Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 21, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL SUNDAY, APRIL 21, 1935 HDlje Car ieel The oScial newspaper of the Publications Union Board ci the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it ia printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post face of Chapel HOI, N. C, onder act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. Robert C. Page, Jr...., Joe Webb.... Joe Robinson.... ..Editor ..Managing Editor . Business Manager .-...Circulation Manager Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Phil Hammer, chairman, Earl Wolslagel, Franklin Harward, John Schulz, DuPont Snowden. Mortv Slavin. Sam Leaser. Dick Myers, Charles Lloyd, Jake Snyder, Phil Kind, Charles Daniel, George Butler, Don Wetherbee, Don McK.ee. FEATURE BOARD Francis CHneman and Willis Har rison, co-chairmen, Nick Read, Bob Browder, J. E. Pom- dexter, W. M. Cochrane, Nelson, Lonsdale. CITY EDITORS Walter Hareett. Jim Daniel Reed Sarratt, Eddie Kahn. TELEGRAPH EDITORS Charlie Gilmore, Bill Jordan. DESK MEN Stuart Rabb and Mac Smith. SPORTS DEPARTMENT Jimmy Morris and Stuart Sechriest. co-editors. Tom Bost, Lee Turk, Len Rubin, ESetcher Ferguson, Lester Ostrow, Ira Sarasohn. s EXCHANGES Margaret Gaines. -STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Don Becker. REPORTERS BiH Hudson, J. F. Jonas, Lawrence Weis brod, Hazel Beacham, Morten Feklman, Ralyh Sprin kle, Newton Craig. ; .JButler French .Herbert - Osterkeld Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER COLLECTION MANAGER OFFICE MANAGERS Walter Eckert, Roy Crooks NATIONAL ADVERTISING . Boylan Can DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE Joe Murnick. LOCAL ADVERTISING Hugh Primrose, Robt. Sesnjk, Eli Joyner, Niles Bond (managers), Louis Shaffner, Bill MacDonaJd, P age Keel, Bill McLean, Crist Blaekwell. CITY EDITORS TODAY JIM DANIEL, BOB PAGE Suaday, April 21, 1935 our ardor for these gatherings in the interest in! the state. . The University is and always will be a "Dogwood Festival" of state loyalty. Casus Pitching: Our Tent When 1300 Boy Scouts make Chapel Hill their camping grounds for the coming weekend, Uni versityites as well as scouts should find the ex perience pleasant. I V.OJTCS by Nelson Lansdale cnt R. S. V. P. The queerest acceptance to anything we've ever received Chanel Hill is notablv famous for its surround- came otner day in a lare ings and for the type of man who spends four whlte envelope, on which m years among the natural beauties and goes forth very reen ink was the name to make his mark in the world. The Boy Scouts, "Miss Ellen Gibbs McAdoo" in on the other hand, are famous for their armre- Pd, finely rounded scrip. I phi i m it M ciationof nature, for their efforts to nerfect -trough this, tnree tnin lines themselves in mind, body and spirit. Surely it is had heen drawn and our name significant that thev will minele together. 1300 ana aaaress, m mucn smaiier let- strong, in the traditional woods of Chapel Hill, tering, was split above and below We daresav there are manv ex-Scouts and tne crossea-out name, we tore wish-they-had-been-Scouts on the campus who open the "''enveloPe disxver will have lots of fun with the high and grammar SAeeiu"y mat we or miss mc schoolers next weekend. Learning how to cook Aaoo' we still weren t sure I : i i- x j - ut j. n.-u i. l..:u wnicn were mviieu tu xa- UU oil UICU IMiUlUg UVYY IAS bCllbO, UUUU fires correctly, find one's way around, is certain ly not below the station of a University student, however sophisticated. We will welcome the Bov Scouts as wholesome American youth, as prospective collegians like the bottom. of the page was an ourselves, and as the spirit of our younger gen eration that even the strain of economic, politi cal, and social malformation cannot sully or! bend. phne's Debut," a debutante mu sical extravaganza for which we could purchase - a box for the modest sum of 25 dollars. On P AR AGRAPHICS It would be a major calamity if the Dog wooder came upon Boy Scouts chopping down dogwood for firewood next week-end. Politics is as bad as ever. It used to be that it was "no-soap" for business ; now there's plenty of soap but it's too soft. We just read an article by Roscoe Pound. We don't know much about law, but we guess what Pound says ought to carry a little weight. First Person Plural Having wondered throughout the past year about the exact origin of the editorial "we," tl present administration is still as puzzled as ever. "We" rather suspect some editor, with his ton gue in his cheek, of being indebted to the divine right of kings theory for the expression. An emperor might say "we" with the greatest of ease. He might believe implicitly in the ancient dogma that thrones were handed down from the Almighty's hand, that "Dieu et Mon Droit" was the supreme expression of the dualism of his personality. Not so an editor. An editor is only a part of his paper. By no means could he restrict the attitude of his pub lication to a mere "we." It is something much more than a two-fold factor. He depends on a is somewhat a misnomer. All this speculation aside, having admitted that "we" are as puzzled as ever about how ever got started, the present editor of the Daily Tar Heel turns over his duties, with this issue, to Phil Hammer, chairman of the editorial board for the past year. "We" wish him all sue cess and propound for his benefit the riddle of the "we," to be mulled over throughout his ad ministration. And, still mindful that the "we' jo iui aimyiy tvvu auxx twu uicuics jluux, wc express our appreciation to members of the staff who have given their time and effort to the Daily Tar Heel. With this last effort, "we" pluck, so to speak what Thackeray called the thorn in our editoria seat. Dogwood Festival In addition to the flock of Boy Scouts which will be present next week-end, the University will play host to the annual throngs who wil trek Chapel Hillwards for the Dogwood Festi val. The festival is becoming more than, an an nual event ; it is becoming a traditional and sym bolic panorama of North Carolina, as a state and asa community. Local color blends together to give the Old North State an ambitious hue, dis tinctive among the 48 divisions of the red-whit and-blue that is America. Sometimes we cannot believe that the state which moves to Chapel Hill so often to review its progress and which selects Chapel Hill as the traditional gathering-place of North Carolina lovers of history" and government and the arts can, at the same time, be so duplicitous as to lash the University as being un-American, as being "radical," as being a "bad influence." However, our bewilderment does not dampen arrow to indicate that the rest of the message was on. the back. We skipped the inside pages containing the names of patrons and patronesses, and got down. to business on page four. At the top of the page scrawl the Hearst Is Not Uncle Sam William Randolph Hearst is something of a in great penciled puzzle to most undergraduates and we are no ex- message began : "My sweet ceptions. "Red-baiting Bill' as we'd like to Am thrilled. As far as call him, is one of the big army-and-navy men know now, I'll say (quick like who believe anything that is radical will destroy a bunny) YES! . . ." As the his pet theory of nationalism, and at the same letter went on, the writing got time, he takes an extremely radical stand to- smaller and smaller, smudgier ward economic interdependence which anyone and smudgier until we-eouldn't with intelligence can tell vou is our lot. read it at all. We take it for Undergraduates, on the whole, have little re- granted she'll be here. greater part of the time, at least, as the only column in the paper. NIGHTMARES The above seems a great deal of dither about nothing when you realize that this, since April 28, 1934, when it started, is only column number 40. That means that if you threw out news, features, editorials, no tices, sports, advertising, and the mast-head, and set the paper only with columns (God forbid I) that you'd have slightly less than seven full pages of this drivel. For those frequent occasions on which we've been long-winded and tiresome, and gone out of our way to explain the obvious, we re sorry. tuaaiy enougn, you never know whether it's good or bad until you see it in print) , For the times when the type-setters have messed up sto ries by errors of insertion and . . . j.i omission, we re sure xney are at least when it made any dif ference. To those whose feelings were hurt whose toes were stepped on, speeches misquoted or ideas misrepresented, we extend our apologies, without being in the least sorry for having called at tention to anything that's cheap, nretentious. hypocritical, or x ridiculous. spect for Mr. Hearst, except that he seems to be, on the surface, sincerely interested in what he! is fighting, for. Recent analyses of the Hears tian complex, however, show a decidedly crooked path of Hearstian endeavor, crooked in that Red-baiting BilV' has deviated from a consis tent policy. It is also true that many undergraduates don't even give Mr. Hearst a thought. This is especi ally true on the Southern campus, where cries of "reds" and "radicals" are usually nothing more than hollow voices in the wilderness. Neverthe less, those who do oppose the great Savior of Nationalism do so with some vociferousness. We agree with the Hearstian opposition. Hearst is not Uncle Sam; he's a menace. Shake-up For the "Y" The incoming president of the Y. M. C. A. is promising a general shake-up of the organization THOROUGHBRED Nick Read, perhaps the most promising member of the rising sophomore class, tells us an other one on Mrs. Ogden Arm our, the wife of the Chicago meat-packer. It seems that she and a Mrs. Cabot of Boston were discussing the values of life and all that. Said Mrs; Cabot of Boston, (Where the Cabots speak only to God) : "In Baoston we tnmk breeding is every thing." "Well, we think it's fun, too i -mm- a replied Mrs. Armour, out we don't think it's everything. HAM OR HAMLET ? Syaney Howard, the play wriorTrf- Tivs nno rn T.ocli next year. Incoming presidents usually admit nrtwnrf1 1A .Q,n, . m . . - - . - , AiVIIWAU WiV XSW VTA VIA ITA1VUA tnaL orgamzauons neea snaKmg up irom xop to he is frequently confused ' V " . . ue8umu'8 seems that earlier in the season thev seldom disturb the status auo. T TT -a . i KQTnonno Hmnmim txroo nn We hope the new president is sincere. While LHpriT10. a r, p me i unaouoteaiy serves a great numoer ot tne I . mii" i qk. students mdirectlv. a verv small nprrfvntao-A ofl . , r . tnr pnnitic -man cho orairi otuuCuu "vujr 10 uuctu, wuu. witu x ijq Howard a copy of her activities. If the incoming officers are able toL: i- A ,:n aa i x. A- "& vCi0iun, aoiwius mm tu ucviac cuiui cuuukii tu air loo, if nver hirn tract more men to tne meetings, the Y will exert day ,and demanded his a, greater nuiueiice uu siuukhi, opinion xnan It nas in the past. The Busy Man Has Time For Everything That prominence in extra-curricular activities ls.m no way correlated with poor scholastic achievement is well indicated by even the most opm ion. "it s a pretty good part replied Mr. Howard. "How does it end?" IN WHICH WE TALK ABOUT US This column began when New Bern's Lonnie Dill took over the editorship of flip Datt.v casual perusal oi tne new uaumron. Many ot Tar Heel and it appears f or the xne seniors wno nave consistently nem a uean's last time in this Editor Din xuisi average mrougnout me nve years nere last issue It is we think. aT1 i ii i j j? i-J-.ii.: i ;j il.;. . j I ' nave long lists oi activities uesiue ineir names, appropriate time for us to aim very lew vi tne men witn mgn scnoiastic acknowledge that the idea of our averages have less than tour or live activities writinff a column at all was Don J- li-t - 3? A. 1 w io Tneir creuiu. ci,nflT0 w0 . rt i uiiwtiuaivci o, auu liidl nic lldlUC Surveys at other colleges indicate practically "Casual Correspondent" w the the same conclusions. For instance, a survey last-minute brainstorm of a city ixwjr xxxc vxiC vjinvexity oi Wisconsin editor. (Our own title for Diiuwo mat omvia&tic average oi meir iracK Tya5! "Letter to " which team is better than the average for the school Lnnarentlv didn't -f L,rKo,r .T1 r-. . . , , I " " a a wnuie. une man, a sprinter nas maae a but usV x : t j tt a . .. . i . - i ' - straignt a average, ana only one man had an Th fvi f ri, xt. average below a "C." YnrW whi Other activities beside athletics would show the greatest nossible fi deli tv n practically the same results, and several would most of .our funniest stories probably show an even better average,, have been told us bv neonle with The figures may show any one or several of a keener sense of humor than a number of things. Perhaps it is because the have. Our especial thanks are Detter ecnoiars are the only ones who have time due Miss Elizabeth Bain, serrp for activities, perhaps eligibility rules are be- tary of the Romance Language nig mure strictly eniorcea, or it may De that the department, without whose help activities tnemseives are hecoming more selec- this column would hav dipd a tive. In any case, it is quite definitely shown natural death late in October. that the "activities hound" who makes a fetish! And -most, nf m iifi ir.d AiVWV illWVl VtJb of his extra-curricula work to . the exclusion of "Casual Correspondent" has his studies is mostly a figment of the popular aroused has been due to its rath imagination. Northeastern News. . er peculiar position, for the APRES MOI LE DELUGE And to this department, at least, there's something vaguely funny about leaving the staff of the paper we've worked on for three years on Ascension Day. We regret we're unable to re port, along with Jesus Christ and Thornton Wilder, that "HeSaven's My Destination." Anyway, to everybody: best wishes for a joyous Easter. Toward the six new Tar Heel columnists (since Editor-elect Hammer is dispensing with dribblings from this depart ment) we feel as did the master plumber, who caused to be in scribed on his coat of arms the legend: "Apres Moi Le Deluge. OUTSTANDING RADIO BROADCASTS 8:00 a. m.: Hollywood Bowl Easter Sunrise-Service, WABC . WBIG; Easter Sunrise Service from Seattle, . Wash., WJZr. WLW. 9 :15 : Norwegian Easter Pro gram, WE AP. 3:00 Philharmonic Sym phony Society of New York,. Toscanini, conductor, WABC,. WBT, WBIG. 5:00: Mme. Ernestine Shu-mann-Heink, contralto, WEAF WSB. 7:00 : Jack Benny, Mary Liv ingston, Frank Parker, Don Bestor orch., WPTF, WJZ, KDKA. 7:30: Ozzie Nelson orch., Joe Penner, WPTF, WLW, KDKA. 8:30: Headliners, Will Rog ersFrank Tours orch., WABC, WBIG, WBT. 9:00: Charlie Previn orch., Countess Olga Albani, WJZ WLW, KDKA; Kay Kyser orch. WGN. 9:30: Walter Winchell, os sip, WLW, KDKA, WJZ. 10:00: Wayne King orch. WABC. 10:30: Fray and Braggiotti, piano duo, WABC, WBT, WBIG. 11:0: George Duffy orch"., WEAF, WLW, WSB. 11 :30 : Stan Myers orch., WEAF, - WSB ; Wayne King orch., WGN. 11:45: Jan Garber orch.,, WGN. 12:00: Keith Beecher orch., WABC, WHAS. 12:30: Kay Kyser orch. WGN; Freddie Bergm orciw Party Bosses (Continued from page one) "The possibilities for im provement of our present gov ernment, through the training of incoming officials and the ex change of experience and thought among old officials, are great. "The program should be of equal or even greater service and benelit, he went on, in the governmental training of our citizens and youth, for it is along these avenues that fetter government in the long run will come." The public schools are taking a large part in the work. High schools in 95 of the state's 100 counties are aiding officials and civic leaders in staging local membership drives. In return, the schools have the opportuni ty to earn valuable and needed materials on government for their classrooms and libraries, plus $1,000 in prizes. Dynamiters (Continued from page one) shown particular interest in this case, which has been -consigned to inside pages and column' ends in North Carolina newspapers since the dynamite was thrown. The only comment in a state journal was in the Textile Bul letin, which carried a long edi torial calling the mass meeting held in Gerrard hall to hear the prisoners speak for themselves a fine example of the radical, not to say actually communistic, spirit rampant on the University campus. Engineering Class Junior engineers will read pa pers on recent developments in their respective fields of engi neering at the class session of English 59 tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the physics auditor ium in Phillips hall. WABC. 1:00: WLW. Phil Harris orch. Festival (Continued from page one) Saturday nights. Three or four different studio jJroductions will be presented each night. AH exhibits will be open from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. on Fri day; 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. on Sat urday, and from 1 :30 to 5 :30 p. m. on Sunday. A folk music program, under the direction of Richard Chase, is to be given in Memorial hall at 10 :30 o'clock Saturday. Bal lad singers, hymn singers, square dancers and dulcimer players are special features. The South Atlantic division of the American Rock Garden So ciety, holding its annual cenven tion here Saturday, will give a demonstration of rock garden construction under the direction of William L. Hunt, vice-president of the society, oh the cam pus at 11 o'clock. Indian Ball Game One of the high lights of the festival will be the Cherokee In dian ball game which will he staged on Emerson field Satur day afternoon at 3 o'clock. The rough and tumble native game in which no punches are barred will be played by two teams from the Cherokee reservation near Lake Junaluska. The Boy Scout pageant to he given in Kenan stadium Satur day night at 7 o'clock will be open to the public. Paul W. Schenck of Greensboro, regional chairman of the scouts, will pre side and the University band will provide music for the parade and grand entry march of the scout councils. Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus and Dr. James E. West, chief scout executive of the Boy Scouts of America, will delivf addresses following the re-dedi-cation to the scout oath. Frank Belgrano, Jr., national comman der of the American Legion, ha been invited to attend. The Boy Scout camp churcn service will be held in Kenao stadium Sunday at 8:30 a. m-
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 21, 1935, edition 1
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