Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 27, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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CAROLINA-STATE GAME 2:00 O'CLOCK KENAN STADIUM GRAIL DANCE 9:00 O'CLOCK TIN CAN i " I tut VOLUME XLIII 1VESTERN POWERS OPPOSE JAPAN'S PARITY DEMANDS TJriited States and England Be lieve Japan Will Offer More Conciliatory Proposals. IELSE WILL END PARLEY London, Oct. 26. (UP) England and the United States today formed a united front against Japan's naval equality demands in the session of the naval parleys now in progress here. It is believed that the two TSnglishj speaking countries are ready to break off the prelim inary naval conversations if the Japanese adhere rigidly to their present stand. The only hope for the success of the naval conversations ap peared to lie in the belief that the Japanese are prepared to produce alternative proposals .more conciliatory. Building Race Feared These naval conversations are among the delegates from Great Britain, the United States, and -Japan. They are supposed to pave the way for the 1935 naval conference. Indications are that the parley will turn into a free-for-all building race. The Japanese delegates to the conference indicated strong terms at the opening session such as the recognition of es sential preliminary negotiations for the new naval agreement zwith the United States and Eng land. The high hopes stated by the delegates from the various coun tries in their talks at the open ing session for the successful termination of the conference were largely upset by the vast differences in the respective pro grams of the countries. Japan threatened at the open ing session of the conference to abrogate the Washington naval treaty of 1922, and also demand ed that the powers recognize her equal right to protect her na tional security. PHI DELTS GIVEN TEST WITH SERUM JVIembers Found Immune May Break Fever Quarantine. Members of the local chapter of Phi Delta Theta were tested yesterday afternoon by Drs. Hedgpeth and Berryhill of the University infirmary with spe cial serum rushed by air mail from Atlanta. The test was given to detect Susceptibility to scarlet, fever. The fraternity men have been confined since Thursday follow ing the development of scarlet fever by one of the members. Results of yesterday's tests -will be known late this after noon. Those men who register non-susceptible will be allowed to break quarantine. The University administra tion has made special arrange ments for the Phi Delts to listen in on today's football game over a special system utilizing the Kenan amplifiers and the tele phone line. Sick List The following students were confined in the infirmary yester day: David Lewis, Charlie Hud son, George O'Hanlon, Jean Mc Kay, Margaret Siceloff, Carl Peiffer, J. A. Blum, J. I. Mun yan, and A. M. Page.;. POOL, WEATHERS TO TALK AT DUKE Carolina Students Address Duke Freshmen This Morning. In Page auditorium at Duke this morning, Virgil Weathers, president of the Carolina student body, and Jack Pool, senior class .i . president, will address the fresh man assembly of Duke Univer sity. This visit to Duke by the Car olina student leaders , is in line with the good-will program that is being carried out by the Y. M. C. A. organizations of the two institutions. NEGRO IS TAKEN AND HID BY MOB Father to Deal with Girl's Al leged Murderer, Says Alabama Mob That Took Negro. Mariana, Florida, Oct. 26. ( UP ) The mob which today seized the Negro accused of as saulting and murdering a white woman tonight played hide and seek with officers of the law. The Negro, Claude Neal, 23, was arrested last week on charges of assaulting and beat ing to death 20-year-old Lola Cannidy, who was feeding hogs on her father's farm 10 miles from here. "Whatever He Desires" Reports said that the mob planned to tie Neal to a stake and let the girl's father do "Whatever he desires." The Negro was spirited from the jail Mariana to a jail in Brewton, Alabama, in order to escape mobs. Today a hundred armed men forced open the cell, in Brewton and took the Negro. Connor, First National Archivist, Records U.S. History In The Making o Former University Kenan Professor Is in Charge of Hundreds of Priceless Documents Dating from Revolution; Articles Are Filed in Special Government Building. o Dr. R. D. W. Connor, former professor of history at the Uni versity, as the first national Archivist of the United States, will have complete charge of the records of our history in the making since this country was a tottering little nation newly freed from the yoke of Great Britain. In Washington, D. C, at the apex of a triangle of government office buildings which would have put the Roman Forum to shame, his office facing on "the most beautiful streetin the world," the former University professor will have in his care documents ranging in importance from the Emancipation Proclamation and the Kellogg Pact to a receipt for an old army payroll. Carefully Protected The thousands of priceless documents will be protected from light and too much dryness and careless exposure by every safeguard the government, working hand in hand with science, can devise for their pre servation. It will thus be possible for fu ture generations as well as our own to view a letter from Ste phen Decatur ... ("My country right or wrong, but always my country") which tells of a treaty made with. Algerian pirates, John Adams' notification-of .his election to the Presidency, to gether with a draft of his in SERVED BY THE CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1934 Requirement Explained For Rhodes Hearing f Committee Wants Applicants' Plans of Study at Oxford. An explanation of necessary requirements for applicants' in terviews with the preliminary committee on Rhodes scholarship was made yesterday By Dean A; W. Hobbs of the school of lib eral arts. Applicants should prepare for the local committee only a state ment of their intentions in the course of study at Oxford in the event they should be chosen and may offer any recommendations they wish from members of the faculty here. This is all for the information of the local committee. The reg ular preparation data stipulated On the application blank wili be required only from the members chosen from this school to appear before the district Rhodes, com mittee later. . 7 7 Robot Mutilated Before Assembly Radium Screams Hatred for Men And Lust for Power. An impromptu skit represent ative of "R. U. R." was present ed by part of the cast of this opening Playmakers' production yesterday at freshman assembly. In order to prove to a girl that Radius, his robot, was only a machine, Dr. Gall cut off Radi us' hand. After the doctor's exit, Radius expressed hatred for men, saying that he would like to "divide Gall into three parts." The playlet ended by the ro bot's shouting that he wanted "power! power-! power!" and, kneeling, that "Allah is al mighty! Allah is almighty!" . augural address, records, dia ries, log-books treaties with every nation on earth, and even Great Britain's recent notifica tion that she would be unable to meet her debt payment. . The declaration of America's entry into the World War can not, for instance, begin to com pare in glamor with the velvet box which holds the treaty be tween England and the United States at the conclusion of the War of the Revolution. Bound in velvet, decorated in gold, the parchment is trimmed with a red and gold cord and tassel, on the end of which is a silver box containing the great seal of Eng land, and a beeswax reproduc tion of the personal seal of George III. Decorated Treaty Even the Kellogg Pact, bound in green morocco decorated with gold, tied with a red ribbon and a gold cord, and bearing names and seals of the fifteen signatory countries, cannot compare in in terest' with the letters of Louis XVI of France to President Washington. Louis XVI wrote to Washington as to a personal friend, telling him of the death of the dauphin, the birth of a princess, or a royal marriage. Another letter from France of a slightly later date carries the slogan: "Liberte, Egalite, ou la Mort," and the name of Robespierre. UNITED PRESS GERMAN CHURCH RESKTNAZISM August Jaeger, Nazi Lay Coun sellor, Resigns from Church N Government of MueUer. Berlin, Oct. 26. (UP) Op. j ponents of the Nazification of the German evangelical church won a preliminary victory tonight with the resignation of August Jaeger, Nazi lay counsellor, from the church government of Reich bishop' Ludwig Mueller. Jaeger's activities as assistant to the Reichbishop and as ex tremist in the move to remodel the church along Nazi lines have led to serious internal dissension which is believed to have em barrassed the Reich government. Conflict with Hitler The Nazi government's pro gram in regard to the church has long been a source of trou ble, and this preliminary victory follows a dramatic crisis yester day that led to an almost open break between Adolf Hitler and the Reichbishop Ludwig Mueller. This is believed to indicate an early withdrawal of the Hitler government from church affairs. CO-OP DIRECTORS TO RE INCREASED Two New Members to Be Elect ed Within Next Week. An election of two new mem bers to the board of directors of the Student Co-operative organ ization will be held within the next week, it -was . announced yesterday by Harper Barnes. Nominations will be made by the present board. Voters may also write the name of their choice on the ballots the day of election. All members of either of the two divisions embraced in the co-operative system will be eligible to vote. Those members belonging to both divisions will be entitled to two votes. The present board of direc tors . is composed of Harper Barnes, Haywood Weeks, and Ir vin Boyle. Grail Dance Tonight Long Will Play for Affair to Honor Golden Fleece. Johnny Long and his orches tra will play tonight for the Grail dance to be given in the Tin Can between the hours of 9:00 and 12:00 o'clock. Simmons Patterson announced yesterday afternoon that the dance tonight will be the last one to be sponsored by the Or der of the Grail this quarter. Next quarter the Grail will give two dances, and three in the spring. The dance tonight is being given in honor of the Golden Fleece. Tickets may be pur chased either at Pritchard- Lloyd's or at the door. "R. U. R Karl Capek's "R. U. R.", first Playmakers' production of the current season, will be presented in the third performance at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the Play makers theatre. Directed by Earl A. Slocum, the Music department's 17-piece Carolina Concert orchestra will furnish music for the program. Rebellion against their in ventors by Rossum!s Universal Robots and man's struggle to perpetuate human life is the theme of the drama, a social sa tire. E exposition Day. Approved By Departmental Heads ( Two Named for Oxford Debate Wednesday Team Composed of Kaplan, Jor dan; Durfee Is Alternate. Leon Kaplan and J. O. Jordan have been selected by Profes sors McKie, Olsen, and Wood house, who acted as judges at the try-outs last Tuesday, to de bate against the team from Ox ford University here Wednes day. . Winthrop Durfee was named alternate. The Oxford team, it is under stood, is composed of two lib erals, one a member of the Eng lish labor party, and one a mem ber of the socialist party. The question for debate is: Resolved, that a strong trade union on a national basis is es sential to organized society. WOODHOUSEASKS PEACE EDUCATION Professor Points to Present Rampant Nationalism as Pos sible Cause of War. The records of history show that intense nationalism, when misused, has always led to war, Edward J. Wootihouse, profes sor of history and government, told the Chapel Hill Rotary club in an address Thursday night. Professor Woodhouse does not agree with those who believe that man will always be a fight ing race, but thinks that the dangers of war, particularly those dangers resulting from the type of nationalism rampant in some countries now, may be diminished through education for peace. "The way to tone down na tionalism to a sensible point," he said, "is to combine it with other peoples' nationalism, to consider their points of view. We should discourage smug Americanism, the belief held by some that we can do no wrong. We should combine with the British and French in efforts to promote peace." The professor of government pointed out the proof afforded by history of the fact that war has always done more harm than gpod. Service for Dr. Tayloe Memorial Will Be Conducted Be tween Halves Today. A brief, simple memorial ser vice for Dr. David T. Tayloe, Jr., whose death occurred recent ly at his home in Washington, is to be held here between halves! of the Carolina-State football game today. Dr. Tayloe is regarded as one of the greatest football players Carolina has produced. He play ed on the varsity for four years, 1912, 1913, 1914, and 1915, be ing captain of the team in 1914 and 1915. Plans for the service have been arranged by. Robert B. HCuse, administrative dean of the University, who was a class mate of Dr. Tayloe. Members, of the four football teams on which Dr. Tayloe play ed have been asked to gather at the Carolina players' bench af ter the first half when the ser vice will be Held. The group will walk to the middle of the field where a citation will be read over the amplifying system. NUMBER 32 DATE DEFINITELY SET IN FEBRUARY Celebration Will Present First Exhibition of University In tellectual Program. 22 DIVISIONS TO EXHIBIT At a joint meeting of the spe cial student committee and Uni versity departmental heads yes terday afternoon, the date for the first annual student-faculty day was set for the week of Feb ruary 19-22. The exact day in the week mentioned will be decided upon by a joint committee consisting of the student committee and a special group appointed by Dean House from the faculty. The combined group, after de liberation, decided definitely on extensive plans for an exposi tion on this day embracing the departments of the University, their functions, accomplish ments, workings, and admin istration. The date originally set for the affair was November 7, but was tentatively decided upon in or der to effect some basis for the development of plans. This will mark the first all University function presenting a complete exhibition of the in tellectual program as embraced in the curriculum, administra tion, and student life. Lawyers Recommend .. A "recommendation from the law school favoring some date in the future which would not interfere with the workings of that department was the first ac tion which resulted in the crea tion of the new date. This state ment expressed the desire that the law school and other pro fessional divisions be exempt from participating in the day if it were to Tbe held this quarter, due to interference in the regu lar work schedule. Accordingly, discussion on a suitable day was begun. In or der to make arrangements for the exposition, which will re quire an immense amount of work in preparation, T;he de-, partmental heads decided that a date must be chosen which al lowed ample time for this work. Consider Legislature Considering the expediency of holding the exposition dur ing the legislative session in Ral eigh, so that members of that group could attend, it was fur ther agreed that some time dur ing the winter quarter would be suitable. Another point was the fact that Washington's birthday, re cently omitted from regular Uni versity holidays should be re garded and with these considera tions, the group decided upon the week prior to this day. - A motion was passed asking all departments to begin plans immediately for the exposition, to decide upon methods of pres enting the workings of each di vision as 'exhibits. . The exposition will not only serve the purpose originally pre sented of bringing a closer faculty-student relationships, but will also present to the students and the public an exhibition of the entire institutional program. Outline Approved A tentative outline was pre sented as drawn up by the stu dent committee setting forth the entire program for the day. It (Continued on last page) t
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 27, 1934, edition 1
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