PAGB TWO
THE DAILY TAB
SEEJ
.. FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1935
: " The cfcial cevrspaper of tie Publications Union Board of the Unirersity
cf North Carolina at Chapel Hill -where it is printed daily except Holidays,
and the Thanksgiving. Christmas, and Spring: Holidays. Entered as second
class matter at the post oSce of Chapel
1373. SuDscription price, fS.ou lor tne
Editor
Philip Gibbon Hammer
Managing Editor
Robert Claude Page, Jr.
Associate Editors
Walter Lee Hargett Irving David Snss
William H. W. Anderson
Assistant Editors
Donald Gist Wetherbee James Manly Daniel
Donald Kennedy McKee
Contributing Editors
Earl Woodall Wolslagel DnPont Snowden Jacob Elias Snyder
Samuel Richardson Leager John Schulz Milton Kallman Kalb
Mortimer Irvin Slavin Francies Fries-Willingham
Feature Writers
Willis Speight Harrison William Francis Clingman, Jr.
William MeWhorter Cochrane James Edward Poindexter
Exchange Staff
George Oliver Butler, manager Lawrence M. Weisbrod
City Editor
Alexander Reed Sarratt, Jr.
News Editors
Stuart White Rabb
Edwin Leonard Eahn
William Palmer Hudson
Desk
Men
Nicholas Cabell Read
John Franklin Jonas, Jr.
Reporters
Robert Nathaniel Magill
Edwin Jones Hamlin
Robert Franklin Ledford
Henry Theodoric Terry, Jr.
Loui3 Samuel Spelke
Emmet Robinson Spicer
Newton Craig
Staff Photographer .
Donald Becker
Business Manager
, s Joseph Cheshire Webb
Assistant Business Manager
Thomas Butler French
' Division Managers
Joseph Hull Robinson, Circulation Herbert Francis Osterheld, Collection
Walter Henry Eckert and Roy Cox Crooks, Office
Montf ord Boylan Carr, National Advertising
Local Advertising Staff
Hugh William Primrose Robert Brendle Sosnick
Niles Woodbridge Bond Thomas Eli Joyner
William Kerr MacDonald Louis deSchweinitz Shaffner
Crist Watts Blackwell Page Clark Keel s
William Deroy McLean Joseph Harold Murnick
THIS ISSUE: NEWS, GILMORE; NIGHT, JORDAN
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
The controversy perennially aroused over student dance con
duct has blossomed forth again. Despite the fact that these are
repeated outbursts, they are important.
At the Student Welfare Board meeting Monday, faculty mem
bers minced no words in letting the student members know that
their dance, or rather, after-dance, conduct was disgraceful. The
faculty has never placed any direct restrictions on students to
curb after-dance disorder ; all existing regulations were made by
students themselves. But that does not diminish the importance
of th ef acuity condemnation.
We think that after-dance conduct is not as bad as it's cracked
up to be, but that there is obvious room for improvement. We
haven't seen the immorality which is reported; the noise is bad
but it doesn't spell lasciviousness. But the regulations as to re
tiring hours of feminine guests has consistently been broken, not
so much by campus co-eds as by visitors. And it's not the fault
of the visitors so much as the fault of their escorts here.
If the students would realize that these rules were made by
students, because those students wanted to safeguard their privi
leges, that the abrogation of these rules puts them and the Univ
ersity (definitely the latter) in a bad light, that no annual rump
us would be raised if they'd use their heads about these things-
then perhaps we a see a chancre
difficult job to argue with a faculty member and try to vindi
cate student behavior when the
on the students themselves.
This is another case where the students have the freedom and
responsibility to act in their own behalf. It is not so much that
we're lamenting the fact that the students in general and the
fraternities in particular are oblivious to what they have to do;
it is rather that we're anxious to see them assume the burden
which is theirs, to get returns
amount of energy and sympathy
HYGIENE
We are in great need of a good
freshmen. By this we mean one
first aid. By "good" we do not
flowers and trees, but a course in
need a clear, frank, factual man
This course because of subject
pathy with our infirmary schedule. This advice should' be con
sidered as much a required. infirmary service as is our present
medical cure. If the University can pay the infirmary doctors for
the additional service, then all the better; if not, we believe it
still would be the infirmary doctors' duty to teach such a course
without additional compensation until the University can afford
such a salary raise or administrative shift.
The course as proposed would not require much time of the in
structors; as we understand it, a one-hour lecture a week through
out the year would be sufficient instruction to cover all the es
sential material. . It does not necessarily have to merit a credit
in the curriculum unless the administration so desires.
We believe the course could be worked into the new curriculum
schedule. We believe it should. In previous issues we have
pointed out the need for such information in the dormitories and
fraternities. Perhaps on the basis of administrative application
to all freshmen would this instruction be best carried out.
Other colleges and universities have made this step. If it would
involve top much financial expense, we would not propose it for
Carolina. But it does not. It could and should be adopted.
Hill, N. C, under act of March 3,
college year.
John McNeill Smith. Jr.
Charles Wurster Gilmore
William Stone Jordan, Jr.
Ralph Sprinkle
Franklin Harward
George Andrew Anderson
James Arthur Brown
Lytt Irvine Gardner
William Coffield Fields
John Lorraine Davis, Jr.
Edwin McKie Sink
Margaret Edmunds Gaines
m attitude ana action, it s a
burden of proof and disproof lies
in the exact proportions to the
they put into their efforts.
COURSE
hygiene course for all incoming
that will cover health, sex and
mean a course about birds, bees,
Mr. and Mrs. Human Being. We
- to - man course.
matter would be in direct sym
From a
COLLEGE WINDOW
By WILLIS S. HARRISON
We suspect that this, our last
column for the year, should con
tain as much evidence of deep
thought as we're able to muster.
And perhaps mixed with that
should be the dismal warning
that has been given to seniors
for the past few years to the ef
fect that they're going to face a
changed world.
Instead of this ponderous and
brain-racking effort, however,
we're going to clean out our desk
drawer and our notebook and
get rid of all the clippings and
what-nots laying around.
First comes a bit of humor of
unknown vintage which was
handed us weeks ajjo by Francis
Clingman when he was under
the impression that this is sup
posed to be a funny column. In
view of the co-ed situation we
ask your permission to dispose
for once and all of this offence
to the Muses :
'Consider This Work of Art
College men want their women
To be like cigarettes:
Just so many; all slender
and trim,
In a case,
Waiting in a row,
To be selected, set aflame,
and
Discarded.
More fastidious men prefer
women
Like cigars :
They are more expensive,
Look better, and last longer ;
If the brand is good
They aren't given away.
Good men treat their women
Like pipes:
And become more attached
to them,
The older they grow
When the flame is burnt
out,
They still look after them,
Knock them gently
(But lovingly)
And care for them always;
No man shares his pipe.
Kentucky Kernal.
Our excuse : one has to please
THE man who reads this col
umn. We've already passed by notes
on a liberal education, student
reform, southern honor in favor
of a lost item appearing in the
Daily Princetonian : "Lost
Bridge work for teeth of upper
jaw. Somewhere on Nassau
St. or campus.
Things we wouldn't run be
fore : The faintly amusing story
of the professor at the Univer
sity of Tennessee was having
some difficulty in getting the at
tention of his class.
"I will not begin today's lec
ture,'' he said, "until this room
settles down."
Was heard a sympathetic
voice from the rear of the room :
"Go home and sleep it off, old
man.
Warning to the reformed Buc
caneer: Last week 3,000 Har
vard students staged a purge on
their campus, seizing and burn
ing 6,000 copies of the "nudist
number" of the "Lampoon,"
their monthly comic. Police
and the fire department were
called. The magazine was
banned from the news stands
and mail as "immoral, blasphe
mous, and profane.
MATHEMATICS CHANGE
' Dr. Archibald Henderson, head
of the mathematics department
announced yesterday that only
one class in Mathematics 2 and
one in Mathematics 2c would be
offered in the fall quarter next
year. All students who have not
yet taken these courses are ex
pected to do so at that time as
they are being discontinued af
ter the fall quarter due to the
new program of study.
Now YOU'JtiE
TnlTrfng
FAIR PLAY
To the Editor,
The Daily Tar Heel:
Being an athlete, I was na
turally interested in Mr. Kellar's
letter in Tuesday's Daily Tar
Heel. I believe I am in a posi
tion to know a little more about
"the canker that is rat-like
gnawing at the foundations of
sportsmen's sports" than one
who, as far as,I know, has, not
participated in athletics at the
University. After intimate as
sociation with athletes and
questioning people who should
know, I can find no case in which
the Athletic Association has
given money to an athlete. Of
course, athletes are given jobs
to earn their expenses, but what
objection can Mr. Kellar have to
that? After all, don't these ath
letes furnish diversion to many
students, alumni, and others?
Do they not give the University
prestige throughout the south
and the nation? I wonder what
Mr. Kellar has done to increase
the prestige of the University?
I believe some athletes hold
scholarships, but isn't there a
scholastic requirement on all
scholarships? Possibly loyal
alumni pay the expenses of some
of our athletes, but what right
has Mr. Kellar and other inqui
sitive students to question the
way the alumni see fit to spend
their own money? I know cer
tain athletes who are outstand
ing scholars. ' Does Mr. Kellar
want to refuse them scholarships
because they are athletes?
In conclusion I wish to say
that I know very little of the
statements and accounts of the
Athletic Association, but I have
given you the results of my ob
servation of the athletic situa
tion. FAB HAYWOOD.
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3-
COLLEGE
- iP I! E S S
University Men
In Business
The report of university place
ment officials that more gradu
ates are being placed this year
than any year since 1930 is
highly gratifying not only from
the standpoint of the graduates
themselves but also to the many
undergraduates who have been
looking into the future with pes
simistic and discouraged eyes.
The report is more than the neat
rows of statistics showing the
number of placements in the
various departments and their
increases over previous years; it
seems to us to be a clear indica
tion that the hard-bitten busi
ness man is at last looking at
the college graduate as an asset
to the business world.
Manufacturers have at last
departed from the view that a
University education must be
pounded out' of a man before he
can be useful. It was the de
pression, we believe, that has
convinced the business world of
the worth of the college-trained
man. After the crash of 1930
when frantic business men be
gan weeding out the less effi
cient of their forces it was found
that a surprising majority of the
men left were college-trained.
Another fact that astonished
these business men, whose favor
ite prosperity jokes were about
university graduates, was that
in the period of business re
organization the college-trained
worker fitted into and better un
derstood the new and various
tasks forced upon the individual
of the concern to carry on
through the lean years than the
specialized worker. The manu
facturer and business men saw
these things and began to won
der whether his prejudice
against a university education
wasn't a bit unfounded. On clos
er observation of the work of his
university graduate employee he
decided that his prejudice was
wholly unfounded, and further
decided that the benefits of a
well-rounded education should be
taken advantage of in business.
In the last few years there
has been a steady increase in
the demand for university men
in business. With economic con
ditions as they are, with effi
ciency and ability at a premium,
this demand shows the new view
of education that business is
taking.
The big jump in the number
of graduate placements this
year might be interpreted as a
hopeful sign of business im
provement in' the country as a
whole. Concerns have been run
ning with a minimum number of
employees as a result of the
great weeding out process at the
beginning of the depression. The
fact that they are now looking
for news men for their staffs
points to the supposition that
they are expanding to take care
of business their depleted staff
cannot handle. This is encour
aging. But what is more encour
aging to us is that the business
world is finally recognizing the
college-trained man, a recogni
tion gained by a victory of merit
over deep-rooted prejudice.
Daily Cardinal.
Lack of Electricity Fails to
Halt Country Newspaper." No,
the only thing that can stop a
country newspaper is lack of
gossip. Boston Evening Tran
script. WENR.
12:15: Earl Burtnett orch.,
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12 :30 : Joe Sanders orch.,
WGN, WLW,
12 :45 : Horace Heidt orch.,
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Class Calendar
(Continued from page one)
gives his permission and the de
partmental committee gives its
approval."
No Cuts Allowed
At the suggestion of Dr. T. L
Wilson, Dr. J W. Lasley pro
posed the following addition
which .was passed: Attendance
on such lectures will not be con
sidered a valid excuse for faiU
ure to attend regular classes.
The phrase, "the day before
these lectures are to appear oa
the calendar," was stricken
from the proposal so as to per
mit lectures to be announced
two or three days in advance.
New Executives
Drs. Hudson and Edmister
were elected to the executive
committee to take the place of
Drs. Wettach and Spruill, whose
terms of office end this year.
The faculty extended for an
other year the plan by which the
executive committee refers to
the 'student council all cases in
volving the honor system, but
reserving the right to consider
any case which the instructor
wishes to have acted upon by
them.
The committee which consid
ered the class lecture calendar
consisted of Dr. Leon Wiley,
chairman; Dr. G. C. Taylor,
Dean D. D. Carroll, Charles Poe,
Irving Suss, and Nelson Lans
dale. ffioy'ro not Willi GG If
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