Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 5, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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L: vr T0 CREATE A CAMPUS A JOURNAL OF THE ACTIVITIES OF CAEOLDOAXS personality VOLUME XLIV EDITORIAL, PHOKX 4JJf CHAPEL HILL, N C.; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1935 ZC&XE33 7B0SX 411 NUMBER 12 MM Inter-Dormitory Council Acts To Improve Social Conditions - Council May Suggest One Dollar Social Fee Dormitory Residents Would Have to Approve Extra As sessment in Referendum HEW QUIET REGULATION Definite steps to enlarge the possibilities for dormitory soc ial life were taken Thursday night by an animated Inter dormitory Council, led by ener getic, gum-chewing Albert Ellis, supervisor of campus rooming establishments. Plans for assessing each dor . mitory ' resident a fee of one dollar for the social activities of his dormitory were discussed. For such a fee to go into ef fect, Supervisor Ellis announced that residents of each - dormi tory would have to approve the assessment in a general referen- dum. The council decided that the voting should be by a stand ard petition November 4 and 5. 0. E. By Administration Consent has already been ob tained from the administration for this one dollar dormitory assessment. The fee will be collected in the business office along with room rent, and each dormitory council will admin ister the funds for its dormi tory. Supervisor Ellis has been fight ing for such a general dormi- ' tory activity fee for the past three -years. The dues will go toward installing social rooms in the dormitories and sponsor ing dances, smokers,' and other social gatherings. Reporting that the Univer sity dance committee, which reg ulates and supervises dances, Tiad consented to accept into its membership a representative of the Inter-Dormitory Council, Continued on last page) Lightning never strikes twice but it did. Last night Miles T. Winslow's name was drawn for the second ime in three months from the ptjvr a "rt v Carolina meatre's lucky box, and for the second time in-three What? Again! DONALD WINTER, MISSING 10 DAYS, LOCATED IN OfflO Carolina Junior Found by Dur ham Police, Acting on Tip From Tar Heel Reporters VISITED GIRL HELD VEEK LOS DOG'S LIFE PHASE Seriously, Interfraternity Coun cil, Prodded by S. P. C. A Bans Cruelty: to Animals -Hell Week, that noble frater nity institution, staggered weakly from its dark corner, Donald Warmen Winter, jun- months he was absent. Costly ior who mysteriously left the absences they were ; Winslow is campus September 24 and has out: $90 as the result of them, not been heard from since, was . - . - - Winslow misfortune last I learned yesterday to be at Co- night will probably be some-llumbus, Ohio. Doay else s good fortune next J Durham police were told by Friday, for the pot will auto- Daily Tar Heel men of a tele- matically be raised to $65. Roving Astronomer ShowsSolar Models gram Ben Husbands, associate registrar, Had received last Wednesday saying Winter was in Ohio. They immediately tele phoned Winter's family in Sum- was vercneg. up unm.y ester- Astronomers v and curiositv aay aiiernoon Plice naa Deen seekers will find a treat in store working on a clue that Winter for. themselves on the lot ad- went to. Florida.; . . . . . - - . .1 rm l i r ji? '" ' 'l "- i joining tne Texaco filling sta- Ane stuuent s disappearance tion at the corner of Franklin I has been shrouded m consider- and Columbia Streets. able mystery. He was a trans- In his car, a Lincoln of an- fer from Davidson, and appar- cient vintage. David Phil- ently not well-known on this lips has built a unique astronor campus. mical display. There are exact First News models of the solar universe and First news of his disappear of the earth with its satellite the ance reached University officials moon. Ion September 27. . Associate It is difficult to decide which Registrar Ben Husbands re has more attractionthe display ceived a teleam from Winter's or the owner. Mr. Phillips, a m01;ner asiung u ionaia were bearded old man nrobablv registered, . wnac nhhnf at i a maiVo nf was, and indicating that she had Florida. . For more than . ten years he has been on the road Chapel Hill for with his "traveling school of aestmauon. astronomy' rSoft'spbke"n and " Husbands replied in part I "Most authentic information I 1 f inoorl or ioroTitr TMrnn JDrOCUraDie mQlCateS He has devoted his was- leaving an unknown P. V. Board Asks Student Vote On Additional Fee To Cover Increased Cost Luck to You! On the eve of their departure last night for the Tennessee in- 190 Cents More Per Student Needed to Save Credit Rating thrust its glass jaw directly vasion' Carolina's fighting foot- student Council to Meet, Prob- infrt r,oK nf rmiW oau wre uuce again I .. 1 . 1 . . J 11. 1 . 1 T X havmaker at the meeting of the mmaea 01 eir sironS suiaeni Interfraternity Council Thurs- body a3 a cheering day afternoon and sprawled on F" wmcn mciuaea nis jx the canvas for the count. . ceUency President Frank, gath- What obviously wreaked s0 ered about their waiting busses. much havoc with this period of Alie ieam coacnea anQ ine childish nranks and what-not nan(Uul 01 rooters wno are was a unanimous resolution by followin2 the warriors to battle lications fee of 90 cents Ber stu. 11.1 J J ? A X T I the fraternity peers that here- ooaraea a special iram at xur- dent per year was tendered yes after no animals be used or col- ham and were expected to reach terday by the Publications Un lected during that time by the Knoxville early this morning. ion Board through the student enterprising neophytes. The res- vsaow, neaa cneer leaaer, council re-1 ably Early Next Week, to Call Student Vote on Issue TWO YEAR LOSS OF $4285 A recommendatory letter to the student body, asking for a campus vote on the issue to grant an additional student pub- olution came-as the result of a '3 - . complaint from a representative of the Society for the Preven tion of Cruelty to Animals that a targe number of domestic pets i travelled with the managers by car. , The letter, engendered by a joint meeting of the board and GEOLOGISTS GIVEN f . 3 01 tne Iour camPus NEW ACCESSORIES D"f"0.rl. J 'Z ji'ictvxici xcxguauii, secretary vx. Donald were usually enticed away from Departments Gets Oscillograph, the board, pointed out that the their cozy firesides during Hell cAVArai naivannmMr total losses for the combined Week and somewhat maltreated. . Duplications for. 1933-34 and The council decided that it was The department of geology 1934-35 were $4285.00, which pretty tough on the freshmen is the recipient of an oscillo- caused a heavy drain upon the without dragging the animals graph and several galvanomet- board's reserves. The losses into it and decreed that the lat- ers as a gift from the Geophysi- came as a result primarily of ter henceforth be excluded from cal Research Corporation. These a 10 per cent increase in print the fun. instruments are the more ex- in? and publishing costs. It was announced that all in- pensive accessories to be used Student Council to Act vitations to freshmen to join with a seismograph which is to student council will meet fraternities could be turned in to be constructed here at the Uni- to a student vote on the Frank Willingham at the S. A. versity. - sue. Jack Pool, student body E. house, L. C. Bruce at the The seismograph, which is president, could not be located Phi Gam house or Miss Mabel used to record minute earth tre- yesterday but a meeting of the Mallett at Dean Bradshaw's of- mors or waves, is a very sensi- council under his leadership is fice as late as 9:30 this morn- tive apparatus requiring a deli- probable early next week, at ing.; A previous statement h&d cately nunted heavy pendulum which time the ' date for the announced that they were due that reinams stationary as the campus vote wilf be set. m Dy mianignt last nignt. earth moves beneath it. To the The board's letter is auoted IT I.- "- - il.--'- XJ I . . ...... I memocrs ox wie executive nendulum is attachGd a loner -ph i iv:n ,' -p i : -. im xuii ciocmiicic xii cma ioouc ui were (Continued n last page) CAMPUS KEYBOARD I t was a lovely afternoon in the Grail room Thursday when all the editors and business man agers and : Publications Union Board members huddled around the ancient (1934) oak table and considered the .proTblemrf iths publication deficit .pf-$2,500. last year. - What; resulted; -was $ ones of . the . keenest 7 bits' of student analysis on any student question in many a moon. What the folks had before them was this: rising costs maae a similar aehcit look in evitable for every year to come. Obviously, this simply could not be. To cut the publication bud gets would be to wreck the work of many an editor in building up his particular publication to something generally accepted to be much better than average in the college publication field. If costs were to remain high and if budget cuts would result in inferior publications, then the oniy alternative would be to raise student fees. Now for six dollars a vear the Carolina student is getting what costs most collegians throughout the'nation in the neighborhood of J if teen greenbacks of the same denomination. In most schools such fees are not com pulsory as they are at Carolina, but there aren't many schools m tne country which won't whole-heartedly -acknowledge that the Tar Heel publications set-up is about the most work able and efficient and beneficial 1 . . m I 4 i i rftw4 uf i nmnnn j irm n m . tith- i :i.j - i i i i i t . i me to I wciiu xwviimuim, , , r committee were requesw;u iu sienaer roa wnicn supports tne thP Datt.v Taw TTttvt. anH o7f- educating the public in the sumaoiy legal Dusmess. was help out while the fraternity pen that records the earth's tre- explanatory. Particularly emnha- mysteries of astronomy, the expected back nere inursaay bids were being distributed at mors. sis was placed during the board only money he earns being the or Friday of tnis week. . . Memorial hall Monday after- In years past the seismograph session on the fact that printing few nickels and dimes which hel Parents See Police noon. has been chiefly used to record coata will remain, at their hii?h Winter's parents then came to Pledges for the fraternity I earthquake shocks, but at pres- levels and that any attempt to North Carolina seeking their presidents to sign in order to ent it is being used to work out 1 balance the union's budget would son. They reported to the po- permit co-eds to visit f rater- certain types of earth struc- result in cutting the budgets of lice in Durham but failed to nity houses were distributed to tures, especially salt dome struc- the various publications. Such . (Continued on last page) the various members and should tures with which petroleum and nTi ni wnt nnt pnnMprpd natural gas are frequently as-lise and, in some cases, not hands by Monday., . sociated. considered txissible. Further- Several cases concerning the I These instruments will be used more the duality of the publi- accosting of freshmen by frater- in the courses of geophysics cations would suffer proportion nity men outside of Chapel Hill given to the advanced geology ately to the decreased allotment BRTTTANICA BUYS RIGHTS ON PLAYS sort of system yet devised for college work. r ? Well, one editor at Thursday's session held up the entire works. Being editor of the daily paper he maintained what he thought Encyclopedia Purchases Two- was wiei.uu;uwuwi.vicwriuiii,i i Year Riflrhts oninree ungi- ind vigorqusly, opposed any in- I nallPlaymaker Produaions; drease in student f ees.' thereby I :.. . " work' of the Carolina (Continued on tt pHf) i students: HOLD Cdrrection I In Berman's ad on Thursday, serve -of the Carolina Publica October; 3rd,r Crosley Square tions Union might , result in the Shoes should have been Crosby jeopardy of the excellent credit Square Shoes. (Continued en Lut ur1 UNION nnm rtri hnTTTniT aymSdown:ometh?n? rf a ty-P The,-ork of tn? MllJUfii iVUKJNKI mie:: cae vempnasizea tnaur itijriayniAero Biwwa - wasn't the students' fault that after their graduation, and their pTOceedsfTOm Progressive Tour costs had risen or, that another plays nave won new iame . nament wiU Go to Person separate publication has been through the fcncyciopeaia-rii- Building Fund added to increase board expen- Unica's purcnasmg two-yeir ses. If the $6.00 fee had al- rights on three plays written m For the benefit of the Person lowed the board to pile up a the university piaywnwng jguildmg Fund there wiu be a large surplus in six years, why courses. 4 , progressive bridge tournament couldn't it stand a. loss for a The Brittanica gives high Thursday night at 8 o'clock m To the student body, couple of years until a parity of schools and junior colleges ; the the Graham Memorial banquet University of North Carolina: expenses and income could be chance to put on these plays free room. At October 3rd's regular worked out? - lof royalty charges in order to The tournament will open to meeting of the Publications Un- After two hours the insurgent make money to buy the encyclo- students and townspeople alike ion Board, a motion was made, pedia. ' : and two substantial sweepstakes J seconded and passed that the Playwrights will be awarded the high scorers, board ask the Carolina Publica- Ella Mae Daniel wrote two There will not . oe duplicate tions union (tne student oody; of the plays purchased by the bridge. I to vote an additional publications Brittanica "Hunger," a tragedy Cold Feet 1 fee of 90 cents per year, and that of North Carolina farm life, The artists who now occupy this fee be collected by the ad first produced November 1, 1934, old Person hall feel that their Idition of 30 cents per quarter to and "Yours and Mine, a modem inspiration may not hold up aur-ithe present $z.uu tee per quar- comedy of -domestic life, given mg the winter m a heatless,Jter. For this year, 45 cents per February 5 1935. Alice Trus- floorless studio and they are quarter would be added to the low's "Pensioner," is the third making efforts to raise funds to! fee for the winter and spring continue work on the building. I quarters since the fall quarter Incidentally the appearance of I fees have already been collected. per publication. . :; i - I Losses Endanger Credits "? " ??Als6 f stressed 'was the" fact that- a -further drain on - the re- Board's Letter To Students element in him died as he be came heliotropic and saw the light. The (permanency of the high printing and , publication costs, the campus demand for all four publications, and the ridiculously low figure at which publications are now given to the students combined to change his rambunctious mind. So the student body will vote. The ballot boxes will be dragged out. Spring lever will come back. But this is different from a regular campus election; this time students will have to think. Let's hope they do and that the results will be favorable to the publications and the voting stu dents alike. P. G; EL drama. The former Playmakers who have been working in dramatics this summer are Shepard Strud- wick, Louise McGuire, Bill Clif ford, Elizabeth ; Farrar, Bill Wang, Ella Mae Daniel, Eugenia Rawls, and George Pierson. the campus would be improved The board feels that it is jus if the scaffolding around the tified in passing this motion. For walls of the building were re- the years 1933-34 and 1934-35, moved. The project is being losses of $1793.00 and $2492.00 sponsored by Graham Memorial respectively or a total of $4285. and directed -by Harold Stead- 00 were incurred, which repre- " ' . mm man. Isents a very neavy drain upon the surplus. There is every rea son to believe that we are con fronted with a more or less per manent situation for the next few years. The board, feels that each year's revenue should be suffici ent to meet the actual cost, and that the present surplus should be maintained in order to con tinue its high credit rating, which permits it to receive best contract . prices possible. The board also feels strongly that it is undesirable to reduce the pres ent high standards of quality in any of the publications. In regard to the above, we are asking the student council to call a vote upon the issue. Very truly yours, The Carolina Publications Union Board By Fletcher W. Ferguson, Secretary. LO i jr re rd ib- its. oh
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 5, 1935, edition 1
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