Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 1, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO The oScial newspaper of the Publications Union of North C&reliaa at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the ThanksziTinsr, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the pest otnee at unapei Hill, N. O, under act of March 3, 1879. aabscnption price, mv ior ie couege year. Business -and editorial offices: 204-206 Graham Memorial Telephones; editorial, 4351; business, 4358; night, 6006 P. G. Hammer, editor R. C. Page, Jr., managing editor A. R. Sarratt, Jr., city editor Butler French, business manager . Editorial Board L D. Suss, chairman, J. M. Daniels, D. G. Wetherbee, D. K. McKee Features W. P. Hudson Assistant City Editor E. L. Kahn News Editors B. W. Eahb, J. M. Smith, Jr., C. W. Gilmore, W. S. Jordan, Jr., J. F. Jonas, L. L Gardner Sporis Staff Ed Hamlin and Ray Howe, night editors, Graham Gammon, Ira Sarasohn, Fletcher Ferguson, E. L. Peterson, Harvey Kaplan, Ed Karlin, Bill Anderson BOOKLARNm' by George Butles Now YOU'RE Talking TODAY'S RELIGION na- MAG-BUC (By Allen P. Brantley) Religion on a pedestal is of little practical use. Religion con- Approaching the famous tional park,, the group of old To Le editor. maid school teachers began read-vuq Daily Tar ing their guide booklets. The In regSLTd to "What is wrong fined to an age, to a race, to a writer, they soon discovered, had th j.e University?" I sincere- church, to a class or to a clan is waxed enthusiastic over the na- j beiieVe that if some action is insufficient for a virile and ef fer tural scenery. Indeed the faces to e taken when the ills are vescent society. The Master- of the demure scnooi marms f.nj th tho fnllowincr sug- Teacher oi all time was woe- i j - i WITH THE CHURCHES BAPTIST 9:45 a. m. Sunday Schools Class for University men taught by Mr. E. K. Plyler. Co-ed class taught by Sirs. Binkley. 11:00 a. m. Worship and ser mon Dr. 0. T. Binkley. 7:00 p. m. Student forum. turned rosy red as they scanned .jon jj .e valuable. Add! fully misunderstood because he the following: "There is prob-L0- fo sfnn'M to the Caro- tausrht a religion that was all Newton Craig, director, H. T. Terry, Jr., Herman Ward embrace, to know them in the in- th(J good of the reform. CATHOLIC 214 Graham Memorial Q.QA o m "Tocc orprv Sun ably no other scenic neighbor- Hna Buccaneer, substitute it for inclusive. He had nothing to do , p V Morriqsev chaiK hood. . .which combines moun- pflrolina Macrazine. and with racial bounds and creedall, . . . .1- 1 11 lit- I I - I . . . .. . I Uiii. tain outlines so doiq wun a, quai- .rP!)fp a Buccaneer, prel- limits, tie had no time ior a re- lty of beauty so intimate ana re- erablv with Pete Ivey as editor, ligion that differentiated be- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE hned. Just to live m me vaney Tne Buccaneer has what the tween Samaritans and the Jeru-. 11:00 a. m. Meets every Sun- in the eloquent and everchang- Carolina Magazine should have, salem Fathers. How then can! day in 209 Graham Memorial. ing presence of these carved and th Buccaneer is a poor ex- we expect Him to be a party to tinted peaks is in itself satisfac- . j f humor magazine. Im- a religion today that would set tion. But to climb into their ,int tion would increase the Caucasion race apart as a . . . ., ii . . . Exchange Editors S.R.Leager, G. O. Butler, W. S. McClelland Heelers , P. Jerniean. R. P. Brewer, T. C. Britt, R. H. Reece, Ruth Crowell, J. H. Sivertsen, A. Merrill, N.S.Rothschild, J. L. Cobbs, Voit Gil more. Jake Strother, R. T. Perkins,. H. H. Hirschfeld, C. DeCarlo timacy of their bare summits. is to turn a new, unforgettable page in human experience.' G. B. HOBBS, '39 MISLEADING W. G. Arey. Gordon Burns - Division Managers . J. A. Lewis, circulation, H. F. Osterheld, collections, local advertising, " R, Crooks, office Senior Reporters H. M. Beacham, H. Goldberg Local Advertising Staff T. E. Joyner, Hollywood has found, among other inventions, one to cover a corner in cobwebs in just a few minutes. This "haunted house' scenery-is made of a liquid rub her that is snraved on with an electric fan. A whole room can be well haunted within 10 min utes. Another asset of the movie kind of a specially favored race We. may be interested m a re- ligion for Americans, but Jesus is not. Unless it will include Mexicans, South Americans, Africans, and the Orientals it To the editor, The Daily Tar Heel: The Daily Tar Heel's report will not meet with His approval of my talk before the Economics I His idea of the Kingdom of God 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 recital. LUTHERAN 214 Graham Memorial 1 1 fln n m T?pv. "Krnripv wilt Seminar, Wednesday, February was so inclusive that it left no be . chanre 0f service. W. D. McLean, P. C. Keel, C. W. Blackwell, R. G. S. Davis, M. V. Utley, studios is a standing army that W. M. Lamont, and C. S. Humphrey can ' obey commands in : nine :. f Staff Photographer D. Becker' 26, has just come to my atten tion. I wish to say that the re port was wholly misleading and much of it contrary to what was actually said. The subject of the talk was not "The Economic and Politi- THIS ISSUE : NEWS, BECKER; NIGHT, SMITH languages:-They are well train- cal MotiVeS, behind ? the . Cottoii V ." ,v ;,. "."r 1 Adjustment Jf rogram." ; so. tar war pictures. ' - las T know there were no rx)litical i . :f e,nee;An' commutation is an ilisDnsable a reports xux - M Ldid .not state . that V 'New ndition of the birth f ideas and knowledge and of other growth into health Bee, after being chastised for Dealers' considered cotton farm- mntivfis. Buffalo t j u ii condition and vigor." John Dewey. SUPPORT OUR PRESIDENT! omitting tne. names oi persux . sianificant noliticallv concerned in his article, submit- than other farmers, and hence ted this cony: "ine recent coia . , ti4. ; rrAjii:nAo tha cfato nnnpra sprpam i nai mnuemiai aiumni n,n,rn an,AanntiY tho pmintrv rans. . . ... . . ucauiu.w i v -. . x i wave .Pu6 j r said nothme: that would even groups are out to get the scalp of our presiaem. a movemem oi ed the freezing to death of Fea- remotel su est such an idea. this sort, siariea mrougn uuucigiuuuu -"a""V1 tnerffin w. dones uiree cows, rpi, v;, wifi, w ing in proportions smce Dr. Graham's liberal ideas became offen- their names being Myrtle, Bos- lieving that the cotton program sive to powerful and influential interests in and out of the state, sie and Penelope." ; had a "neutral value " The con- as one of the factors or which the alumni campaign is based tern phasizes. - Farrago : Purdue offers . ..... . 11 1 The campaign against Dr. Graham's athletic policy, wnere me in bridge probably m had a "neutral value. " The con trary is true. The program was a decidedly successful in raising the incomes of cotton farmers as a whole. It did help some movement has gained some degree of popular strength, has been d- . n the latest shin sig the camounage oenina wmcn tne nais. ; . A Mendrix uonege pro- gr0ups more than others land leresis nave aiiacKea ui. raaiu & i.siu tess0Y nas weigned a ray oi sun- owners more than tenants. But as a man and as president of the university oi iNonn arouua. liffht. . . Medical authorities re- The opposition to the corisQjidtipn policies of the president was Lort that the hearing becomes . 1 . . . 1 I-i .AitnA iilnlinn IMIf HT1 IIUUU1 LUIIiAL cldQUluh I ... ...... . i. ...U AnAfi ft M All professors should be one out. We would leave a lot of people out of our plan of salvation, but Jesus includes them all. God is the Father of us all, and we are members of that J one great family, ' ' Christianity, therefore,, stands for . universal brotherhood idealistically inter- METHODIST 9:45 a. m. Sunday School, Dr. E. T. Brown, Superintendent. 11:00 a. m. Worship and ser mon Rev. Allan P. Brantley. 7:00 p. m. Student forum. PRESBYTERIAN :10:00 a. . m. . Student, class taught by. Rev. W. M. : Cooper. Power. . to ee It preted. and consistently prac ticed. What good isderived in Topic; - "The believing in brotherhood unless! Through." . it is practiced? What good are 11:00 a. m. Worshi pand ser our ideals unless they are stand- mon Rev. Donald Stewart. To ards by which we live? If we pic: "The Christian, and the have a religion, good for noth- World He Lives In." ing more than to believe in, we 7:00 p. m. Student forum. To might as well discard it. Christ- pic: "The Student and His Re- ianity as a religion is a way of ligion" Led by Lawrence Hin- life. It is a simple method of Ikle. living. It is living decently, and courageously adopting a life pat terned after the Christ of the Ages. We wax eloquent in our advo cacy of the kingdom of God. We not essentially against consolidation but an opportunist grasping acute when the eyes all groups were benefitted. FRED H. ARNOLD and "com muhist" who was playing hell with what he considered the unfair treatment labor was receiving at their hands. ;:' ' It Dr;(anam who has built up the liberal tradition which ' has ut Carolina at the top in educational circles. It is for this ' work that: iie is condemned. Small vociferous groups have poured -anti-G thfe'state until the ? state begins to believe in the sincerity of such things as the alumni questionnaire recently dis tributed, whose questions were so leading as to be impossible of an swering except just as the alumni who wrote it want them answer ed, so leading as to be revolting to fair-minded people. Dr. Graham has stood for the principle of liberalism in stu dent government. He has backed those policies which he honestly and sincerely believed right. He has worked unsparingly to build Carolina into the highest type of educational center. And he has succeeded, in the face of drastically reduced appropriations, in the face of high-powered minority attacks who built up a cumulative opposition by every means, regardless of the worth of the nature of those attacks. ; If the Board of Trustees and the people of the state allow themselves to be duped into ousting Dr. Graham, they are tacitly sanctioning the installation of a catspaw as president, catering to the whims and idiosyncratic fancies of a reactionary minority. We must support the president in this crisis against misrep resentation of his ideas, against hysterical mass action instigated by a selfish and grasping few; we must support, his right of free dom of speech and the right to take action to make the University ; progressive. If Dr. Graham is ousted, the students loose their in herent right of self-government; the state loses the force which makes the University of North Carolina what it is today. Thor Johnson closed. informed of this fact before the TTriJHWbi Continued fwmSrst page) y K , f , iQ-,;.i,tO; be concertmasterof the Na- 4 1 w'iB4-ii4s rst summer session.at. In- les annoys speakers-and disturbs , . , , - i a'udiencesi"! claimed. New Jersey is one of the fejv states which has neither a med ical nor dental school. . . "Exam inations are as harmful to the intellect as liquor and women," says a Bowdoin physics instruc tor. . . A campaign to raise $375,000 for the University in Exile, composed of Nazi refu gees, has been started in New York. . . "Flying schools in state universities are reasonably f eas ible," claims Amelia Earheart. Despite the fact that women sel dom spend money on dates, Wis consin co-eds spend $150 more per year than the average man. COMPREHENSIVE ACTION Yesterday morning the boys struggled through long hours of comprehensive examinations. The comprehensive committee, "ap pointed to try to get comprehensives abolished, probably cursed themselves lustily for not having sufficiently pushed action. When the Daily Tar Heel drive for the abolishment of comT prehensives and the subsequent substitution of a comprehensive course demanded action, the committee mentioned above met with the faculty committee, but were jerked to a sudden halt when the faculty committee claimed the students had no factual basis for their proposals. Action died there for the-present. The Daily Tar Heel recently conducted a survey of depart mental heads as to the advisability and possibility of substituting ,a course; this information, together with that obtained from stu dents who took the exams yesterday, will be used by the committee. With information from these two sources, representing all ;sides of the argument, there can be no dearth of 'the :desired facts, 3ior any further grounds to deny immediate action of some sort. Po4;df : MM terlochen, .Mich r or tne past seven years ne has been concertmaster of the University of Michigan Sym phony Orchestra and on numer ous occasions nas appeared as violin soloist with that crrouD. He has also acted as soloist with the University of Michigan Glee club and has played frequently for radio stations in Detroit. In 1932 he was awarded a masters degree in violin at Michigan University and since then has been a member of the faculty of the school of music. ; Miss Peinert, a native of To ledo, O., has spent the greater part oi ner musical career m Michigan. While still a student in high school, she was awarded two scholarships for unusua musical attainment. Since then she has studied at the Univer sity of Michigan and under Hanns Pick, famous Swiss vio lin-cellist who is a graduate of the Conservatories of Karlsruho and Budapest. In the summer of 1929 Miss Peinert attended the National High school orchestra camp a Interlochen, Mich., and in the following summer appeared with that organization in concerts in Atlantic City, N. J., New York City, Philadelphia, and Wash ington. Since 1932 she has served as assistant instructor in yiolin-cello at the University of Michigan -school of music, and has been violin-cellist with the University Symphony for six years. A fraternity at Indiana Uni versity had sent their curtains to the cleaners and it was the second successive day that the house had stood unveiled. One morning, the following note ar rived from the sorority across the street : "Dear Sirs : May we suggest that you procure cur tains for your windows? We do not care for a course in ana tomy T A chap who had left his shav ing to read the terse message answered: rDear Girls: The course is optional!" A professor at Notre Dame said reprovingly to a tardy stu dent, "You should have been here 15 'minutes ago !" Wherewith the flippant sophomore answer ed, "Why, what happened?" UNITED (Christian-Congregational) : 10:00 a. m. Student Bible class taught by Dr. Raymond Adams. 11:00 a. m. Worship and ser- echo the words of John the Bap- n Dr W' Topic' List in our urgency to get into iy oncepi OI a- - the kingdom. Then to show ' -io p. m. stuaent lorum, led what colossal, hypocrisy is be- by Jim McCachren. Topic: "The- hind our ardent enthusiasm "we I Mranam nan. ; . . build four inimigration Walls- so ROjCKY M0UNTERS PAK 1 high,;that only a-few can get a ; SOCIAL FOR HOLIDAYS peep into our physical land much ' ' : ; v- c ess' a' glance into 'our spiritual I Members of the Rocky Mount and. I wonder if we really 1 be-1 Club i,mei!;iiday.."Bght:and.di's- ieve that the kingdom of God cussed plans for a social to be- was ever meant for all races:! held in Rocky Mount during the Yes, with compartments, no spring holidavs. The social wilt doubt. When Jesus prayed "Thy I be held for the purpose of at- Kmgdom Come" he opened the tracting Rocky Mount high kingdom for all races and school seniors to the Univprsitv creeds. We pray that same pray- next year. The University Club er but with reservations. We will together with the local alumni be contented with a kingdom and the Rocky Mount Club are made up of our American to sponsor the social, friends and relations, and if I Thp dnf will 1 " w (Till 11U1U i I lrrl-T 1. i f I t; uou ooesn t looK out ior tne rest, at an early date they will toe at the mercy of no one. We just simply aren't in- hood are two unVnnw nutf- v I - . - -w WW A A V terested in other people. The ties in our present social setup- High Churchmen of Jerusalem To advance these ideals is were not interested in the Sama-j little more than mockery. As a ritans out J esus was. We may practical issue we are not inte not be interested in people of rested in them. Kagawa, per other lands, but Jesus is. haps the greatest Christian of We believe in social justice, this century, has embodied the We shed copious tears over the co-operative movement in his plight of our fellowmen. Thou- plan of Christian .Brotherhood, sands walking the streets hun- He was held up at our Immigra gry. Men and women working tion Office not because he had a for a pittance which scarcely little eye trouble, but because his holds body and soul together, doctrine of co-operation, broth We condemn the atrocious ex- erhood and peace made trouble ploitation of our fellowmen. for our system of cut-throat Then do nothing about it. We competition and rugged individ vote the same old ticket which ualism. Kagawa believes, live? puts the same old gang back in and puts into practice a practical office, that runs the country in Christianity. We don't care ho the same old way. It's "Every- much idealism a person believes body for himself, and the devil in, just so he doesn't try to prae tor us all!" This is not surpris- tice it too much. Living and ing -in the least for we live in a exercising a practical religion system that produces rugged in- sent Jesus to the Cross. It sent mviduahsts. Our keen competi- martyrs to the stake. It will bid tion malces every one for him- us go on a daring mission. K self. It is the survival of the will send us forth over a hard j one whocan hold out the long- and difficult road, but who of n j est. Co-operation and brother- will not dare to travel that road:
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 1, 1936, edition 1
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