Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 27, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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Patif "TO CREATE A CAMPUS PERSONALITY" A JOURNAL OF TUB ACTIVITIES OP CAROLINIANS VOLUME XLIV EDITORIAL THOSZ 4IS I CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1935 SCXDIESS PHOMt NUMBER 57 If are oard Seeks Betteraneet Off EatiBg Goedittioinis We FINAL PEP RALLY OF YEAR TO HEAR F00TBAI1 COACH Cheer Session wiU Get Underway Tonight at 8 O'clock In . Memorial Hall WOODHOUSE WILL SPEAK Poach Carl Snavely, whose fighting Tar Heels taKe on Vir ginia tomorrow, will appear be fore the student body for the only time this year at tonight's pep rally in Memorial hall at 8 o'clock. Government Professor-Politi cian E. J. Woodhouse and Stu dent Body President Jack Pool are also scheduled to address the meeting. r . Swan Song,". ? DANCE LEADERS $ 'J r $ ' Va '" ft .vv.v.v.v.:.:o:o:o:o:xo::-ivw.vrv::'.. '?'" 'I t -4 r l2 'J tteJf ass V ,s k s - ' s , I -s '' - V ' X- ss 'V s High Costs And Poor Diet emand Urgent Attention COLLEGES UPHOLD Charge Town Cafes U. S. COMPETITION Exploiting Student IN OLYMPIC GAMES Self-Help Workers Eleven CoHege Newspapers Op- Snavely Declares Team is Under- posed to Non-Participation The three attractive vpung women pictured above will grace the campus when they arrive here to lead the figure in the Fall German Saturday night, )l From left to right, they are Miss Betty Fugitt of Atlanta, wlio will be escorted by Harry Mont The nine seniors on the squad gomery leader; Miss Sarah Stevms of Winston-Salem with Joe -Fletcher, first assistant; and Miss Lydia Stewart of Charlotte with Albert Neal, second assistant. The dance will be the final one in the set of five, which begins tomorrow night. DI SENATE VOTES AGAINST PLAYING OF EXTRA GAMES who are wearing Carolina uni forms for the last time tomor row, will be on hand and several prominent camous :.''. lrs will j. speak. At 8 o'clock, a quarter of an hour after Old South bell rings . out its summons, the rally will get under way. Cheer Leader 1ps fist.rnOT and his sauad will lead the meeting in the cheers rouP pn01?f ranaf s rian Willi jdii Oiuv;uia d umvcionj i rfT-r t - mi. fi J 9t uduujm6 uwft iui,--. mree scneauiea Dills were Last Game set aside last nizht as Di Sena "Tomorrow's game is not on- L. s de ted their evening to the ly the last on our scneauie, . saia resolution : That President Gra . m tm -n . I . . Ostrow, "but it s aiso one oi our ham be condemned f or 'usincr his traditional games. It's .up to us influence to -prevent athletic to Show the team that we're fp.aTYia nf tho TTniversitv from backing it and the way we can scheduling post-season games. A close vote defeated the measure. Senator Stein, leader of the victorious opposition, asserted hat the discouragement of post season games is necessary to keep the University's athletics on an intercollegiate rather than a professional basis. He urged hat if Carolina wishes to have 'Rose Bowl teams" it should close its halls of learning and concentrate on hiring profes sionals to play the Green Bay Packers and the New York Giants." J - Senators Hastie and Watts up held the merits of the bill. Has tie pointed out the helpful publi city given a school by its foot ball team is undeniable. He ar gued that Carolina's athletic prominence has aided in spread ing its scholastic prominence. '. Announcement was made that the nine Di freshmen who will try out for the debate against the Phi assembly freshmen will be heard next Tuesday follow ing the society's regular meet ing. Gretchen Gores and Ernest Byfield were voted in as mem bers of the Senate by last night's small gathering. FalllGer mans To Begin Tomorrow Night do that is by turning out tonight and yelling for all we're worth. Coach Snavelv has addressed the students only once before in the two years that he has been at Carolina. He appeared at the pep rally before the Wake For est game last season. PROFESSOR TALKS AT CO-MEETING Woodhouse, Student Leaders Ad dress Woman's Associa tion Meeting : Representatives from ; the . Di and Phi societies, the Foreign Policy League and the govern ment department extended invi tations to the members of the Woman's Association to take an active interest in their respec tive organizations as they talked to the women at their regular meeting yesterday afternoon in Graham Memorial. Jules M. Verner and Francis Fairley explained the work of the Di and Phi societies, and Fairley requested the women to take an active interest in the Foreign Policy League and its extra activities. Jane Ross, president of the "Woman's Association, presided at the meeting, and introduced the principal speaker of the afternoon, Professor E. J Woodhouse, of the government department. Terming himself as the fourth of the campus activities to be exploited, Mr. Woodhouse showed the women the use of becoming familiar with phases of government in whatever line of work they followed. "I have a vigorous antagonism to tying women down to the kitchen, however much respect may hold for those who do make Continued on page two) . JELLY LEFTWICH WILL OPEN DANCE Tommy Dorsey and Orchestra to Carry on for Remaining Four Dances in Set The first big set of dances dur ing the current school year will get started tomorrow night when tne iTprrman I mh nnpns its an- nuarfall-frolic-ih'the Tin Cant' am deemed it wiser with an informal, open script af fair for students and their guests on the campus from 9 till 1 o'clock. Jelly Leftwich and his band, featuring Miss Kay Keev- er as vocalist, will entertain the dance crowd. The set will continue with the first tea dance Friday afternoon when Tommy Dorsey and his noted CBS orchestra arrive to take charge of the festivities. . Princeton Ball Dorsey and his band played at the "Prince"-Tfeer Ball at Princeton, one of the more pro minent social affairs in eastern collegiate circles, last Friday night when Princeton students entertained , guests from Dart mouth prior to their football clash last Saturday. Dorsey and his unit made a tremendous hit : (Continued on page three) PHI GROUP MOVES TO DELAY DEBATE WITH DI SENATORS Assembly Makes Short Work of Bills Presented Last Night ' The college press has turned against the campaign of the Committee on Fair Play in Sports, if the recent poll of the Cornell Daily Sun of Cornell University is indicative. fed, Losing Wreight Because of Poor Food SESSION GETS VERY WARM Vigorous objections to eating conditions in Chapel Hill, voiced in determined and positive lang- Tl a era Tvtr Q (Truru cf T'qitto and ofn Eleven of the larger college Aet mart newspapers .including the Daily meting of the Student Welfare uau again5l Boafd Iasfc nj ht r Ki r - . ifA' . J l 1 American participation in the Olympics because of Nazi dis crimination. The committee, headed by Uni versity Alumnus George Gordon Battle and' including such fa mous personalities as Dr. Frank Following a presentation of statistics concerning costs of board to freshmen by Dean Francis F. Bradshaw, the meet ing turned into an animated dis cussion, in which more than finances were involved. Coach Pnrl CI avolv Ho. Graham and Norman Thomas. Li -ivxctxcu uuti xiis luuiuitu piayers were undernourfshed and - that nas carried on a vigorous cam paign against American partici pation in Berlin next summer. The editors of the college papers at Columbia, N. Y. U., C. C. N. Y., Colgate and Dartmouth The Phi assembly last night moved to postpone the annual Di- Phi freshman debate, origi nally scheduled for December 3, until December 10. it's not money we need, but some good food, and there's not a place in Chapel Hill where' my. players can get it." He went on took up the cry for the college kis experience as ft foQim coach, his Dlavers were losincr For a while only four news- weight. papers, tne Cornell Daily Sun, "Thev usnallv o-n in nn fh he Daily Princetonian, the Stan- average of 20 nounds rar . to allow the University debating team to use the Phi hall on the original date If or their return contest with Wake Forest. The subject of the inter-society debate will remain the same, basing the discussion around the practice of euthanasia, or so-call ed "mercy killing." r The Phi squad will attempt in its argument to show that the adoption of such a practice by the state would be unjustified. The assembly made short work of the two bill discussion scheduled for debate at last night's meeting. It resolved without discussion to go on re cord as favoring: an organized cheering section at athletic con tests here. The bill favoring government ownership of munitions was ta bled immediately. brd Daily, and the DAILY TAR Heel stood against the non-par- icipationmoye,; but jas. the re cent poll shows, other collegiate son," he declared. Diet and Scholarship Furtherdenunciation of-local- menus were carried on bv Prof. i . organs are lining up m tne same William S. Bernard; who saw a manner. A a fin H a ri'vr'T-al o -f J --i lMtlnmnn Als4- OIL PAINTTNOS fiO al!d lchla3?c Ed- ON EXHIBIT TODAY tary, Dr. Ed Hedgpeth, Dr. Wal- Art rftlWti n gi, ; LCi " eyiuii, v,oacn isoD rei- W--WAVA TI1U 9J UAIV If il All Hill Music HaU CAMPUS KEYBOARD Last Issue With this issue of the Daily Tar Heel, publication 1 of the student newspaper will cease while members of the student body wend their ways home to do a little turkey carving dur ing the four-day Thanksgiv ing holiday period. V The next issue of the. Daily Tar Heel will appear Tuesday morning, December 3. All members of the staff must re port for work Monday afternoon. TOMORROW'S Thanksgiving Day game with Virginia is steeped with tradition and is us ually one of the best games of the year from the standpoint of everybody's having a darned good time. Carolina teams in recent years have had little trouble from the Cavaliers, but the spirit behind this historic meeting has not di minished in the least. Common friends of Carolina and Virginia have made a habit of trekking gamewards on Turkey Day for the sheer delight of getting to gether again in a congenial atmosphere. Those of us who splashed up to Charlottesville last year have forgotten most of the game which was a muddy classic, but will never forget the hospitality of the Virginians, and the friend ly spirit which pervaded Scott stadium. It is this sort of feeling which has made the Carolina- Virginia series' one of the na tion's most famous football feuds and school rivalries. Despite the fact that Virginia and Carolina are in general two very different types of institu tion, they are alike in one re spect: they hold similar posi tions in American education as the south's greatest institutions of higher learning. For this rea son, as well as the many, other ties that bind Charlottesville to Chapel Hill, it is appropriate that the Carolina-Virginia game has attained its traditional emi nence as a part of an historic se ries.; We admire Virginia's stand on athletics, although we imagine it has been pretty hard for some Virginia men to take the results of simon purism with a grin. At any rate, the campus looks for ward to tomorrow s encounter between two ' good teams and true. P. G. H. zer, and otners. ( Continued on page two ) EXAM SCHEDULE LASTS ONE WEEK A collection of oil paintings by contemporary American art ists will be on exhibition in Hill Music hall from today until Tuesday, December 17. The paintings which are loan-1 Final Examinations Due to Be- ed by the Ferargil, Kraushaar, gin Two Weeks After the Milch, Rehn, and Walker galler- Thanksgiving Holidays ies of New York Citv rover a I variety, of styles of American Instead of the usual four-day paintings with emphasis on, lo- exam Period final exams for this cal scenes. The best known of quarter Wlli extend the . last the regional painters, as paint- five days because of the re-ar- ers of local scenes are cXe. rangements ot courses made ne- whose works are shown hereJcessary Dy tfte new curriculum are Thomas Benton, John Steu- introduced at the beginning of art Curry, and Reginald Marsh. ims scno01 year. Luigi Lucioni's "Contempo- Examinations will start Mon- rary Conversation" is. according aay' -ecemoer lb, exactly two to Mrs. Corinne McNeir, one of weeks after the students return the finest pictures in the whole rom Thanksgiving holidays, and exhibit. It'portrays a desk bv wm continue xnrougn noon n- sunht window on which is a day December 20, it was an- cactus plant, a china dog, a torn nounced yesterday, from the of- newsna-ner rl iooin cr. fwo Vialf- nce 03- ne registrar. hidden pictures, and a copy Continued on page two) Durham Fire mi r j m . 0I xnenrsiexamoiiMonqay, ue- cember 16, from 9 to 12 o'clock in the morning will be held for all 11 o'clock, five- and six-hour classes and for all 11 o'clock, XI T 1 i luree-nour classes, meeting on Silver's five-and-ten cent store m purham.was completely de- TuesdaySt Th and Satur. nDr f oe- days From 2 10 5 o,clock that foreBull City firemen could get afternoon exams will be given inc names unuer control alter a? -far. oil iq four-hour fight. The Durham Men's Shop ad joining Silver's on Main street suffered considerable damage from water which streamed from fourteen hoses the entire time. V The demolished store, whicji runs the whole block from Main through to Parrish street, 'suf fered an estimated loss of $100, 000 or more. o'clock, three-hour classes meeting on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Noon Classes Exams for all 12 o'clock, five- and six-hour classes, except German 1, and for all 12 o'clock, three-hour classes meeting on Mondays; Wednesdays, and Fri days will take place Tuesday morning, December 17, from 9 to 12 o'clock. That afternoon Continued on page two)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 27, 1935, edition 1
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