Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 7, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL TUESDAY, APRIL 7. 1936: fJ?JiPmT- Uni?m Board of the Unirewity Business and editorial ofikes: 204-206 Graham Memorial Telephones: editorial, 4351; bnsiness, 4350. gat, 6906 P. G. Hammer, editor D. K. McKee, assistant editor R. C. Page, Jr., managing editor A. R. Sarratt, Jr., city editor Butler French, business manager k Features W. P. Hudson. J. M. Daniels . - Assistant City Editor E. L. Kahn News Editors S. W. Rafeb, J. M. Smith, Jr., C. W. Gilmore, W. S. Jordan, Jrn J. F. Jonas, L. L Gardner, D. Becker Deskman Frank Harward Sports Staff Graham Gammon, Fletcher Ferguson, E. L. Peterson, Harvey Kaplan, Ed Karlin, Bill Anderson, Bill Rainey News Release Newton Craig, director, H. T. Terry, Jr., Herman Ward P. Exchange Editors S. R. Leager, G. 6. Butler, N. S. Rothschild, T. C. Britt Heelers Jernigan, R. P. Brewer, R. H. Reece, Ruth Crowell, J. H. Sivertsen, A. Merrill, J. 1 Uobbs, voit uumore, Jake Strother,, R. T. Perkins, H. H. Hirschfeld, C. DeCarlo, W. G. Arey, Gordon Burns, Joe Fletcher Division Managers . J. A. Lewis, circulation, H. F. Osterheld, collections, T. E. Joyner, ! local advertising, R. Crooks, office Senior Reporters H. M. Beacham, H. Goldberg Local Advertising Staff W. D. McLean, P. C. Keel, C. W. Blackwell, R. G. S. Davis, M. V. Utley, W. M. Lamont, and C. S. Humphrey . T Staff Photographer .'; J. R. Larsen THIS ISSUE: NEWS, GILMORE; NIGHT, SMITH , "The open air of public discussion and communication is an indispensable condition of the birth of ideas and knowledge and of other growth into health and vigor." John Dewey. STUDENT-FACULTY DAY Exhibits go up today and the second annual celebration of Student-Faculty Day will begin. ;. A dozen students and faculty members, organized with dozens more of the respective groups, have worked assiduous ly for days and days in preparation for the event. In addition to arranging through departments for the many exhibits, this group has worked out plans for a gala day tomorrow in-" eluding a mass convocation in the morning, student-faculty luncheons at noon, a tremendous dormitory program in the early afternoon followed by fraternity open house affairs, and a huge stunt night program in Memorial hall tomorrow mgiii. Student-Faculty Day Will go down in University history as one of the mdst cherished of Chanel Hill's many traditions. Based on the solid foundation of mutual relations between University constituencies, student and faculty, and motivat ed by the philosophy that co-operation and understanding are most essential to the ramified problems of collegiate educa tion, Student-Faculty Day will always survive as an obvious manifestation of a mutual appreciation and an earnest desire to make the relations between pedagogues and pupils more harmoniously perfect. All plans for Student-Faculty Day are nothing more than structures in which ample opportunity is offered for individu al co-operation and participation. Upon the willingness of the campus to take advantages of these opportunities does the success of Student-Faculty Day depend. NOSTALGIA Quill Quips by Mac Smith Exhibit Schedule Brother to Bob One morning last week the Ra eigh News and Observer came out with a two inch advertise ment proclaiming that Phil Hal- ettle and His Orchestra (we don't know him) was ON TOUR : For information write or wire U. K. ti. House, Chapel Hill, N. C. A couple of days later came a note from Carolina Pines to Mr. D. K. E. House, Chapel Hill, "Dear Mr. House," began the letter. Continued from page one1) Electric and Water Division: Pictures and illustrations relating to the Division, and charts and drawings showing the procedure . involved in furnishing power for the University Plant. Extension Division: Pamphlets and publications of the Division. Large map of North Carolina showing the extent and location of students in the Extension Division. Graduate School Office: Open all day for visitors. Laundry Department: Tables showing the processes involved in the laundry operations, illustrations of the type of work done, samples of the materials used in washing, charts, printed forms, prices, etc News Bureau: Samples of stories sent out to newspapers, xx um bers of newspapers to which stories are sent regularly regard ing University activities. Telephone Division: Old and new type telephones and charts per taining to the telephone service. Shocked The Greensboro Daily News scooped in its story of the storm the other night. According to its list of the dead, one (uniden tified) man was electrocuted when he came in contact with a live wife. Immediate Reply Which discussion of newspap ers, brings up a matter which Battle's Eddie Kahn has taken great pride in explaining to the campus, it seems that one day last week the Charlotte Observer ran the streamer: HITLER CALLS ON GOD FOR HELP. In the headline drop the paper continued something like this: VOTE OF CONFIDENCE EX PECTED TOMORROW. No One to Blame And one press report declared that the Supreme Court gave an anonymous" decision. Come One High school senior and daugh ter of Dr. Howard Odum, Mary Francis Odum, as president: of the Girl's Hi-Y here, had a great deal to do last weekend when her Hi-Y entertained all of the other older girls' Hi-Y's in North Carolina. Mid-winters were in full swmg while the horde of high school girls were meeting in Chapel Hill, so many of the "Y" girls were disappointed in not being able to have all of the flashy Carolina manhood at their mercy. Mary Francis points out that Carolina certainly was a draw ing card for her conference. She says that when the word went out that Hi-Y conference would be held here, new girls' Hi-Y clubs sprang up all "ever the state. "If the Daily Tar Heel came out twice a day, we would have had two crises a day during the past two months," stated Dean of Administration House at freshman assembly yesterday. We hope that Dean House was referring to the conglomera tion of issues which rose during the winter quarter and not to our abnormal ability to get people all worked up. We're rather touchy about the latter propensity. Dean House went on to say, however, that since Christmas there have been so many distractions that much of our intellectu al pursuit was stifled under the mad rush to maintain equilibrium, which Jbears out our hope that he was not deriding our abilities as pot-boilers. What he has to say is important. It is a sad commentary on our system of education when we allow ourselves to get so rusty that when we start chipping it off, the reverberations are so distracting that we can't even study our lessons. We not only fail to study but we also fail to live like normal human beings. Perhaps we undergraduates are entirely to blame for the whole winter quarter which was so hectic; no doubt, we allowed ourselves to get in such a state that nothing short of the occurring revolution could have fixed us up. But under the circumstances, Carolina undergraduates did .only what was necessary. Issues were not created just for the fun of it. If there are any persons in this University who yearn for some of that good old intellectual pursuit, in the good old ortho dox methods, with the good old peace and quiet, it is ourselves. But when issues are thrust upon us and we are challenged at our very foundations, then there is no alternative other than to answer and to make our answer good. If we are to attain that optimum state wherein good intellec tual development is carried forward we might suggest that student government and intercollegiate athletics be scrapped and be damn ed and then we will have some intellectual activity Revenge An interesting story, whether it's true or not, has to do with the origin of the new American fascination, "Monopoly." According to the rumor, the fellow who invented the intrigu ing board game once lost all his money in real estate. Out of his dispair came "Monopoly" (which 1 I V 1 aeais in real estate) to regain for him his millions ! Indignation We heard the sophomore rais ing Hell with the University ad ministration the other day. He said that it was a dirty shame the way all the nice "short-cut waiKs were oeing piowea up The furrowed ground was giv ing him stone bruises ! Mixed Metaphor . rrrt ' . 1 ine main worry aoout run nmg a shop to repair broken phonograph records is that you are liable to get the sides of the records mixed up in the rehabil itation. We heard of one broken record, had it not been mended carefully, would have found it self two new pieces entirely "Santa Claus, Miney Mo!" (on one side) and (on the other v i n r siae) nienny-ivieeney tame in the Spring!" B. Student Activities. Graham Memorial. Open all day, except Daily Tar Heel, open from 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. Buccaneer: Open office. Display of drawings; posters showmg growth, changes and operations. Daily Tar Heel: A display tracing a news story from the time of its happening until it appears in print in the paper the next day ; the careers of ex-DAiLY...TAR Heel men ; copies of old issues ; tracing the development of the publication since its founding; display of the office files and morgue; display of High School News Release ; financial, administrative, and functional organi zation of the. publication set-up; exhibit of photos, mats, and cuts; photographs of the staff at work in the printshop and office; exhibits of various headlines and style sheets. Di Senate and Phi Assembly: Open rooms for visitors. Dance Committee: "Miniature decorations of dance hall: pictures of dancers from Wootteri-Moulton ; Yackety Yacks open to pages showing dance leaders and sponsors. Foreign Policy League: Informal table of related literature; posters arranged in "March of Time" effect. Carolina Magazine: Display of interesting issues; posters show ing growth. Interfraternity Council: Poster with names of officers and of fraternities on roll; Interfraternity Council athletic and schol arship awards; National Interfraternity Council Yearbooks; papers showing work and activities of the Interfraternity Council. Monogram Club: Will exhibit in connection with Athletic Asso ciation. University Club: Homecoming decorations cup; Posters showing pictures of pep rallies and other activities of the Club ; pictures of past presidents ; brief statement of purpose of Club. Yackety Yack: Open office; display of old issues showing growth and improvement. Y. M. C. A.: Y. M. C. A. Building. Onen all dav. Founding nf general "Y" and its world spread; founding of Carolina "Y" several constitutions of local "Y"; roll of University "Y" pres idents; some program features; handbook and directory dis play; Human Relations Institute display. Woman s Association: In Graham Memorial. Placards shnwinir the growth of the Woman's Association. Posters and pictures depicting the activities of the. Women's Athletic Association. Section III. University Divisions A. Humanities Division. Reserve Book Room, Library. Archaeology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Education, Eng lish, Foreign Languages, Philosophy. - . Posters and books, all day. Music Department: - Hill Music hall. Open all day. Exhibit of printed programs and pamphlets of work done this year; de monstration of Capehart Phonograph; explanation of organ and trip to the Organ Loft 11:30 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. The Carolina Playmakers: Playmakers theatre. A dramatic col lection, including stage models, costumes, scrapbooks, playbills, files of the "Carolina Playbook," volumes of "The Carolina Folk Plays," photographs, masks, dramatic properties, etc.. will be on display in Professor Koch's offices '(112 and 113 Murphey hall). Miss Darice Jackson will be in charge. Photographs of recent Playmaker productions will be on exhibit in the lobby and the Green Room of the Playmakers theatre. Professor Selden in charge. Visitors are invited to step backstage to see the stage machinery and the lighting equipment. Between 2 and 4 o'clock there will be a demonstration of scenery-making in the Playmakers' Scene Shop in the basement of the gymnasium. B. The Library. Exhibit of old and rare books in main lobby. These will be on dis play several days before and after Student-Faculty Day. C. Natural Sciences Division. Botany Department: Davie hall. Open all day except from 1 to 2 p. m. Basement and main floor of Botany wing of Davie hall. Exhibits of drawings and paintings made by Chapel Hill artists for books now being written by Department members; exhibit from herbarium specimens of all North Carolina parasitic and insectivorous plants; books and theses by professors and stu dents in the department; pharmaceutical preparations. Chemistry Department: Venable hall. Open all day except from 1 to 2 p.m. Room 173,' glass-blowing; room 206, silicate chem ical gardens; room 142, organic display, petroleum products, rayon, dyes, individual graduate displays ; room 206, models of organic molecules; room 175, solidifying mercury; room 201, coal distillation products; room 201, wood distillation products; room 206, rubber display; room 171, synthetic lemonade ; room 152, ultra-violet light showing fluorescence; room 169, detec tion of poisons; room 143, cotton display; room 142, colliods showing Browman movement; room 173, liquid air; room 173, detection of small temperature changes by the thermocouple. Arranged by Dr. J. T. Dobbins, assisted by the Alpha Chi Sigma Chemical Fraternity. . Geology Department: New East. Onenll dav. Tlem ,. (minerals chiefly from North Carolina and New Jersey). Room (Continued on last page) Student-Faculty Day (Continued from first page) ments will all be presented in the- Tin Can. If at 2 p. m. tomorrow, two bombs go off immediately after the ringing of the bell in Old South, the afternoon program is to take place in the Tfn Can. If only the bell rings, the program takes place in the quadrangles as originally planned. . The games are but one phase of the jamboree program, the most important feature of the afternoon being the reception in each quadrangle, or in each sec- , tion of the Tin Can, for the pro fessors and fraternity men by the dormitory hosts. ' Fraternity men are entertain ed at the dormitories until 4:30; after that they themselves hold open house for dormitory resi dents. Dormitory men, on the other hand, play hosts between 2 and 4:30, and visit in the fra ternities after 4:30. Philip Morris and Co. Ltd., will provide free cigarettes for the afternoon attractions, and the Wrigley company will dis tribute their products "gratis,"' also. At noon, faculty members will be the guests of students at luncheon. - With all of the men in Uni versity service, faculty members and their families, members of the buildings department staff,, and all of the students in the University invited, the after noon jamboree will begin in the lower quadrangle at 2 o'clock. The front, yards of Everett,. Aycock, Graham and Lewis will be given over to flaring booths where student barkers will run games of fortune, bingo, egg throwing at campus leaders, and the like. In the street between the Iowt er and upper quadrangles, Fred dy Johnson and his band will be playing for Carolina's first five cent "dime" dance in many years. Thirty girls have been secured for the taxi affair. As the crowd moves up to the Mangum, Manly, Ruffin, Grimes court, the sports program will begin. Contests in bowling, horseshoe pitching, miniature golf, etc. will be open to every body. Free lemonade stands are to be set-up here. Approximately at 4 or 4 :30 the assemblage of students and University employees will have moyed up to the green under old Davie Popular. There the All Carolina lawn party is to be held, with free luncheon for all. The occasion will be the first time in over a hundred years when all of the students and faculty mem bers have eaten together. Until after the evening meal, all of the fraternities will hold open houses for visits from the dormitory men and faculty mem bers. Topping off the whole day's program, the Stunt Night tomor row night at 8:30 in Memorial hall will provide an hour of more or less home-talent entertain ment brought from the ranks of professors and students alike. McDonald (Continued from page one) ing and was elected to the state legislature for the last session. He was also a leader of the Mc-Donald-Lumpkin faction which was opposed to the re-enactment of the sales tax. The second speech by a candi date for governor will be made on April 14 at the same time and place by "Sandy" Graham. In vitations have also been extend ed to Clyde R. Hoey of Shelby and to John R. McRae of Char lotte. Neither . of these candi- , dates have been heard from by the CPU. FOR SALE: Royal portable type writer in excellent condition. Drop around and make me an. offer. D. JUDSON; 114 Grimes.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 7, 1936, edition 1
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