Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 20, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL The official newspaper of tke Publications Union Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of 2arch 3, 1879. Sub scription price, $3.00 for the college year. Business and editorial offices: 204-206 Graham Memorial , - Telephones: -editorial, 4351; business, 4356; night, 6806 Don K. McKee. .Editor A. Reed Sarratt, Jr Thomas Eli Joyner . -Managing Editor -Business Manager Editorial Staff Associate Editoes: Edwin Kahn, Mac Smith, , Stuart Rabb. City Editor: Charles Gilmore. News - Editors: Lytt Gardner, Ed ; Hamlin, Bill Jordan. Editorial Assistants: Bob Perkins, Ruth Crowell, Gordon Burns, AHan Merrill, Jimmy Sivertsen, Voit Gilmore. Deskmen: Will Arey, Herbert Hirschfeld, Carl Jeffress. Reporters: Randolph Reece, Ben Dixon, Dorothy Snyder, Jesse Reese. Sports: Ray Howe, Editor; Herbert Goldberg, New ton Craig, John Eddleman, Night Editors; Fletcher Ferguson, Len Rubin, Harvey Kaplan, Ed Karlin, Bill Raney, E. L. Peterson, Tom Tufts. Reviews: Bill Hudson. Files: H. T. Terry, Director. Art: Nell Booker, Phil Schinhan. Photography: Jerry Kisner, Director; Alan. Cal houn. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bill McLean, Crist Black well. - ' Subscription Manager: Roy Crooks. Durham Representative: Bobby Davis. For This Issue News Editor: Herbert Goldberg Philosophy Of Life I 4 To Help Something Better Grow Text Rebates This year the Book Exchange is presenting a carefully worked out plan designed to lower the cost of textbooks for students. It is estimated that by the 10 per cent rebate the students will save around $4,000 a year, a considerable saving to the student body as a whole, as well as to the individual student. When considering the difficulties encountered in making this plan? such as the possible publish ers' disapproval, the necessary accounting set-up, and the designing of a rebate system that would . not be abused, one realizes the efforts the admin istration is making in order to aid the students. It is up to us to cooperate with the Book Exchange by making full use of this plan to see to it that it becomes a success. E. L. K. Library Hours Mild displeasure met the announcement from the library that reserve books would henceforth be due back in the morning at 9:30 instead of 10:30. Many fellows didn't like it that the over sight check-out time had been changed to 9:00 from 8:30. Challenged on the point yesterday, library of ficials put. up a pretty clean explanation of the changes. Reserve shelves this year will contain many actual course textbooks, "besides the usual lines of parallel readings and the new. hours will keep the texts in the library a longer time. The commerce and social science reading rooms have always maintained the new hours because they too carry many textbooks, and the reserve room change thus gives all overnight users exactly the same hours. To clinch the argument, the officials say, is the study made this summer by the library science school. The national survey showed that most college reserve rooms let books out one hour be fore closing and demanded their return one hour after opening the next day. Our new hours, there fore, just go to show our copy-cat efficiency. J.M.S. See the Wolf Acting upon the request of Coach Raymond Wolf , the Student Union Board of Directors has voted to establish a coaching headquarters in the room opposite the athletic association in Graham Memorial. Accordingly, an office has been provid ed for Coach Wolf and his assistants in the for mer University club room; and the University, club has been moved elsewhere. " Coach Wolf, in asking for the office, declared that he desired to establish a closer personal con- , tact with the student body. Now that he has been installed in his new quarters, students are af- forded the opportunity for this contact. A better understanding between the average student and the coach his school employs can go a long way toward eliminating a great many of the unpleasant misunderstandings that might be otherwise unavoidable. S. W. R. Sunday Thought The purpose of life is to buUd the divine community. The way to create the ideal society is to live today as if it is already a reality. Live this hour as a good member of the Family of God. De pend upon love. Run the risks. Accept the conse sequences. Have confidence in God and faith in man. Rather than forsake the way of love it is better for a man to die. Kirby Page "Living Triumphantly" (Farrar and Rinehart) Condemns SAND AND SALVE By Stuart Rabb You Other Witch-burners . . . Truth, tolerance, and "free dom of mind in this day of mod ern witch-burning" are words easily said. To Franklin Roose velt at the Harvard tercenten ary celebration they must have been troublesome. For it is not easy to talk when one has his tongue in his cheek. And it is doubtful if any recent public figure has "burned" as "witches" more of those who disagreed with him. 5 F. D. R. has attempted to make the voters of America a witch-burning mob incensed with class hatred. DuPont, Mor gan, and members of the Amer ican Liberty League are the witches. All who make and accumulate large sums of money are eligible for witch-craft. Those who con tribute to the Democratic war chest are innocent. Moral: If you've got to be rich be a Democrat. .RADIO By Bud Kornblite 9 :00 WDNC Original Com munity sing, guest leaders. WPTF Concert. 9 ;30 WGN-WOR Horace Heidt's Orch. 10:00 WDNC Jay Free man's Orch. WGN-WOR Ted Fio-Rito's Orch. 10:30 WPTF Leon Na varo's Orch. WDNC Frank Dailey's Orch. WGN-WLW Kay JCyser's Orch. 11:00 WABC Artie Shaw's Orch. WJZ Henry Busse's Orch. 11 : 30 WDNC Bob Crosby's Orch. WGN-WOR Ozzie Nel son's Orch. 12:00 Fletcher Henderson's Orch. WSM, WENR. Be Sure to Hear 1:00 Magic Key WPTF. 3 :00 Intercontinental Con cert, with Hal Kemp, Howar Barlow, Frank Black, others WDNC. 7 :00 Goodwill Court WPTF. 7:30 Eddie Cantor's Show, with Bobby Breen WDNC. 8 :00 Sunday Evening Hour, with John Charles Thomas WDNC. 8:15 Paul Whiteman's Vari eties WLW. 9:00 Community Sing, with Milton Berle, Wendall Hall, Billy Jones and Ernie Hare WDNC. l rt - kS34A o cress? cppw wnc OUF. UNV. - COLOR OPERATIVE. AUTHOCSMtfWUMOBg. mr I,. ii ii ini 'rM-mwifinfy-1"- c 1 orresponaeii Letters Over 250 Words Subject to Cutting by Editor c e You Gourmet! To tie Editor, The Daily Tar Heel: ' I am insult. I am insult not one times but two times by Pete Ivey. The other night at College Night he called me suave. For tunately for him I was absent, looking in my dictionary to see what a gourm is. You see, Ivey wrote me a let ter about two weeks ago recom mending the Graham Memorial grill on the basis that all galls are divided into" three parts: two parts being satisfied by or dinary hash and the third part demanding- the superior cuisine of the Graham Memorial Grill. I didn't mind being solicited; but I did object to being addressed as "Dear Gourmet," for such was the salutation of the letter. Fm not very bright, but I have always observed that an et sound added to a word makes the word both diminutive and derogatory. For instance, or par example, I have seen enough three-room apartments in my time to know that a kitchenette is always a dirty little kitchen. A gourmet, therefore, would cer tainly be a dirty little gourm, and that's certainly no way for Pierre Ivey to be speaking about me. . Monsieur Ivey! En guar del JIM DANIEL. Batons Raised By Roberts Jernigan, Jr. ll.UMmWW.VMWWWWWUWtWWj.VI HULL inwjwwwyywwwiHi r s I - - : TED BLACK This favorite orchestra of stage and radio has won acclaim for its slow, sweet music on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1930 it enjoyed a succession of triumphs abroad, playing, among other places, for eightr months at the Blue Room, smartest Paris night club, and later at Hotel Norman die, exclusive society gathering place in Deauville. Following its return to Amer ica, Ted Black and his orchestra were featured for twelve weeks on Broadway in Hammerstein's original "Ballyhoo" stage pro duction, with W. C. Fields. From Broadway, Ted and his musi cians sailed for -Havana, where they enjoyed another success at. the Hotel Presidente, and, inci dentally, enjoyed the distinction of being the first American dance band to play at this fa mous Cuban hostelry. Golden Sax Back, again, in the United States in the spring of 1932, Ted Black found his now celebrated orchestra very much in demand for broadcast engagements. There followed a series of radio appearances on the major net works which made Ted' Black and "his Golden Sax" known from coast to coast. At the same time the orchestra was featured at various New York night spots. During the fall and win ter seasons of 1932 and 1933, Ted Black and his band were presented at the Village Barn, weir known Greenwich Village restaurant. More recently,' the orchestra has been appearing at the Cafe Royale at Fifth avenue and 43rd street. New York. Ted Black himself first be came interested in music as a student in the Erasmus High School in Brooklyn, where he learned to play the clarinet and took part in high school musi cales. Following his graduation, Ted decided on a course in art and entered the' Art League School in New York, where he defrayed his tuition largely from his earnings gained by fill ing odd engagements with his clarinet. In the summer of 1924, Ted organized a five-piece band from among acquaintances whom he had met on vacations at Lake Hopatcong. Ted in duced one of the resort's pro prietors to build an annex next to his roadside eating stand and use it as a dancing auditorium for visiting guests. Ted and his hastily organized troupe fur nished the music, and the proj ect proved a sensational success. Abandoning all ideas of pur suing his art course any further, Ted set about building up his orchestra for more iVrtant Suand WaS dually re warded securing an engagt ment at the Little Club, one Continued on latt page) SUNDAY, SCEPTEMBEK: Zfr I93s Coed Policy To the Editor, The Daily Tab Heel: This month six or more girls who live in Chapel Hill are en tering W. C. U. N. C. Three more are going out of the state to other colleges. All but two of these girls wanted to enter Caro lina, but the regulation exclud ing all freshman and sophomore coeds, except those entering the professional schools, kept them out. A year ago three Chapel Hill girls entered the pharmacy school here. Why?, For the sim ple reason that they wanted a college education and could not afford to go to a college out of town. Because of this obnoxious ruling, they were forced to study pharmacy (in which they were not interested) . or do without a college education. Several grad uates of Chapel Hill High School in the last two years have had to do without college since they did not wish to take up pharmacy, and could not afford another school. Why could these girls not af ford other schools? Well, in the first place the tuition in most colleges especially women's col leges is higher than at Caro lina; second, the girls have to -pay for room and board while at another college ; and of course this is not necessary when a girl is living with her parents; third, there is the cost of transporta tion to and from school. In these days college profes sors, in fact Chapel Hill resi dents in general, do not have any extra money that they want to get rid of in a hurry. Why, may I ask, should these people who live in a town which has a great university be forced to spend extra money to send their daugh ters out of town to other schools that are often inferior to the one right in their home town? I believe that it is about time that something was done by the students and townspeople here to remove this unnecessary reg ulation which keeps Chapel HilL girls from attending Carolina JOHN W. FRINK. Arc We Becoming Educated? Genuine culture consists in being a citizen of the universe, not only on one or two arbitrary fragments of space-time; it helps men to understand human society as a whole, to estimate wisely the ends that communi ties should pursue, and to see the present in, its , relation to past and future. BERTRAND RUSSELL. Magazine Meeting Upperclassmen who are either old or prospective contributors to the Carolina Magazine will meet tomorrow night at 7:30 in the banquet room of Graham Memorial. " Joint 'Y Meeting a be a joint Y- M. C. A.-Y. W. C. A. "lemonade hike" m Battle Park today in honor of new University coeds. The two groups will meet first m front of the "Y at 4:30 p.m. Gussie Guesses: One freshman says he's fund a place to stay. He gets his room and board, and sleeps on the board
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 20, 1936, edition 1
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