Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 13, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1935 C)e atlp Car eei 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. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C under act of March 3, 1879. - Subscription .price, $3.00 for the college year. . - ' . ' Robert C. Page, Jr.. Joe Webb......-.. George UnderwjooeL ..Editor .Managing Editor .Business Manager .Circulation Manager EDITORIAL Wolslagel, Snowden,- Editorial Staff BOARD Phil Hammer, chairman, Earl Franklin Harward. John Schulz, DuPont Margaret McCaulev. Morty Slavin. Sam Leaser. Dick Myers, Charles Lloyd, Jake Snyder, Phil Kind, Charles Daniel, George i5utier. FEATURE BOARD Nelson Lansdale,' chairman; Nick Read. Bob Browder. Francis Clinsrman, . J. E. Poin- dexter, W. M. Cochrane, Willis Harrison. CITY EDITORS Irving Suss, Walter Hargett Don McKee, Jim Daniel, Reed Sarratt. TELEGRAPH EDITOR-Stuart Rabb, Charlie Gilmore. DESK MAN Eddie Kahn. . v SPORTS DEPARTMENT Jimmy Morris and Smith Barrier, co-editors, Tm Bost, Lee Turk, Len Rubin, Fletcher Ferguson, Stuart Sechriest, Lester , Ostrow, Ira Sarasohn. . , . . . " r. EXCHANGES Margaret Gaines. STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Don Becker. - REPORTERS Bill Hudson. Jhn Smith. J. F. Jonas, Howard Easter, Lawrence Weisbrod, Hazel Beacham, Raymond Howe, William Jordan, Morton Feldman, Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER COLLECTION MANAGER.! Herbert Osterheld OFFICE MANAGERS.-:Walter Eckert, Roy Crooks NATIONAL ADVERTISING.. -Boylan Carr DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE Joe Murnick. LOCAL ADVERTISING Hugh Primrose, Robt. Sosnik, Eli Joyner (managers), Bill MacDonald, Louis Shaff ner, Page Keel, Bill McLean, Crist Blackwell. -Butler French Giving the , . . . : Y. ' ' jv'C Union a' Chance- jr ,- -'"7 , . -The others night approximately 40 : students crowded together, for, the purpose, of formulating a Carolina Political Union. The meeting, was ex ceedingly informa!, and at times conflicted opin ion caused some chaos. ' - There was a feeling prevalent among a few that the meeting was unsuccessful and meaning less. Then too there were others -who were stimulated with the idea and intend to be patient and give the union a fair trial. The meeting regardless of pro's and con's suc- i Gertrude Stein Continued from page one) bling. The subject sits relaxed, in the presence of music or con versation or some distracting in fluence, and writes without pay ing any attention to what goes on on the paper before him. Miss Stein denied absolutely the validity of this method of writing. Undergraduate Days , According to her account, she ceeded in accomplishing-two important factors became interested in the subject which will tend to create a strong and worth- while an undergraduate at Rad- while union. The main good that came out of cjiffe William James was ex- the meeting was that the meeting conveyed a tremely interested in the pheno- general idea Of what the 'campus man thought mna of spiritualistic and auto- the union should be. These opinions as rendered matic writing and had her, a ny tne campus man win act as guiamg posts lor brilliant student, transferred to the organizing committee. The organizing com- Harvard where she worked un- mittee was the second good achieved at the meet- jer james, who was convinced j mi A j J 111 . mg. ine organizing cuiniuiLiee as set up win at the time that there was attempt to outline the routine-and procedure of writing under these conditions, the union. ' v . and that it would Drove extreme- The leaders of this movement have promised Iy valuable scientifically. to give the campus a real progressive and inter- gbe and a graduate student esting Union, or else not trouble the campus with parried out the experiment with just another organization which will exist in a planchette, an instrument of name only. four strings and a piece of wood The. success of the Union will depend upon the as an arm-rest, suspended from interest it can create ancTextend to the student', the ceiling. The wires controlled It will build itself upon such grounds. Let-it be the hand only to a slight extent, remembered that the formation of the Yale Polit- and the experimenters gave the cal Union took two months of careful planning, hand a shove, and then wouldn't CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: REED SARRATT Wednesday, February 13, 1935 1 I I mm w w we can not expect to iorm a similar union m an hour and a half. ' . PARAGRAPHICS With the warm weather comes Comparative Anatomy 0-0-0 given seven nights a week in the arboretum. It's a crip. We see where there's a new book written on American "sticks." We hope there's a chap ter in it on the "corn" variety for true'local color. v The figures say Peacock' of the law school is leading the' intramural scorers. Apparently the lawyers have been giving the other teams the bird. University 1 Debaters Last night two representatives of the Uhiver sity debated speakers from the University of hess j-ney wrote. We found." she said as she Doing Our Part of It . A special edition of the Alumni Review, which will send an analysis of the financial need of the University to 40,000 friends of Carolina, merits the whole-hearted attention of the students. The edition shows that whereas appropriations have been dangerously cut, at the three divisions of the Greater University in every case there has been an increase in enrollment. It shows, that the University ranks lowest among 48 institu tions in the way that . salaries have been cut And, finally, it shows from testimonials un solicited from prominent Americans, the high value which they place on the University. The least we ' can do would be to mention the need and value of the University in our let ters home. , ,Need and value when the people of the state realize both, their representatives will act accordingly. So Fill The Stein v - This is a fairy tale is a fairy tale it is. Tender it is as buttons, buttons, who's got the buttons ? About a Stein it is it is, so fill the Stein with delight at the publicity she gets from this non sensical writing which is not so non-sensical as her own writing with which she has been making fools out of otherwise intelligent lovers of lit erature. Is that clear? As clear as beer as btem is clear? Who's Got Our Petitions? The campus at large is still trying to figure out whatever became of the petitions which were cir culated so arduously -by the members of the-Uni versity Club in their effort to procure for the students a through bus service from Raleigh to Greensboro via Chapel Hill. Over three weeks have elapsed since the date of the hearing before the North Carolina Util ities Commission at which time the petitions were to be presented. No further word has been received of the disposal of the petitions or of the date of the next meeting. The original hearing was to be convened on January 22 but was postponed due to the illness of one of the members of the commission. . Whatever the reason for, the continued delay the parties on this campus who were the lead ers in this much-needed movement should delve into the matter and see just why there has been such a long delay and strive to remedy the situa tion. . v ' touch it. Miss-Stem found that only when she guided the sub ject's hand, started it definitely to writing, did she get any re suits. She found that the more they became the unconscious nodded a curt gesture in refusal of a cigarette, "that the normal intellectual person doesn't act much automatically. James was finally convinced of this, and came to realize that such auto matic writing as liad been pro duced had been prodded out of West Virginia on the nationalization ot arma ment production. ' The debaters of the University come in for very little recognition and support in proportion to the effort and ability which goes into their contests. They put much time and work into the preparation of their speeches, which are always on topics of contemporary and general in terest. These students are representing the Uni versity just as much as any athletic team and Lhe subjects by the sheer good unserve some recuKiiiuun lur uieir seivices 1 i wen as a certain amount or support. Ui, r, n I CAUCl liilVilL. 111CJ XUUUU Furthermore, the debate council gets a fee for what thev wanted to find be J TT7-1 J.1 J 1A. J -L I - " : ' sustenance, vvneiner or not it unserves cause James wanted them to find sunnort is another matter, but at least the stu- , ... TnGfiA because ot Miss stem s in- V U1VV I T?rvn ah sistence on the importance of M. VTA. .4. A. AA President Roosevelt once made the remark the sound of her words, the in that there are "two kinds of justice in this coun- terviewer asked her what she try, one for the rich and one for the poor." Last thought of Edgar Allen Poe's week Maver C. Goldman. New York lawver and The Bells," a poem remarkable chairman of the Committee on Public Defenders for its onomato-poetic effects. of the New York State Bar Association, pro- "It's a very interesting expo posed a solution to the situation. , sition of Poe's problem as an in- He is heading a movement for the abolition of tellectual poet to relate words to private defense in criminal cases, and the estab- meaning," replied Miss Stem, lishment of a public defender, to occupy much "Great poets have always held the same position as the present public pfos- themselves down to exact choice ecutor, -except that he would defend the accused of wordsand all first-rate poets in criminal court. Such a public defender would are obsessed with the emotion be either elected or appointed, and his services of calling upon something, as would be available, or rather, if we understand Poe was calling upon bells, and it right, compulsory to one and all, rich and poor the intention they have in writ- alike. The police force and investigating agencies mg poetry, or in what they wish of the state would be as much at his command to convey. as at the prosecutor's.' "Much of the glory of Eliza Mr. Goldman says, "Although the immediate bethan literature," continued the problem is to guard against injustice to those author of "Tender Buttons," who are unable properly to protect themselves, "lies in the fact that they were the ultimate solution of the inequalities in the so much taken with words that criminal courts must come about through state the meaning of them was largely defense for all as long as prosecution remains a indifferent to them. Their word state function." choice has marvelous delicacy, While this proposal undoubtedly has its merits, but they didn't care about the there are some Questions which we would like meaning. Minor poets are al to ask. First, would not such a system be an added burden to the already overburdened public treasury? Why not establish a definite fee to be paid by defendants for the services of the public defender except in cases where it would be im possible, such deficiencies to be made up by the state? Secondly, although, as Mr. Goldman states, the alleged right to private counsel degenerates into a mere privilege to those who can buy their way, it is still a very valuable right, and one which we would not like to see withdrawn. Suppose the defendant did not like the tactics of the de fender, and felt some repugnance at being de fended in such a manner. Suppose further that the defender was an enemy of the defendant, and unwilling to do his best for his client's interests. Would it not be better to have a complete staff of defenders from which the accused could make his choice? There is so much good in Mr. Goldman's pro posal, we think it should be given serious thought from all angles, and examined thoroughly, in the hope that something beneficial may come of it. ways concerned more with their excitements and less with tneir Intention. Ben. Jonson is an ex ample. Our own Whitman was always falling by the wayside be- cause he got his mieunuu emotion mixed up with his in tention of expression." Back to Normal "The great normal poet," she said, as the interview drew to a close, "is always in control of his emotion in relation to. his intention," Miss Stein lectured to an audi ence'limited to 500 in Gerrard hall last night, after which she was the guest of honor at an in formal reception in Graham Memorial. She is leaving Chapel fTill this mornimr for Charles ton, S. C. Kay Kyser (Continued from page one) from Auburn, where Tie played recently, his orchestra is just about the best to appear there in many a moon. Seven Original Members " Of the 14 members now play ing in Kay's band, seven of them are original boys, included in the orchestra when it was formed here. The unit how includes Joe Kirkham, Merwyn "Isch Kabib ble" Bogue, Jack Barrow, Carl ton Ackley, Bill Stoker,. ISully Mason, Lyman Gandee, "Muddy" Berry, Lloyd Snow, Art Wilson, and George Duning. Besides these regular mem bers, Kay will bring here Vir ginia Simms as feminine vocal ist. Miss Simms formerly worked for Guy Lombardo, Hal Grayson, and Tom Gerun. On the west coast, which she calls home, she sang over the network and many local stations. ' The dance set will consist of four dances, all to be held in Bymim gymnasium. It will open with a tea dance Friday after noon from 4:30 to 6 o'clock and will' continue with a formal dance Friday night from 9 to 1 o'clock, another tea dance from 4 :30 to 6 o'clock Saturday after noon, and will end with a formal dance Saturday night from 9:30 to 12 .o'clock. Due to the restricted dancing space in the gymnasium, the number of bids to be sold for the set will be very limited, Chapin Litten, secretary-treasurer of the German Club, an nounced yesterday . OUTSTANDING RADIO BROADCASTS 1 J 1 :00 : George Hall orchestra WBIG. 1 :30 : Little Jack Little, songs,. WBT. 2:00: Radio City Matinee, Reveler's quartet; Leonard Joy orch; John B. Kennedy; guest artists, WJZ. 3:00: Kate Smith's Matinee Hour, WBT. 4:30: Rochester Civic orch., WJZ. 6 :45 : Lowell Thomas, com mentator, WJZ, KDKA. 7:15: Plantation Echoes Robison orch., Southernaires quartet, WJZ, KDKA. 8 :00 :- Mary Pickf ord's plays and players ; Lou Silvers, musi cal director, WPTF; Penthouse Party, Emil Coleman orch., Traveler's quartet; Jean Sar gent, guest star, WBT. 8 :30 : Wayne King orch., WEAF, WSB; Everett Mar shall's varieties, WBT. 9:00: Town Hall Tonight, Fred Allen, comedian; Lennie Hayton orch:, WEAF, WLW; Andre Kostelanetz orch; Lily Pons, soprano; male quartet, WBT. 9:30: Burns and Allen, come dians, WBT. x 9 :45: Jan Garber orch, WGN. 10:00 Guy Lombardo orch., WLW, WPTF; Jack Pearl, comedian; Freddie Rich orch., WBT. . 10:30: Melody Masterpieces, Mary Eastman, soprano; Con cert orch., WBT. 11:00: Hal Kemp orch, WJZ, WIS. 11:30: Eddy Duchin orch, WEAF, WW; Ozzie Nelson orch., WBT. Commerce Freshmen U.S.S. Macon (Continued from page one) climbing above the clouds. The ceiling was 2,000 to 2,500 feet at the time. The big airship disappeared in the clouds, but I could hear the motors for about half an hour." "I hope that all the men will be saved. I wish to God it were daylight," said Admiral Thomas J. Senn, the 12th naval district commander. , LOST Brown camel-hair topcoat, name on inside pocket. Please return to the A. T. O. house. Re ward! No questions asked. There will be no meeting of the freshmen of the school of commerce this morning, accord ing to an announcement from Dean Carroll yesterday. The regular Wednesday meet ing has been called off because of a conflict with the sophomore convocation in Memorial hall. Baptist Social A valentine social will be giv en for Baptist students and their friends Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in the, basement of the Baptist church. TODAY "The Winning Ticket" With LEO CARRILLO TEDHEALY Also . - Comedy Novelty Midnight Show Friday Doors Open 11:15 P. M. "Redhead" with GRACE BRADLEY 4b& mm II H tO I HJH Hi If (3 FIFTH JVVENUE, NEW YORK EXHIBITION CLOTHES OF INDIVIDUAL EXCELLENCE, CORRECTLY ATTUNED TO THE IMMEDIATE SEASON ) FORTY DOLLARS AND MORE EXHIBITION AT Student Co-operative Cleaners TODAY AND TOMORROW - 7 - ' '- .. f ROBERT GRAY, Representative CLOTHES INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED TO ORDER :: ALSO HABERDASHERY . HATS SHOES FI NCH I FY SEROUS" REDUCTIONS ON ALL FINCHLEY ouununjnciM, nAii AND SHOES NOW CURRENT IN NEW YORK SHOP MADE TO ORDER CLOTHING NOT INCLUDED. SALE
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 13, 1935, edition 1
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