be quarantined on ac count of scarlet fever, but they're not the only f rat that's caught in the red. And 'tis said student-faculty day will work if we can keep the profs from cutting. International question : If Hitler died, would he go straight to Abraham's bosom? Co-operation Or Stubbornness? The banking crisis between the nation's bank ers and the present administration was brought to a crucial noint Wednesdav night in Presi dent Roosevelt's address to the American Bank- theatre and is considered an au- ?.c Acaiofirm a navonn nr tv, VinTioimi.a f i-1 thority on late Elizabethan cisms of administration, relief, monetary, and drama. At the close ot his read financial nolicies. Roosevelt asserted that he ex- n will conduct a discussion pected the bankers to supply the credit need of period, giving his personal com- the rountrv. and to heerm sunDlvinflr it at once. xucliW U1A xYxciiiijr " j w mt r - Bankers have been frankly critical of the ad ministration's policy of lending money to indus ry. Roosevelt, in his speech, held out the prom ise to them that governmental lending activ ities will be curtailed as soon as banking is able to assume the responsibility, which, contrary to CLUB TO PRESENT Sign of Encouragement That the Di senate has approved the student council's proposed revision of the honor system pledge is an encouraging omen that campus opin ion will be favorable to this change. Yet, as the Daily Tar Heel has pointed out on another occasion, the revision is not so much a "change" as merely a re-affirmation of the honor system code under which all examinations and quizzes are conducted. Be that as it may, we solicit opin ion on the question with a view to having some early action taken on the proposal. If it goes through, it should be encouraged to the utmost by every member of the faculty. Too little emphasis has been laid in the past on the wording of the pledge with the consequence that students have been lax about giving it, in many cases only signing the word "pledge" at the end of their papers. We are not quibbling in favor of a legally binding pledge nor picayunish about wanting to see careful observance of it. But at this time the students have a greater opportun ity than ever before to bring to the attention of the entire campus, for now and henceforth, the true responsibility both of refraining from vio lation and reporting violations upon which the best maintenance of the honor system depends. This responsibility has not always been abso lutely impressed on the students, and if they have not in the past always observed it to the fullest extent, (there is a great deal to be said for th$ fact that it should be advertised as a continua reminder of the duties of a Carolina student. Wake Forest Goes Forward Modernizing its system of publications, Wake Forest College. recently adopted a publications board to govern all student publications. Mem bers will be composed of the several -business managers along with faculty advisers, who wil have complete authority over the various pub lications. This system, used at the University for some years, presents distinct advantages.' All finan cial allotments are controlled by the board, elim inating to a great degree one of the richest of the collegiate rackets publications graft. The board at Wake Forest is seemingly to be invested with the further powers of control of all rules and regulations concerning the publi cations. To what degree such sweeping power's will be 9f advantage remains to be seen, bu Wake Forest is to be congratulated on taking a step forward. At the University the board's powers extend only to financial control ; Wake Forest's attempt at editorial dictate will be interesting. I on "Merrily we Koii Along." Joe Sugarman,v editor of the Carolina Magazine, will intro duce the speaker. the assertions of the banking interests, they are not assuming at the present time, according to Jesse Jones, chairman of the RFC. Jones as serted that leading records of the RFC showed the banks had been unwilling to make loans which that agency considered sound. RADIO BROADCAST Fourth in Series of University Club Programs on Today. witn f reaay jonnson s new orchestra furnishing -the mnsiV ml .1 .J I J 1 I me oanKing interests, now m comparatively d mh bv Jack Clare And good financial shape, should remember that the Jack Lowe featured on the pro entire banking situation was saved by the con- Vm TTwcif,r nh,wa structive policies of the Roosevelt administra- Ikly half.hour broadcast over tion. witnout tnese policies, nnancea largely oy gtation WDNC Durham, will be the same RFC now coming in for so much criti- hard thig af ternoon at 5 .45 cism by bankers, many banks now sound ana 0ciock a. i j i i iu i. -r siroiigwoumiiaveuiu&euuvei uic xucjvs ui aiiiu nio will a a cryf , Without the co-operation so strongly urged by mentarv of five minutes. hiU t : j i. : .i :ii u i I me rreHiueni, a viciuua tuue win nmm.amcu. Lowe reyiew m weeks ac. bo long as the banks retuse loans, industries tivities on the campus. m s . kph.i rif iiiiiii'i inn hi. a. iiniiiuiuiii. n i liiny i t.i-- t. i i i i jonnson s nann. wnicn waa as production is kept at a minimum, money in organized this fall, will present circulation tends to be restricted, and so long an ntertaining musical pro as circulated money is of a comparatively small gram faturing new arrange amount, the government must of necessity keep ments and several numbers by 1 1' X J 1 J up lenaing xo mausiry. his nodular "tnrrn. sin o-at-o ' X i - W SM. '.AQ KJ rrvi r. i 4.1. ja xi. Needed Reform ; . A111 WAU "ie Auur "me In Public Taste tms year that the University Georee Arliss' "Disraeli" is doubtless one of club has Presentd a radio pro- fhp hino-ranhiVal mastermeces of the films, but Sram two previous presenta the majority of exhibitors refused to show it at r?tJ!aVmg en glV6n 0Vr the time of its release. Mae West, on the other Cnd one each 0Vr WBT' h w the first time in tbe historv of motion Charlotte, and WPTF, Raleigh. i,, .aaUrA nt n oino-u noToiioinr, nn i Jack Clare is radio chairman of - xi "u i 4- A I wie uuu. any OI me piutureis m wxucii sue Biaiicu. There we have a nutshell edition of the pre- Tlm I TTT vailing condition in the movie-goers' world. The I fKUfcbSUKS movies of high historical, dramatic, or educa tional merit only engaged for short runs, while those films distinguished mainly for their shab- biness and salaciousness do an enormous busi ness. Is this rueful situation the fault of the producer, the exhibitor, or the public? The producer and the exhibitor are compan ions in the proverbial boat. No reputable pro- DELIVER ADDRESSES Dr. W. C. Coker, head of the botany department, made i speech last night at Guilford Col lege on "How to Use Native Shrubs in Our Gardens." Dr. H. R. Totten, also of the hotanv rlennrtmont onnl-n loo J ,..m ll - "v, ioi , , , J , J night m Goldsboro on "The Use lu see xiuw mucn saiiu ne can raise, nor uoes any Native Vines respeciauie exniDiior iaKe great aengm m snow- joria '. Ti.xi. . 1 luens. nig snauy pictures, uoin are anxious to snare in the good public opinion. Unfortunately, how ever, both exhibitor and producer are in the busi X 1 J f 1 r 1 ness 10 maKe money, ana n sucn nims as "Berkeley Square," "Oliver Twist," "Eskimo," or "Byra at the South Pole" fail to start the shekels rolling, they must come forth with such box-office appealers as "Scarface," "So This Is Africa," "I'm No Angel," etc. in Our Gar- The same speeches were re cently presented by Drs. Coker and Totten at a garden school in Raleigh. MANY ALUMNI GROUPS MEET ON FOUNDER'S DAY ' .T. Mar von So Tf DAnn 11 J.t. i. i 1.1. XV . I - .- . ' J' " CC1" ai1 pxeseiiu truuuie in tne 0f the Alumni assorintior. motion pictures devolves upon the movie-going ports that 22 meetings of Uni public. It has been the tastes of this public versity alumni were held 01 which have dictated the types of pictures to be Founder's Dnv rvtnW 10 presented The recent efforts at censorship of Alumni in such distant places motion pictures, while curbing the production of as San Franoi x undesirable movies, contain no provisions for Pittshnrcrh rt nitw 'm?1?11! Wh6ther the gether' on that da President ultimate effect will be to heighten such tastes Graham spoke to the meetings is a matter of conjecture. Let us hope that such at Pittsburgh and Boston by will be the case. lrtT1 .AtaM x - J Robert T. Sherrill, auditor of student activities here, and E. E. Peacock, of the school of commerce, are attending the semi-annual convention of the North Carolina certified public sirvmintants. which began m Raleigh last night. The Sir Walter hotel is the headquarters of the convention, at which place the board of di rectors of the association met last night. . This morning, and afternoon will be devoted to business meet ings. Tonight there will be a dinner and dance in the ball room of the hotel. The convention will officially close with a business meeting to morrow morning. HILL HALL TO RECEIVE SYMPHONY BROADCAST Music lovers are invited by Glen Hay den, head of the music department, to come to the cho ral room in Hill Music hall to hear the broadcast of the Phila delphia Symphony under the di rection of Leopold Stokowski from 3:00 to 5:00 o'clock today. A similar broadcast by the New York Symphony under the direction of Kemperer at the same hours Sunday is scheduled. The program to be played by the Philadelphia Symphony to day is: "Water Music" by Han del, "Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor" by Bach, "'Jupiter' Symphony" by Mozart, and "Con certo Grosso in D Minor" by Vivaldi. PHILOLOGICAL CLUB WILL MEET MONDAY The regular monthly meeting of the Philological club will be held in the lounge of the Grad uate clubv Monday, October 29, at 7:30 o'clock. Dr. Waldo G. Leland, perma nent secretary of the American Council of Learned Societies, will speak on the experience of the council in dealing with the gen eral problems of the humanities. SHE'S GLORIOUS 1 r NSS .'.V'ft V. .V.V.V.V' .-ij. in the story of the wife who dared to ask herselft'What is fidelity?" iMlili I i1" ;i mwm Ml with BRIAN AHERNE PAUL LUK AS JEAN HERSHOLT OTHER FEATURES Isham Jones and Orchestra in 'Underneath the Broadway Moon" Cartoon News TODAY Ti Saturday El FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1934 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS For Fall Dances TUXEDOS AND FULL DRESS SUITS in Stock $22.50 & 29.50 at " LIPMANS Want to be A Movie Star? THEN READ! Every film company in Holly wood is looking for new talent. Ydu know that. You've read it in the news. You can have your chance right here in Chapel Hill. You do not have to pay the fare to go to Holly wood, in order to gain experi ence for the movies WE COME TO YOU.' Right here in Chapel Hill we'll teach and train you. Watch for the Announcement and the opening of J. Walter Delmar's SCHOOL OF ACTING V.V.V.V.VA mmwmtmmmmimmmmmmmm PHH mmmmmmmmmmmmmm wmmmmmmm "GABLE JACKET" is a sport model gone . . . Modern. There's really nothing like it! Keep a sharp eye on the de tails . . . the saddle-bag pock ets .. . the throat latch . . . the shirred blouse back . . . all Varsity-town designing triumphs. You'll call it "Grand" when you see it! 25-00 up With Talon Trousers Pritchard-Bright and Company "Tomorrow's Styles Today" Washington Duke Hotel Bldg. Co-ed Dance... You Must Be Especially Beautiful Tonight THEREFORE We have saved you an appointment. This week . Special on all Pennanents ' m. . Shampoo and Finger Waves 75c DiaI 66Tx University Beauty Shop u"6 v.ai,ai.ic teiepnone uver rsruce 3 a & xw
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 26, 1934, edition 1
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