Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 23, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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Hi-- TODAY FEES. IN Y. M. C. A. LOBBY XO CREATE A JOURNAL OF Tim AcrrrmEa OF CAHCZJKIAKS A CAMPUS PERSONALITY OM& A MJ1(DM AIL 7V7 - .... ir ii i i vf 1 fl c lAv 7 mm XLIV emtouaz. room Ji CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1935 roaxxus rsoxx 4JS6 NUMBER 27 "Y" Social The Y. M. C. A. social an nounced yesterday , will not be a sophomore affair but will be gi ven for the three cabinets meet- ng together. Held probably in Battle Park the social (Thursday night of next week, Hallowe'en) will give the boys a chance .; to entertain their favorites among the fairer sex. - ' HUBBARD SELECTS MONO EXE(OTVEGR01IE Jjversity Club Will Broadcast Homecoming Program lxnilit Radio Station WBT To Transmit Gala Half -Hour Feature Oirlotte Observer's Jake Wade and Art Newcombe, Carohna s jack Pool w Appear SflAFFNER IS IN CHARGE Invitation to participate fax Carolina's jolly weekend of f es pies will be spread far and . - . ! TT! ii. vide tonight, as tne university 3ub sponsors a special Home minjr Bay radio program at Station WBT, Char- lotte.- In charge of the broadcast is toTus Shaffner, who rirdeasj6d;the detailed program, of the affair to fa versity:Gubifc cal meeting lasi nig.g Jake Wade and Art Newcombe prominent sports writers for the Charlotte Observer, will be fea toe speakers on the program andwill present the dope to the iootbaUfans on Carolina's chan ces of downing the Yellow Jack et! Alumni An invitation to alumni to vi st Chapel Hill for the Home cming game will be given by President Jack Pool. Dr. Roy McKnight, president of the Mecklenburg Alumni As sociation, will propound the jlinmi's attitude toward Home cming in response to Carolina's M Pool. Dr. McKnight's well cpnized alumni association is , rig, in sponsoring the pro- The Charlotte high school 1 land will furnish the music, ren dering the most popular of the University's battle songs. Profes sor L. R. Sides, former princi pal of the Chapel Hill high school, is director of the band. (Continued on page two) LAUNDRPRIG -v- . t i- . TO BE REDUCED FOR FIVE VWm dio Will star ED eeadle Tw Essiaes Next Quarter will Find Carolina Rates, as Low as Most -: Schools in State : Cheers for the Tar Heels will spread far, and wide Friday night over the etherial waves of WISH OF ADVISORY, GROUP radio, station WPTF in Raleigh - " ". P: r! as; students gather at Emerson The administration accepted field for a pre-Georgia Tech- yesterday the Student Advisory caroiina game pep raUy. viiiiuifcwcc a rtxumuieuuauuu ; .. The program which will be that laundry prices .'on five &tr sponsored by the University tides of clothing here be ri- club has been tentatively drawn duced, and the University lauri- Up to open with a torch light pa- to keei) Raising Student Government And P. U. Board Fees Involved CO-OP CLOTHIERS ADD NEW SERVICE Four-Page Pamphlet of Activi ties and Styles will be Distri buted to Students Weekly Students will now find it easy dry will put the new rates into w in w nf th ,T W1C th. f5r.t nf Tt nr: S Tor ana events wnicn are occurring , pS . o on the campus. The Student The action of the administrar lowing the band to the field. Co-operative Clothing Stofe has xion yesteraay wm maKe caro- At exactlv 8:30 the radio sta- inififlf o ;in?nnft ni,r, i -- - ",i 1 ' 7, w ----- - . ....w.. M w.cmuw JUU nilblVJ una, iiwimry'pr.as;,iow;. or tion wiu cut in for the broad- both news antl ciirrpnt sfvlQ in ATlTfl ' Thou- fAWAtiMmnhAiirpl I - , - ' - . - y .uwuv"" cast wnicn win - Begin wixn : a men's dothincr ran he mwn tn Ten Men m Composc PoweTfiilP: souna." every person on the Carolina Committee Set Ul the mad campus. ory vommiitees survey. cmidanee of Lester Ostrow. cj xv. -i. . ' i . i jvcx.v iuuiiuav Liia smn: wii The student advisers' recom- Dr. Archibald Henderson, ma- Dut out a ,mall foilr.nairA. naTn. mendations were passed by the thematician-rooter-cheerer, will ljpf etitled "Trends in Drw " President University administration J only defy all laws of average' when in which the com- uvc uajra axicr iuc weft; buy" ne gives ms views on oa-turuay a piete program of University ac- mitrea oy tne commiuee re- outcome. UiVifino v, n j r - is.- v j lii. m m m . . ir-: .iiiiiiiih' w rv . The radio hook-up as weltas thtwo inside pages is the sche- Polls in T" Lohhv ; ' To Remain Available From 9 till 5 Oclock Increases of 10 and 90 Cents on (Government and Publication Levies Under Consideration by Ralph Gardner RAND NAMED CHAIRMAN Monogram Club unarne nuooaro: yesteraay an nounced the personnel of ' the executive committee of the orga nization, which committee has been imbued with many import ant functions since its forma tion as an active group last year by Ralph Gardner. The members are : Hubert Rand, chairman, Jim McCach- ren, Ernie Eustler, Tom Evins, Harry Montgomery, J. D. Drake, Melvin Nelson, Buck McCarn, Edward DeGray, and Hubbard. The first meeting of the group will take place in the Grail room next Monday night at 10 o'clock. First Duty cord breaking time. :, . , 'i Schools Studied 1 Included among the education al institutions studied . in : the ... j y comparison of laundry i rates were Duke University, Wake Forest, William and Mary,- and other colleges in Virginia. The committee's recommenda tion- submitted to the adminis tration by Frank Willingham, Bob Magill, Francis Fairley, and Don McKee reads as follows : the pep rally will "Hark the Sound" close with at 9 oclock. SOPHOMORES SET DATE FOR DANCE . V''. . '-I- ; ' Entire Class" Meets Tomorrow Night to Choose Figure; Les Brown's Band will Play ONE BALLOT MAY BE CAST In a short but productive The Student Advisory Com- meeting, sophomore dass body gtyle conscious dule, with the middle space oc cupied by a picture of something in current styles. Double Breasted For instance, this week the store is emphasizing what it thinks is the current . style in suits, the double-breasted. These pictures, however, have nothing to do with, the co-op's merchan- aise; tney are oemg snown m an endeavor to make the entire mittee has met with Mr. Ben- xontbme& on last page) lSISUCU VI1C XCJLU1X1UCX W tuiliunv- tee members that they will be acting members of the; dance committee at the J Grail dance Friday night and will be respon sible for floor conduct. ' (Continued on last page) RECITAL TONIGHT Associate Music Professor, New comer to University, will Gie Public Performance tives last nisrht set Friday, No vember 8, as the date for the an nual Soph hop. r - - appropriation fofthe affair. The drent . types of branded ap- ; Only one of the pages is de voted to advertising the store's merchandise. This consists of CAMPUS KEYBOARD Dr. Benjamin F. Swalin, as sociate professor of music, will be presented in violin recital to- I night at 8:30, in Hill music hall. Dr. Swalin, who has recently I been appointed to this post, is i a former member of the Minnea- smooth:f untioning A dance ; com mittee under the direction of Billy Seawell left only the bur den of decision with the execu tives. , . Les Brown and his Duke Blue Devils will play- for the dance, Seawell announced. The hop will be formal. 103 Bingham Tomorrow The executives voted to hold a meeting of the entire sopho more class tomorrow night at Six " "-v " m Jjuring tne tnree weeKs in which the plan has been opera ting, it has worked well. The pamphlets are being delivered to dormitories and fraternities. From 9 o'clock this morning until 5 p. m. todav. stu dents will cast their votes into ballot boxes located in the Y. M. C. A., marked either for or against the following questions: " Shall student government fees be increased 10 cents to the to tal of 30 cents per year? Shall the publications fees be increased 90 cents to the total of $6.90 per year? The first-named , proposal was made bythe student council af ter console: T" on of tjjf annual deficit and, t:9 incre3&4 expen sesqf student government. The second proposal was made by the Publications Union - Board and the publications' editors follow- ing a second year of considerable . loss to the Carolina Publica tions Union, the student body. The balloting today will be under the supervision of student government officials. Each stu dent may cast only one ballot. Compilations of faVts concern ing the two proposals are to be found elsewhere in this issue. " Today's balloting will be the first official plebescite since the inauguration of the new regime under Student Body President Pool. Several Daily Tar Heel straw votes were taken last spring to test campus opinion on various pertinent matters. A columnist in one of the Wash- sort of investigation. On the swu, u, j newspapers umer xianu, ycLiiaya xuaij iati sade merry with Maryland's did exactly what North Carolina gibilitycasesandhadacrood did: took the word of the players i a..- nnatra nnlrfs 7 nVWV in 103 "Rinaham. - - w - - J14S) ijj XiiJ"VlJF v& w, Mv.M. w w.wk O laugh at the expense of Mary- that they were eligible and un- acadmic degrees from Colum- representatives of the class will officials. He said that it attached by the stigma of pro- . . . via TTnivprsitifts. and ha chosen to narticinate in the certainly was too bad that Mary- fessionalism or rule-breaking. . , 11Tiripr famous dance ficrure with members of w I I lLi L. LlLllVUi WAV I -P artists both in Europe and Ame- the dance committee and class He has had wide.experi- officers. ?- h?4. tfirt ,It ..wH: ' ' ence; ini symphonic s conducting. The dance willibe held in the ahdf performance, owaim vjaa. owpwwuaiiufcvu- coiries to the tUniversity c from operatewithvthet Grail, which is n-Dt TTriiTrrsitv:rGreencas- snonsof inff "a dance in the Can eiice rules haw haw haw. ably be traced to an attitude in f1 TTlfq wnpre he was professor the following, night. A large x V CI V tSLJUi Llllkl I WC wmtnwv m nnH TVI1101J1I In Hi 1 TV HUH I fiH V 1 1 1 VT IS LllUZy CUCLUCUt XXVMAO . , , , . I Ui. VlUilii ouu uiuov. v i o oi tne aance win ve irom :uu p. m. till 1:00 a. m. . nad to know so much about But the fact remains that Mary- z iNrth Carolina guard and land did not "know the situation ?so - littler about iti own oil its- own ' fiauad' when at ithe Pers that a : boomerangs niii sairie time-it brought upr an jai "gation.found two ofi their Jversarys5 Record;' " ffiea breaking Southern Confer- No this 'fact 'can very prob-J a very lorthe columnist to do and apparently is universal that 4 ovmnbonv or Soma i... . ... im conuuuujt w ms cracks were pretty everytnmg is nunKy-aory unui chestra. r-v,.wo. ijut there is a ser- someDody proves tnrougn ine element to the situation disagreeable procedure of pro JJ the columnist's raucous testing that things aren't what -j jyKe. rrhat is that unless they; seem. The . students in Jlem Confprpnro onVinnla I Sniifhpm Ponfprpnc.A schools saner view of their ath- have to see swell young men The complete program for to night's recital is as follows: "So- nata f or Pianoforte ana vioun, D Minor, Op. 108"Brahms ; "Chaconne" (for violin alone; Bull's Head Lecture The " Bull's :' Head discussion group which met yesterday aft ernoon at 4:30 in the extension -Bach; "Minuef'-Porpora-Kre- division 0n the ground floor of isler; "Nocturne in D ajor"-- the library was led m a disctis- Chopin-Wilhelmr, JViinstreis sioiron "Publishing Plans in the Facts For Your Ballot re same sort of disagree- like John Shiscak suffer all be- stuation is going to come cause records seem to prove that v , M - w , W . 0in2 to have a long as the higher goal oi get- on. ati"g out smirks ting an education is the .ulti land?aS significant that Mary-' irJT lt UP" itself to "not ,f n the alleged ineligibi ' or one of North CaroHna,s ayers while on its own e f were two men who i quite v;ell-known na vini, s!.conf?renculigs. lCr"ce'rin fact -jwiiu, iiKe manv nfv, wuiem n mate aim. ' ; . All we have to say is this : either take the bars away com pletely or secure them tightly. Southern Conference schools must follow Dr. Graham in his cofinft"-Chavez: Ind- lsieri oww""- - ian Lamenf-DvoraK-ivreisier ; Scherzo Tarentelle"-wieniaw- ski. klLS oWn players before any The public is cordially invited. LIBRARY VISITORS University Press. " The idea, explained Mr. Couch, is to cover the south with books. The problem of books paying for themselves was discussed and. the speaker, declared that about five of the 24 books printed by a trroun of more than 215 boys the University Press this fall u u" iirvw ; :LiV;i onmores from the would do this. After a brief lec- stana ;or xne muer n h School, made a ture by Mr, Couch, members ex- sane view precluding other un- Goldsboro nign dc v books fortunate occurrences is to be JeA by truck written by such political leaders taken. Or else Dr. Graham and afternoon. They ar rf J Hamilton uner u umue . 0 inspect and study and others were not extensively by the agitetion to abandon the visit was to inspe rules and make a good job of the collection oi i: m,' with subsidization, etc. No more deals like Sniscak'sV please. P. G. H. the foyer of the University li- brary. an informal tea. Below is a brief compilation of facts concerning the two is sues to be voted upon today by the student body in the Y .M. C. A. lobby: , ' ' ' ' , . 1. Issue: That student government fees be increased 10 cents to 30 cents per year. How proposed: By the student council. . ri-ui vr Why, proposed : For rithe past two years student gov ernment has ended up with a deficit. Student government began this year with a $102 balance,-in the red. -Numerous items, including. national; federation dues,.jstudent programs, Conven tion charges, flowers to the sick or the family of deceased, printing costs, etc., completely consume the annual budget of slightly under $500. It must also be noted that the student government did not get out a letter to freshmen this year and have not been able to compile a student government handbook because of lack Af -funda TT'iirttiormnri) nrMitinnnl functions this Vear. SUch &S J Swain hall investigations and work in the ineligibility case, have added other items of cost which are unusual in the gen eral run of student government business. 2. Issue: That publications fees be raised from $6.60 per year for all four publications to $6.90, adding 30 cents per quar ter. How proposed: By the Publications Union Board (ma jority members from the student body) following consultation with editors and faculty adviser. Why proposed: For the years 1933-34 and 1934-35, losses of $1,793.00 and $2,492.00 respectively, or a total of $4, 285.00 were incurred. Estimated costs for 1935-36, because of permanency of high printing and engraving charges, to be the same or higher, with income at approximately the same figure. Decrease in costs by paring publications budgets would lower publications standards or reduce number of publications. Exist ing publications budgets are compartively low but to maintain them the Carolina Publications Union must again sustain a con siderable loss. Real issue involved: Increase fees by 30 cents per quarter or decrease publications in size, number or stand ards. ' J ! J i !4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1935, edition 1
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