Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 1, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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7- -. - i -" 7 JL JOUESAL OF Tim ACTTTTnZ3 OF CAE0LEOJLN3 A CAUPUS VOLUME MJN mrrosxu, raon 4sn CHAPEL HILL, N. C, TUESDAY, "OCTOBER 1, 1935 non 4i s NUMBER 8 j i i 11.4 i m. i , ; f Graham Will Re-Deliver Social Control Speech University Day ELISHA MITCHELL t SOCIETY TO HEAR DUKE PROFESSOR Annual Celebration Set for October 11 laying of Old East Cornerstone 142 Years Ago is Occasion for Commemoration NO CLASSES AFTER 10 :30 Traditions and scholarly learning with roots 142 years long will be celebrated and re newed October 11 as University Day marks the laying of the cornerstone of Old East, old est state university building in the nation. . , In response to several student committee requests, President Frank Porter Graham will give .again his now famous speech iflrst presented at a ' Williams- town, Mass., Institute of Hu man Relations gn;vieme "Can Demjnia, taking it on theVflu iuvuci u me monensive t: "Adti.nrsTegntion by Of this speech -Oswa.. son Villard, radical editor New Want Ad Section A new classified? advertis ing section with a minimum rate of 25 cents for fifteen words is the newest addition to the Daily Jar Heel's ad vertising service. - Beginning tomorrow an ad equate section will be set aside for the ads and "announce ments. They will all be placed up this section and ciassmed according to their character. Students wishing to, buy, sell or exchange articles are invited to make use, of the section, mere will also be a lost and found department. Ads may be submitted to the business office or : to S. W. Rabb and must be paid for before they are run. - j S Scientific Group will Open 52nd Year October 8th - 1 aOAlVTOmiTDC' 1 GROUP PLANS the Nation, said in an editorial of September 18, "As for the ad dresses, it was worth ; going .to Williamstown to hear the ad mirable speech of. President Frank Porter Graham of the University of "North Carolina, a document that every conser vative ought to read because of its carefully reasoned presenta tion of the case for social, con trol in this country, and its ar guments for modernizing our constitution and our govern ment. - - ; V;,'".. If . Mr.- Roosevelt -is a. -wise man, he will make this exhibit one in behalf, of the New Deal in the campaign of a year hence." Although October 12 is the true anniversary of the laying of the cornerstone, the cere mony will be celebrated the day before rather than on a Satur (Continued on page two) FOREIGNERS PLAN INTTIOTEETING 4Y" Sponsored Cosmopolitan Club will Hold General Busi ness Session October 9 Freshman Deputation Teams, Charity ; Projects, Parents' Day" on Tentative Progriua The second meeting of the Freshman Frien iMp Council was held in the :Di Hall 'last night at 7 :15. Delving into " "Medical Prob- ems peculiar to -isortn. uaro ina," at the initial meeting of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society October 8, Dr. W. C. Davison, Dean of the Medical School of Duke University will, as guest speaker for the occa sion, inaugurate the Society's 52nd year of activity on the campus. Following Dr. I)avison's ad dress; a smoker will be held in the lounge of the Graduate Club for the purpose of getting new members acquainted vith the This . year's officers for tie society are: president, Dr. Char les D. Beers of the department of zeology; vice-president, Dr. A.M. White, of the engineering school ; an secretary-treasurer, Dr. Evan W. McChesney of the chemistry department. C . Pro grams for this year have already been formulated by the program committee. : : j Scientific department heads BOARD WILL PLAN . SUMMER SESSION OP LOCAL SCHOOL Definite Program to be Formu lated' by Committee Today Plans and a definite program for the 1936 summer school ses sion here will be drawn up in an administrative board meet ing this afternoon. Members ot the local com mittee are R. B. House, dean of administration; L. B. Rogerson, assistant controller; W. W. Pier- son, - dean of the graduate Board-In Womarn'o College Reported $16.11 A Month Frosh Reporters All freshmen who . have been attending the Daily Tar Heel training school are ex pected to attend a meeting in the publication office at 2 o'clock ' this afternoon. It is important that all wno wish to get permanent places on the staff.be there. Greensboro Division Has Cafeteria Style I Investigation Committee Named by Pool Finds Board Rates Lowest of Survey OPERATE FARM FOR MILK school; A. W. Hobbs, dean of WflWT V Til ITT 17TIN the school of arts and sciences: 1 1 IilUiI DULLljllil P. D. Carroll, dean of the school of commerce; T. J. Wilson, reg istrar; F. F. Bradshaw, dean of students; and M. R. Trabue, head of the school of education. Dr. E: W. Knight, dean of last year's summer session will meet ex omcio with the board, ac- have sehfc in their nominations i jr"jie,t? "members, who will be uecided' upon at a special meet ing .oflfesent members called Due to the unexpected iness for 10 ;?.0 A. M. October 45, to of President Jack Seawelf,IJwK6 be held in the lecture room of was in the infirmary, and be- (Continued on page two) w sorf nA informal. AllUeilC JMlUipnieilL president Henry Hudson Pe- Ready for Freshmen iblUCU. ....... f 'v. - - I mi., I.Ja, mm nnm'nmnn)- - 1 1I1H 1 tiH L112CUU.U. KViU Following., the song. J-Tt's ,-a1for ikaw whictT is needed Long Way to Tipperary" Jack for the new physical education Hughes rendered a short devo- dasses may be secured during tional. inasmuch as no aennite the next ten dayg at the Tphy program had been prepared, tne remainder of the time was de voted to discussing future plans of the Friendship Council. New Projects . Opening the discussion, Pro TO GO OUT TODAY Tar Heel High School News Service will be Given Eighty State Institutions on List The fee for a month's board at the Woman's Collecre in Greensboro was reported yester day to be $16.11 by Jack Pool's committee on food prices. The investigation of eating I conditions at the Woman's Col lege was made by Nick Read and Don McKee. George Mac- Farland, third member of the committee, was unable to make V. room m iJynum gymnasium from 2 to 6 p. m. 1 u The new outfits have been completed and placed on sale by the Book Exchange and all ! freshmen may avail themselves gram Committee Chairman Rob- of the opportunity to secure the ert Dalton told of the projects equipment for their first physi- which were being contemplated cal education class. by the group. Some of these All of the equipment in the were : freshman deputation regulation set has been approved teams, charity projects, and a by 0. K. Cromwell, head of the program whereby the Friendship newiy created physical education Council might have reciprocal department of the University. programs with the Councils of the trip to Greensboro, but has The second fall release of the! been busy surveying board Daily Tar Heel, weekly High! prices at local fraternity houses. cording to his aniiouncement of I School News Service will be - All students living in dormi the meeting yesterday. . I sent out this afternoon, ac-lfories at the Greater Uni ver- On Friday the summer school cording to Don McKee, director, sitys unit in Greensboro are re- board of the consolidated Uni-1 Eighty institutions in and I quired to take their meals in versity will meet to Work out around the state, are on the the college dinincr hall. At recr- Jn4.nn s-F 4-Via Ylmnta TT-niTTAf-l 1 J. -i. ' : m I . ... . Mcuww ui wic wcaici wiuw- mauing ust to receive uewa i istration each dormitory' resi- sity -summer session and co- their alumni and the University, dent pays S145, which covers ordinate the schools of the! This news is sent out in the hoard for the nine TnontVifl of three divisions. form of a general mimeographed school. i . - . ... . . i Meeting with that group will I release which is mailed out to l Lowest Fee be Dean House, Controller C. every one of the 80 schools ana This board fee is the lowest T. Woolen, Dr. Pierson, and Dr. personal news letters sent to the committe has found in its Knight, representing the' Chapel schools whose alumni have been investigations. It is two dollars - - . Hill division; Dean J. W.- Har- prominent m university uie. less per month than , at State relson of Raleigh, and Dean W. Last Release I College, where students eat for C. Jackson of Greensboro. I The release last Tuesday was! $18. - the larcrest in the historv of the I 4f ntz 11 IT" J -J -j-k ; I v ipiuix ITCJL J-UUll 1.11, lb WUO Yucauunai i iufeiam Mews Service project, seventy- hut R .Sd npr rlav tn Pat nf th j 1 XI . . - . - . . . 1 w JJlSCUSgea oy vaDineiinme schools received mimeo- Woman's College or a general - i i crranhpii nil iPTina qtih IK thP l o i rr i xt "A-WvA.nriwrftm of voca- e , avdKCUi ,i, ameaurorinu 6u uu A rpndv rpRnnnsps havft pome , j r.: : Lroo WOOT,Dr1rtrto SlnmftrA - " .. . . . . "l BCCUIIU UClillga UX PWw: ;:T; r;;t: m.frora the sch00ls about .tne everything but fruits at break- x. atx. . xx. vcwv,u m v,w-,fi t .. .... .j Hofmto data J...1 .3 -i . i . . , , cv. - I - -t-i - -i rlicr " " vwmvv, nasi ana aesserts. ""v ""to"" "J v-.w 7Z,0 0rcani7.AT.10TI Ot THAI "C. . J j j. i. if a nnfhm- r"WWk . j x-wu ia csux veu ciiieLena siyie A i J.T.. vttxiuua iu6u;wVwo aT; . DreaKiast ana lunch, ana nowever, was aevotea to tne nmv m.- tt. Today's Release Today's release will feature the Carolina-Wake Forest came. in tnC iiiaiiiiii Vx x ui unci Px u- latest developments in the gramS. Cwdn Viall cinoHnT. nKnm(r Rabb V plan for vocational enrollment, the new denartment training is still in embriotic of TeUgioil here, and other form, but elaboration is on the trends in student and Univer- docket as a faculty speaker Tor filling of questionnaires designed to find the main interests of the members. These will be used the cabinet is promised for next week's meeting. The new" Cosmopolitan 'XJlub composed r of students and fac ulty metnbersi who either ;wiere "born in a f oreign countryorhave lived two or more consecutive years in one, will hold its initial meeting Wednesday night, Octo ber 9, at 8:30, in the Episcopal parish house. "Y'.'-sponsored and financed, the new organization will have as its purpose the promotion of fellowship and good will between the various campus nationals rather than the study of inter national politics. . About one fourth of the membership will be American. First Meeting The first meeting will be general get-together and busi ness session, featured by an ad dress by Dr. Y. Z. Chang, Chi . nese professor here for a year on an exchange basis, replacing Dr. E. E. Ericson of the English department. Regular meetings will be held at two-weeks intervals, probably in the Grail room of Graham Memorial. Plans for these sessions will be formulated at next week's meeting. .Interested faculty members and students who meet the membership conditions, are., re- (ConttnutJ fg$ itmt) otlieir nearby schools. Other pro jects mentioned were the ing of a "Parents Day" m col laboration with" UniVersity t)ay, m VA ...py"i ..u'..-rr. " I i v,TOQa nQoi Will US UUX111K nauunu. IV. -.rt 1JJ Vk i t I mc paiii-LiiuuuviiS iii uic giaoo- umy ampoeif tnen spo u tr.dders Like vour crood old the importance of carrymg n Chamber of Commerce classifi- the work oftne juresnman ( Continued on fag two) :-'-;.'V.." i "' . .... ' " ' - ?'"" cation, the "boosters ' and the "knockers," the local grouping PHI WILL DISCUSS 1S Pretty arbitrary but for all SWAIN HALL BILL Practlcal purposes, nice writing a cuiuixiii, iu wux&a iixiiit. Republican Durfee to Speak oa National Election . Now the path-trotters have two sects : the new-path-plodders and the old-nath-plodders. Both meeuiiK xux wic dcwuu Linre of xvjeni like t0 trod rjaths. as this quarter, the Phi assembly you may have guessed. They will convene at 7:15 o'clock to- like to plod paths because that's mght on tne iourtn noor. oi what they came here for, to get New East to consider final act- somewhere, not by shortcuts, ii j : i c i . .. ion on tne cumruverauu owflin y by doing a gcod job 0f path nail diii. . -nirHncr wih the enroiirace- Also under consideration will ment of some older1 path-plod- be the bill recommmending that ders. ' ' women be permitted to enter the The new-path-plodders like to University for their freshman beat new paths, but they're dif and sophomore years. ferent from the grass-trodders, Winthrop, C. Durfee, super- as we shall see. They go about Republican from Massachusetts, plodding new paths in a syste will open discussion on phases matic manner, not to get any- of the 1936 national election. where faster, but to make it eas- Speaker Francis Fairley will ierrfor others to get there when make a speech of welcome to the their time comes. , A new men and will, outline plans The old-path-plodders . aren t for the fall session, ' as progressive as the new-path sity life. The Daily Tar Heel News Service will be continued throughout the year,, with Tdis patches being sent out .weekly. .The ,'; News Service . project, which . waa set-up. last spring; by Editor Hammer, is financed by plodders but they're dependable I J, M. Saunders' alumni office. andL stick to the paths and plod! Assisting Director McKee in ike- the old-path-plodders tell I the writing and mailing of the them to. Every once in a while releases are Newton Craig and they get exhiliarated . and step I H. T. Terry, Jr. on the !0-'nat.h-nof'f!era, heels. but as a general thing they f ol- biliXNAlili fJLAJNo fow and follow well. - MKETUNtr Now the grass-trodders are an unprincipled Duncn. rney shoot . right across the grass with much speed. ana miss an a full calendar, the election the beauty and an the choice 0f a new president nro-tem to stuff which the old path-plod- take the place of Don McKee, ding guides have to point out. an(j the discussion of two highly In fact, they go so fast they controversial bills, will come up often miss their destination, before the Di Senate tonight in which isn't very peculiar as a meeting beginning at 7 o'clock there usually are bushes in the I jn New West. way except where the paths go. I Plunging into the problem- The grass-trodders differ from haden field of University sonsol- new-path-plodders m that the I Nation, the senators will argue former haven't any system about the question, "Resolved, that their campus scurry. the University be condemned for Of course, some people are I the new policy concerning" the both path-plodders and grass-1 admission of first and second I Controversial Bills to be Dis cussed in New West Tonight trodders. This is a hypocriti- trodders This is a hypocrit ical bunch and not good column ! ZT. at dinner. The majority of the studenlstherf desire to take? all their 'meals (Continued on page two ) HOUSE ADDRESSES FRESHMAN CLASS year women students." Another local problem calcu lated to bring eloquent senators to their feet is found in the sec- 1-"1 ii i nm ill . n - . i I UUI1 tms stun wm pain, just ond bm "Resolved, that the trod around some time. . I University should have a new P. G. H.I (Cotrtmed rt two. Speech Deals with Life's Funda mental Structure: Spiritual, Social, and Economic In the first , of a series of Monday.-talks.-before the fresh man . classl: yesterday morn in cr in Memorial Hall, Dean House stressed character intelligence, and imagination. Dean House delivers these talks each year before the in coming freshmen. " His speech' dealt with the three fundamental structures of life: first, the spiritual; second, the social; third, the economical. In discussing the importance of character, Dean House gave the definition "Character is that embodiment in you that makes you realize that man is a living spirit. ' It gives you a. basis of confidence and meaning and significance in your life." Inferiority Complex Going further, he said that this is what makes one man different from every other man. In comparing ourselves ' with others, we find ourselves lack ing, and gain, as a result, an inferiority complex, instead of living up to our own standards, we . try to compare ourselves with standards set by others. Quoting an answer by Thomas A. Edison to the question, "What is the main characteristic of life?" Dean House said "life is characterized, not by inspira tion, but by perspiration." i !
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1935, edition 1
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