I
PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1935
BULLETINS
Tea for Co-eds Chi Omegas in
vite to tea all women whose so
rorities are not represented on
Today's Religion
(Continued from page two)
ganized by the very society it
was meant to redeem! The
church has seemed to imply,
where it hs not actually pro
claimed, the benediction of its
God for those relationships be
WITH THE CHURCHES
"Y" Cabinet Group
To Plan Activities
Co-ed Hockey-Tomorrow 4-5 nd m our in-
uusinanzea society tnat coma
Co-ed Archery-Tomorrow 2 ntby fy sth f thef 7
m nation be said to be motivated
70 p. m. Tomorrow-Freshman bV1? Coni thmt
Friendship GoundL- P ,f Ur Siety cMf?
Business Staff-There will be an as bf ? an ai5 J"1 abet"
important meeting of the busi- tor. f e utlu however,
neis staff of the Tar Heel Mon- mtenbonally.
day afternoon at 2 o'clock. All ft is the slowness of the
members not present will be church to realize the imperative
dropped from the staff. necessity that she must lay
Meeting Photography staff of strong and daring hands upon
.Yacety Yack tomorrow after- this social cance, in which her
noon at 1 : 30. own members are also involved,
Varsity Basketball Practice be- that constitutes another of the
gins tomorrow, 4 o'clock, in Tin facts that have' repelled so many
Can.
"Red Salute"
of '. our contemporaries and
brought up again under the con
demnation of the carpenter of
Nazareth.
It needs only to be said to be
(Continued from first page)
vented their carrviner out these
measures. They are appealing obvious that in so calamitous a
to the student body to protest ?ay as1is ours, for Christians to
aaint tfiA WW f niVW deny themselves sugar in their
in the anti-radical tradition by t!iduringrlLen' or induce in
sf9,i9Wrf,nmflfo. lfts to chanty, or in baskets
if il - t j ci i I to the poor at Xmas time, while
tion of the "Red Salute." , '
- neglecting the weightier matter
( rropaganaa of e transformation, yes, even
The stand recently taken by tuallv the obliteration of a svs
the Daily Tar Heel has been tern that permits the dictation to
adopted Dy a number of m- thousands of our fellowmen of
dividuals, who agree that now, earnings which it is a sheer
in comparatively unexcited and mockery to call a 'living wage ;'
peaceful times, they have the op- that arrests the possibility of the
portunity of seeing an example full development of the persons
of the type of picture that may thus treated; and that permits
within the near future be used the channeling of profits to the
to propagandize war. privileged in ever increasing vo-
Smith's description of "Red lume to do this is simply to
Salute" tends to make the whole make a laushing stock of the
affair assume the tempest in-a- rfligion we Profess To Prefer
teapot appearance. He has not he s.este charit? the.die"
seen the picture, relying for his Vt. w T '
BAPTIST
9:45 a. m. Sunday School.
Class for University men
taught by Mr. E.-K Plyler. Co
ed class taught by Mrs. Binkley.
11:00 a. m. Worship and ser
mon ur. u. 1. JBiniuey.
7:00 p. m. B. Y. P. U. and stu
dent forum.
CATHOLIC
214 Graham Memorial
Mass every Sunday at 8:30 a.
m.
Rev. F. J. Morrissey, Chaplain.
EPISCOPAL
Chapel of the Cross
8 :00 a. m. Holy Communion.
11:00 a. m. Morning prayer
and sermon.
8 :00 p. m. Prayers and organ.
METHODIST
9:45 a. m. Sunday School, Mr.
E. T. Brown, Superintendent.
11:00 a. m. Worship and ser
mon, Rev. W. A. Jenkins.
7 :00 p. m., Student forum.
PRESBYTERIAN
10:00 a. m. Student Class.
Theme: Jesus and the Family.
11 :00 a. m. Worship and ser
mon, Rev. Donald H. Stewart.
Tonic: Missions A Force or A
Farce.
7:00 p. m. Student forum. To
pic: Obstacles to the Rehabilita
tion Program.
UNITED
10:00 a. m. Bible Class for
adults. Taught by Dr. Raymond
Adams.
11:00 a. m. Worship and se,
mon, Dr. W. J. McKee. Topic:
Christ versus the New National
ism.
7:15 p. m. The Youth's Fel
lowship - Topic: Students and the
Peace Movement.
tnat it snail be possible lor a
man to love his neighbor as much
as himself, is simply to humbug
oneself about religion ; to play
the fool with the facts of a
bleeding world ; and to create a
new that very caricature of reli
gion which has repelled and up
set many a life on the way to its
ness.
Football Results
information upon the advertis
ing material sent him by the pro
ducers. Their summarjf indi
cates that it is a humorous ac
count of unsuccessful radical ac
tivity on a college campus, with
love interest between the red
tinged heroine and a U. S. sol
dier generously distributed maturity.
throughout. Particularly objec- . ' ,. ., -
.. , . . .. ... , . The imperative necessity for
tionable to the liberal group is transformation of our hori-
one of the closing scenes, m zontal relationships at a cost to
which 'the collegians" break up the privileged is upon us. Let us
a radical demonstration m a not think that we can play the
pitched battle. In the end, the ostrich stunt here. There is no
heroine "realizes at last what escape. The logic of history
her American heritage means to wjn effect it if the constraint of
her and that Jeff, battered but the Man of Galilee doesn't. At
happy, is the kind of man with such a juncture as the present it
whom she can find true happi- )is luminouslv clear that a merely
vertical or individualistic gospel
will not work. Nor was it ever
meant to work alone. If a man
love not his brother whom he
hath seen, how on earth can he
love God whom he hath not seen?
To quibble before the necessity
of making articulate a social
and economic relationship that
will ensure the brotherly treat
ment of all our fellows is to play
the fool with the contemporary
task. The church has but two
choices. She can either iden
tify herself unprotestingly with
a society that crucifies its un
fortunates on crosses of nickel
and copper; or else she can take
part in the honest resentments
of life, and tread the via dolo
rosa to the deliberate crucifixion
oi an ner pagan allegiances m
which she has involved herself,
by virtue of the stakes which she
has driven into the present or
der of things.
Truly it is nara to love our
neighbor as much as we love
ourselves, but the creation of an
ethical industrial order is the
paramount need of the hour.
We cannot exnect to command
the allegiance of an already ob
servant world unless we thus ex
pressly address ourselves to this
.
Francis Fairley will Untune
Work -of Deputation Groups
The junior-senior "Y" Cab
inet will meet tomorrow night to
make important plans for forth
coming activities. Arrange
ments will be discussed for the
all campus peace demonstration
and the lectures by Dr. Reinhold
Niebuhr.
The cabinet committee will
j i
give a report on wonc accom
plished so far this term. Fran
cis Fairley, chairman of the de
putation committee, will outline
the work of his groups for the
remainder of the quarter.
Recommendations for nation
ally prominent speakers that
many students would like to have
come here to make addresses
will also be put forth at this
meeting.
Old Tar Heels
the
five
The business offce of
Daily Tar Heel will pay
cents an issue for five issues of
the paper dated September 29,
1935. Bring them to the office
tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock.
Pianist At Duke
A large and appreciative audi
ence heard Sergei Rachmaninoff,
well known pianist and compo
ser, perform in Page auditorium
at Duke University Thursday
night. .
The program consisted of the
compositions of more than nine
great composers. Rachmaninoff's
own compositions were well re
ceived by the audience.
WAGNER ORGAN RECITAL
Playing at Hill Music hall in
another "all" program of organ
music, Jan Philip Schinhan this
if ternoon varies from last week's
all-American program to an all
Wagner program. His selections
for the 5 o'clock vesper recital
are: " Prelude to Act 1 from Lo
hengrin," "Prelude to Act III
from Lohengrin," "Siegfried Pa
raphrase," "Evening Star from
Tannhauser," and "Pilgrim Cho
rus from Tannhauser." The pub
lic is cordially invited.
P. U. BOARD MEETING
meeting
of
at
Important call
Publications Union Board
10:30 this morning in 113 Bing
ham.
Infirmary
Those confined to the Infirm
ary yesterday were: B. D. Ban
non, H. H. Hodges, Casra Pol
lock, J. K. Whicker, Clara Rob
erson, J. G. Pickard, R. H. Shul
man, Miles Horton, John Eas
ter, J. W. Francis, and Nat
Townsend.
BULL'S HEAD READING
Dr. Howard R. Huse, Profes
sor of Romance languages, will
read from his book "The Illiter
acy of the Literate," in the staff
room next door to the Bull's
Head on Tuesday at 4:15 p. m.
OH, JOY!
Since Dean House is out of
town freshmen will be given a
respite tomorrow. There will be
no chapel programmer, them.
NOW FOR V. M. I.
FOR RENT Two-room apart
ment, furnished or un-f urnished.
Steam heat, 226 Pittsboro St. T.
T. Tompson.
DOG-GONE Black and grey
Scottie puppy. Sometimes an
swers to the name Mattie. News
wanted at 7406 or 7711. REWARD.
Frosh Harriers
(Continued from page three)
man crossed the line in front of
a Carolina runner. The order
of the finish was as follows :
Hendrix and Wakely (C) ;
Pierce (S) ; Willis (C) ; Russell
(C) ; C. Hubbard (C) ; Christy
and Lashley (C) ; D. Hubbard
(C) ; Burr, Williams, Long,
Young, Lovelace, Shumaker and
Baucom, of State.
Duke 19, Tennessee 6.
Notre Dame 18, Ohio St. 13.
Pittsburgh 0, Fordham 0.
Dartmouth 14, Yale 6.
Army 7, Mississippi St. 13
Tulane 14, Colgate 6.
Navy 0, Princeton 26.
Alabama 13, Kentucky 0.
Ga. Tech 13, Vanderbilt 14.
Georgia 7, Florida 0.
Maryland 14, Virginia 7.
W. & L. 0, W. Virginia 20.
S. Carolina 0, V. P. I. 20.
Carnegie Tech 0, Duquesne 7.
N. Y. U. 14, BuckneU 0.
Richmond 7, Georgetown 7.
Harvard 33, Brown 0.
Manhattan 60, C. C. N. Y. 0.
Cornell 7, Columbia 7.
Purdue 6, Minnesota 29.
Penn. 6, Michigan 16.
Temple 7, Michigan St. 12.
Rice 41, Geo, Washington 0.
So. Methodist 20, Texas 0.
Illinois 3, Northwestern 10.
California 14, U. C. L. A; 2.
Indiana 6, Iowa 6.
Marquette 20, Iowa St. 6.
Clemson 13, Mercer 7.
Furman 7, Citadel 0.
Villanova 13, Detroit 7.
Lafayette 6, Rutgers 31.
Boston U. 0, New Hamp. 0.
Your Lasll: Qaannce !
Only six more days in which to perfect your credit rat
ing. After November 10th all accounts will be turned ov
er to this Association for re-rating our files.
If your credit card bears the honor badge "OK" accomo
dations will be extended gladly.
Pay By The 10th
Chapel Hill Merchants Association
OFFICE IN McRAE BUILDING
PHONE 7031
rv ill rwi . jrr" fi tv
own
PERCOLATOR AND IRON Both for $6.95
LESS ALLOWANCES: 50c For Your Old
Iron, 50c For Your Old Percolator ....... gl.QQ
$95
Electric & Water
Division
U. C. S. Plants
On Terms
$5.95
regeneration of our modern so
ciety. ,
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