Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 11, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
7 TO CBEATE A CAMPUS PERSONALITY' A JOURNAL OP THE ACTIVITIES OF CAROLINIANS MM T vr VOLUME XLJV Esrro&UL reoxi 4111 CHAPEL HILL, N. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1935 K73XXZ33 reou 4is NUMBER 65 MONOGRAM CLUB RESOLVES TO END WUEIUMORS' Adopt Resolution Planned to Eli minate Unsanctioned State . ments Concerning Athletics GRAIL THANKED FOR GIFT The Monogram Club took steps last night to minimize the effects of unsanctioned opinions regarding athletics at the Uni versity, as a result of alleged ad verse publicity which has re cently been given to athletics Tiere as a result of unqualified and unauthorized statements from "irresponsible sources." - Acting with dispatch, the let--ter-wearers unanimously passed the following resolution: Resolved, That in view of the first hand knowledge, the char acter, and experience of the di rector of athletics, Coach R. A. Fetzer, and the chairman of the athletic committee, Dean A. W. Hobbs, any statements concern ing athletics will be given through them, and the Mono gram Club will not sanction any statements given by school edit ors, school administrators, or (Continued on page two) PLAYMAKERS GIVE PLAYS TOMORROW Second Bill of Experimental Composed of Works by Koch's Playwriters VOTE The following six questions concerning athletic policy in our colleges and universities are placed on the following straw ballot without editorial comment for or against. T Numbers 1, 2 and 6 were among the recommendations of Pres ident Frank Graham which received the approval of college rep-. resentatives at a meeting of the Association of American Uni versities . ' - ""'v. ;'-. -; Numbers 3, 4, and 5 are asked in order that student opinion on these matters of policy may be clarified. V Students are asked to mark "X" next to "Yes" or "No" after each question. Ballot boxes located in the lobbies of the Y.M. C. A the library and Graham Memorial .will be open from 9 o'clock this morning until 5 this afternoon. The results will be announced in tomorrow's paper. University Departments Offer The second bilL of experimerit tal plays will be given in the Plajnakers Theatre tomorrow night at 7:30. The six plays which were se lected for production were writ ten in Professor Koch's class in playwriting. The plays are student-written, student-acted, and student-directed. 'Take Your Choice" flnnyrrct CtorVo' "TaVa Vftlir . 7 .. . Tr I previously included m the cum Choice" is directed by Kenneth r . . , , . , - , , Featuring Dr. Sherman Smith, vocalist, and Peter Hansen, pian ist, as soloists, the men's and women's . University glee clubs will give their first concert of the year tonight in Hill Music hall at 8:30. H. Grady Miller is director of both clubs and will present a mixed chorus in concert for the first time, having organized the girl's club only last year. Wilmington Following the concert here, tne glee clubs win appear m vv nmington, Friday nignt m Thalian hall, sponsored by the men's club of. the Trinity Metho dist church. Friday afternoon, the organi zation wfll broadcast over the Wilmington radio station, and will be entertained by Carolina alumni that night, returning to Chapel Hill Saturday. Program ... A difficult and varied program has been arranged for both the concert here and at Wilming ton. It will include the sacred 17th century music of Bach, and modern sacred and secular music. ' The solos which will be given are "Rhapsody in E Flat" by Brahms, by Peter Hansen, pian ist; "The Pilgrim's Song," by Tschaikowsky, and "The Time for Making Songs Has Come" by Rogers, by Dr. Sherman Smith, baritone. The concluding numbers on the program will be sung by the iitfYiT' I innrsPS r Oi revf I liiM-vr mixed chorus and will include tne ionowing compositions : Straw Ballot 1. DO YOU FAVOR THE POLICY OF ALLOWING ATH LETES OR PROSPECTIVE ATHLETES TO RECEIVE PREF ERENTIAL CONSIDERATION IN THE MATTER OF TUI TION, FEES, ROOM, BOARD, BOOKS, CLOTHES, JOB, ETC? Yes - No 2. DO YOU FAVOR A POLICY REQUIRING OF EACH ATHLETE A DETAILED STATEMENT IN WRITING OF THE AMOUNTS OF HIS FINANCIAL EARNINGS AND IN COME RECEIVED DURING THE COLLIE YEAR, AND THEIR SOURCE? - Yes ' No - :'?i..-.: 3. DO YOU FAVOR THE PRACTICE OF ADMINISTERING ALUMNI GIFTS TO ATHLETES THROUGH THE CO-OPERA TIVE MEDIA OF ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONS OF ALUMNI AGENCIES? Yes No 4. DO YOU FAVOR ALUMNI SUBSIDIZATION IN THE FORM OF DIRECT AH) BY THE ALUMNI TO MEMBERS OF ATHLETIC TEAMS OR PROSPECTIVE ATHLETES? Yes No 5. DO YOU FAVOR SOLICITING OF ATHLETES OR PROSPECTIVE ATHLETES BY MEMBERS OF A COLLEGI ATE ATHLETIC STAFF? Yes " W' '. No 6, DO YOU FAVOR POST-SEASON GAMES IN FOOT BALL? Note: Ballot Boxes are located in the Y. M. C. A., The Lib rary and Graham Memorial. ...Hours : 9 till 5. II LEE CLUBS GIVE CONCERT TONIGHT Men's Women's Glee Clubs 'Present Mixed Chorus as First Program of Year to Administration Officials Urge Swain Re-Openin; Engineers Registration for engineer ing school students will be held tomorrow and Saturday in 301 Phillips hall, r Sophomore engineers regis ter from 2 until 5 p. m. tomor row. Juniors and seniors reg ister from 9 a. m. until 12:30 p. m. Saturday. During the fall 139 stu dents were registered in the engineering school. Seven Directors See Better Campus Health In Remodeled Swain Statements to.be Consolidated with Student Petition and Presented Saturday ALL KEY MEN PARTICIPATE n i Duccaneer issues Christmas Number Hinkle's "Receive All Praises Thine An Epic Poem," Is Featured Statements submitted to the Phi Swain hall committee yes terday by seven administrative officials responsible . for the health and well-being of stu dents urged immediate action on the University's plan to reno vate and re-open Swain hall. The statements, published elsewhere in this issue, point out that the University is losing much in student health by not providing suitable and' reason able eating facilities. Officials expressing opinions Dr. W. R. Berryhill, Uni- The Christmas issue of Nel son Lansdale's Carolina Bucca- were neer, held up four days by en- versity physician ; Dr. R. B. Law- graving delays, appeared on the son ynum gymnasium oirec campus yesterday afternoon tor; Harry Comer, General Sec wearing a Christmas Angel co- retary of the University Y. M. dositma) Vtr "Rill 'Wa4-csvr onJ C. A.: R. A. Fetzer, Athletic A. I A l-jkll d 1 11.11 1 V I 1 I I I mm 1 III. A I I I I executed by Julian Bobbitt. Featured is Lawrence Hin kle's' "Receive All Praises Thine An Epic Poem" on campus pol itics. Also included are "The Spirit Moves Them," excerpts stolen from fraternity records by Tommy Wilson, a short story by Mac Smith called "Alibi and The 40 Thieves" and "Pat" Dicks', sketch of drunken alumni at a football gamer, ' "The Good Old Days Are Now." New Departments Approximately 30 Courses will be Given During Winter Quarter for First Time More than 30 courses not culum will be offered to students during; the winter quarter. The mathematics department is offering, the greatest number of courses in the coming session. Besides' the regular second quar terwdrkiiitO freshman - math Bartlett. It is a play of college liberalism, with the setting in the meeting room of the student league for peace at the Univer sity of Barchester, a small con servative -university, located in a northern city.-;, r:.:'y.k Marjorie Usher's 'Black there win be a course in straight Sheens a tragedv of the color f reshman algebra fortudents line, is directed by Ralph Bur- who have had onlyitrigonometry gin. The settin is on the col- in nih school and a similar lege cammis of Harrisville course in trig for those ' who School for Girls in the Piedmont have had onlv algebra. One section of North Carolina. quarter of work in these sub- "Elections" jects will enable those who take them to complete freshman y mj 1 small-town politics, by Mary De- math. laney, is directed by William Soph Math Wang. A large cast has been Regular sophomore mathema- chosen for this play, representa- tics will be continued with math tive of the usual type of politi- 12 and Dr. Mackie will teach a cians underfoot hef nrp "an elec- course in differential calculus. tion. Courses for graduates and ad Barbara Hilton's "A Most La- vanced undergraduates will be : i mentable Stnrv" i riirfprl hv 104. advanced algebra under Memorial Fund Student contributions to the Will Rogers Memorial Fund will be accepted at the office of the Daily Tar Heel. Money received will be placed in a na tional fund treasury to set up a permanent memorial to the beloved humorist who was killed last summer. - -: : 'The Day of Judgment" by Arkhangelsky, "Sing We and Chant It" by Morley, "The Home of .Liberty, a weisn air, ar ranged by Richards, and "By Babylon's Wave" by Gounod. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB ilary Fowler Spencer. Waymire's Death Richard Wavmire, . well- known local writer whose Cheltenham Papers have been a feature of the Carolina Mag azine this fall, died yesterday in Chapel Hill after a linger ing illness. Waymire was generally re garded as one of the most bril liant contributors to the mag azine. Dunns: his stay in Dr. J. C. Lyons will speak at the regular meeting of the Cos mopolitan Club . at the Carolina Inn tonight at 8 o'clock. His lec- GOMMERGE GROUP tur&ir $e ADMITS NEW MENlhe gaye nt; af Fort ;Bragg, Director; O. K. Cornwell, Phy sical Education and Hygiene De (Continued on last page) DI WINS FROM PHI IN JOINT DEBATE Senators Win In Annual Inter- Society Freshman Debate; Wingfield Best Speaker Alvin Wingfield and C. Klutz, representing the Di Senate, last night won the annual Di-Phi Two new departments, "We freshman debate. The resolution Quote," and "Stolen Treasure," this year was: the latter a page of exchanges That a system of euthanasia clipped by Mac Smith, make should be legalized in the United their appearance in this issue. States in cases of incurable and Regular departments include loathsome diseases and the low- "As They Are," a sketch of Dr. est forms of idiocy. Eric Zimmerman by Francis Wingfield was named the best Fairley, Eleanor BizzelPs Christ- speaker of the evening by the mas shopping suggestions in iudcres. . - w - "Making The Man," "Nine" Vance Rowe and Mace Gwyer Henderson's "Shadows Before," argued the negative side for the Bill Anderson's Sports, Fletcher phu.They cited the. Declaration Ferguson's "Bandstand,"; Hazel of. Independence, the Ten Com Beacham's. "Seen , and; Obscene" mandments, -and' the-supremacy and the editor's "Casuah Corres- of Athens over Snarta.--: which practiced a form of "mercy kill- j j. (Continued, on page two J A- Beta Gamma Sigma, Honorary Com merce Fraternity Initiates Six CAMPUS KEYBOARD The Alpha chapter of Beta Gamma V Sigma held its initia firm rvf rpw TYipmhpra HTnnrlnv " iwr w I Pit Tf " J I vnif rhtn I . AnnAnnH night in Graham Memorial and "A -"'B admitted to membership the fol lowing six seniors: Raleigh W.j Baker, H. L. Bass, F. R. Ham ilton, N. R. Holland, R. P. Ross- er, Jr., and Billy Yandell. Beta Gamma Sigma is the na tional honorary fraternity in commerce, having chanters in F3LKS on the campus evidently believe that the editorial pol- to the honor system. As a matter of fact, many Chapel Hillians believe that we would like to see this code of ethics abolished. About six months, ago some agitation was created to have an addition tagged on the pledge which everyone signs at the bot tom of a quiz. This addition Dr. Winsor; 131, theory of equa tions, taught by Dr. Hoyle; 152 analytic 1 projective geometry under Dr. Lasley. Three courses in this depart ment will be open only to gradu ate students. They are: 206, complex variables; 216, dyna mics ; and 247, advanced theory of matrices. . Geology Courses -Students who have taken geo logy 11 during this quarter will enter geology 12, but those who took the course numbered 11 last year will continue with 42. Chapel Hill he had made many friends among the undergrad- Ugy 52, which was formerly Udie Student DOay, as wen a -nmprrial crootrrannv n v- o o- 'i J " 1 fcC among the faculty. the leading schools of business have made ch student m tne umtea oxates ana is re- - nrortnr hv hia ttP.n nromise cognized as the official honorary r . cheating. Honor iraierniiy. Lac fr ro snrrifirpr? fnr thp svs- The other senior members . in tern. That's why we opposed the the chapter are: S: P. Hatch, B- addition. L. Barron, J. R. Ellington, O. stnart Rahh's article recently M. Ivey, and J. : E. Snyder, The appeared, trying to point out officers for the current year are Uhat even he system'is failing S P. Hatch, president ; - H. . D. now. as well as the honor. In Wolf, honorary, president; J. recommending that every stu- I ing," m denouncmg euthanasia. Cost of Incurables Wingfield's principal address stressed the social,, economical, and political cost of incurables. He argued that the system of "mercy killing' would be well or ganized and supervised by a com petent board of impartial medi cal officers. Klutz recalled several cases of horrible suffering by incurables. . He declared that, euthanasia would not1 be unreasoning and they have thrown aside and cut out the hypocritical duplicity and make it work. If Paul Green's play did noth ing else, it showed the shallow ness of the student body. Whe ther it is the fault of the educa tional system, secondary and higher, or of the personnel of the alUUCUk UUU AWCiJ., C iC :jUl. ,-4- , 1A K ii I UUaVUiuaUiC , it umu utuw- saying. We believe it is conjecture of both. But the point remains that bur students are afraid to seek the truth in volence. In the chief negative talk, Gwyer asserted that euthanasia un- B Wposley, secretary; and L. Barron, treasurer. INFIRMARY R. dent read the article, we did not endorse every conclusion, how ever obvious Rabb might have made them. . Those confined to the infirm- We are not opposed to the ary yesterday were Fred Packe, honor system, but sincerely be E D Vanderburgh, J. A. Long, lieve that it is not working. And C. E. Leake, A. L. Ellis, and J. it won't work until students take t T'oifoT, i oacK me resnonsioiuiy wmcn have endorsed outwardly so con sistently. There's nothing wrong with the working of the honor system except the intellectual dilly dallying of the student body. Those who oppose the honor system because they say- the "system" destroys the "honor" are endorsing a proctor-system in light of the failure of the stu dents to accept the honor prin ciple. An assumption of respon sibility by the students will save whatever is left of our honor system from utter abolition. P. G. H. sicians. He deplored its legaliza tion and consequent subjection to misuses. , : A small audience heard the de bate. Judges were Harry F. Co mer, Y. M. C. A. secretary ;R. H. Wettach, professor of law, and Voit Gilmore, Daily Tar Heel reporter. New Greeks The pledging of J. E. Elrod, Jr., to Chi Phi, and John A. Moore to D. K. E. was announced yesterday by the Dean of Stu dent's office. (Continued on page two)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 11, 1935, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75