Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 14, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO To Help Something Bettes Grow WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1935 fyz Batlp Car Seel 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. Don K. McKee Editor A. Beed Sarratt, Jr. T. Eli Joyfier Jesse Lewis.; .Managing Editor Business Manager ..Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Associate Editors: E. L. Kahn, J. M. Smith, S. W. Rabb. City Editor: C. W. Gilmore. News Editors: L, L Gardner, E. J. Hamlin, W. S. Jordan, Jr., J. F. Jonas, Jr., H. Goldberg. Editorial Assistants: R. T. Perkins, Ruth Crowell, G. Burns, J. H. Sivertsen, V. Gilmore. Deskmen: W. G. Arey, Jr., H. H. Hirschfeld, C. O. Jeffress, R. Simon, E. T. Elliot. Sunday Supplement: A. H. Merrill, Director; Ruth Duffee, C. W. Gunter, Jr., J. J. Lane, R. H. Leslie, R. B. Lowery, G. B. Riddle. Reporters: B. F. Dixon, Dorothy Snyder, J. B. Reese, Erika Zimmermann, J. K. Harriman, R. K. Barber, H. J. Burgess, J. S. Currie, Sarah Dalton, S. P. Hancock, C. B. Hyatt, Elizabeth Keeler, W. B. Kleeman, Mary Matthews, R. Miller, K. V. Murphy, R. M. Pockrass, Nancy Schallert, Irene Wright, W. B. Stewart, Eliza beth Wall, T. M. Ward, Jane Wilson, M. Rosen berg, T. B. Keys, H. C. Clement, T. Royster, J. Hancock, McKeldin Puckett. Sports: R. R. Howe, Editor; N. Craig, J. Eddleman, L. S. Levitch, Night Editors; F. W. Ferguson, L. Rubin, H. Kaplan, E. Karlin, W. Raney, E. L. Peterson, T. C. Tufts, W. Lindau, H. Langsam, J. Stoff, M. Drucker, S. Rolfe. Exchanges: N. Kantor, E. L. Rankin, Jr., T. M. Stanback, J. McCall, W. A. Sutton, Jr. Reviews: W. P. Hudson. Art: Nell Booker, P. J. Schinhan, Jr. Photography: J. Kisner, Director; A. T. Calhoun, H. Bachrach. Business Staff Advertising Manager: W. D. McLean, C. W. Black ,wdl Collection Manager: R. C. Crooks, Jr. Office Manager: C. S. Humphrey, Jr. Durham Representative: R. G. S. Davis, Jr. Coed Advertising Manager: Mary Lindsay. For This Issue News: Lytt Gardner. Sports: Leonard S. Levitch o Townspeople Union TWICE AS MANY townspeople as students heard Miss Kay Def enbacher's excellent violin reci tal at Graham Memorial Sunday. There were ap proximately 55 students present. The Graham Memorial board of directors pays Miss Defenbacher $25 per concert. Miss Defen bacher's concerts are worth the money of anyone who hears them. ' But Sunday only some 55 students heard her. And it is from the general student fee of $1 per quarter that Memorial entertainers are paid. It is a generous gesture for students to provide entertainment for townspeople. Some, however, may prefer an entertainment they will enjoy at tending. Violin concerts are excellent but Graham Me morial should and could give entertainment so at tractive to students that there would be no room for non-students. -S. W. R. What Price Glory rEN IN THE Course of Human Events (Woodhouse, government 156) the social ef forts of the eds and the coeds become malcoordi nated, it is the inalienable right of the Y. W. C. A. to attempt to coordinate same. Ippso factory, Mamie Rose and her crew have set up their dating bureau under the slogan, "Now this school might be jeopardized. The reader noted that Mamie Rose did not say "Now is the date for all good men . . . " We feel indignant as spokesmen of the campus that no blacklist was established off which we students would be proud to be! We believe a caste system exists inconspicuous ly here and unless such a suspicion is either dis pelled or accounted for, the fair womanhood of this school might b jeapordized. The reader noted that we said "fair" womanhood; it is generally accepted that only the "fair" grade will be avail able to the blind claimants! The "extra-fine" grade is naturally going to be in such demand by the known that the unknown won't have the pro verbial prayer. Seventhly, the date bureau is subversively aim ed at disrupting the money-making schemes of the Grail and other party organizations which admirably, constantly, religiously attempt to breed good feeling among the coeds and the eds aforementioned. Students who can't get dates at the "Shack" after Grail introductions are proba bly the ones who ought to be on the aforemen tioned (again) blacklist . ... The date bureau will be free with no one profiting (least of all the datees themselves, we fear), while the Grail makes a dollar on each prospective girl-meeter, -which dollar by the way is always spent on the campus. Unfair competition from this new source might wreck the purple-and-white's progress! On the other hand (change of tone coming) the date bureau will necessitate many, many more girls than we now have in the University. Which necessity will surely force the Y. W. C. A., if they make their bureau successful, to bring more girls to Carolina. This indirectly will produce co-education which will satisfy the' A. S. U. and we'll all live happily ever after .... Every cloud has a sil ver lining, though never the swain shall meet in a date bureau ... . J. M. S. SAND AND SALVE By Stuart Rabb SHORT CHANGED Colonel Knox muffed a good chance yesterday. Before him was assembled as large an audi ence as the University can mus ter. The gathering was Demo cratic but not definitely hostile. And yet the Colonel was con tent to make a few general con demnations, to talk about our football team, and to praise the University. He left his audience without attempting to make a single point. The Political union went to a great deal of trouble and ex pense to arrange the Colonel's appearance. The Colonel him self went out of his way to make the speech. Now that Knox has spoken we wonder if anybody concerned in the event got his money's worth. RADIO By Bud Kornblitb 7:30 WEAF Frank Parker, tenor. 7:45 WBT Boake Carter. 8:00 WPTF One Man's Family. WBT Cavalcade of America. WJZ Fannie Brice, Arden's Orchestra. 8:30 WEAF Wayne King's Orch. WJZ Ethel Barrymore in "The Doll House." WBT Burns and Allen. 9 : 00 WDNC Kostejanete' Or chestra, Nino Martini. WPTF Fred Allen's Town Hall Tonight. 9 :oo WPTF Address by Presi dent F. D. Roosevelt. WDNC Same as WPTF. 10:00 WPTF Your Hit Parade. WBT Gang Busters; Phillip Lord. 10:30 WGN Kay Kyser's Orch. WDNC News; Vocals by Verrill; Jack Shannon. 11:00 WDNC Artie Shaw's Orch. WJZ Henry Busse's Orch. WEAF Nano Rodrigo's Orch. 11:15 WEAF Phil Levant's Orch. 11 : 30 WLW Phil Oilman's Orch. WEAF Casa Loma Orch. 12:00 WDNC Guy Lombardo's Or chestra. WEAF Fletcher Henderson's Orch. WOR Cab Callaway's Orch. 12:30 WABC Benny Goodman's Orch. Required Subjects (The Davidsonian) Do college students of today have to take so many courses of un-needed subjects like so much castor oil? This potent question echoed throughout the country, follow ing an address by Charles Eu gene Mcintosh before the Con ference on Vocational Guidance at North Carolina State College. . . . . Mr. Mcintosh illus trated his point of the table d' hote style of feeding courses to students in that he endured two years of unnecessary foreign language when he desired to concentrate on his major. And again the question arises in his mind when a girl in high school refused to attend school because two years of language was re quired to graduate and she did not expect to use this subject in after life. Dr. Robert Maynard Hutch ins, young and aggressive Pres ident of the University of Chi cago, chucked tradition over board, when the requirement was established that no formal grades or exams were to be giv en. A, comprehensive examina tion, taken when the student felt capable of going into a higher group of work, sufficed as grades. ias. Information Nick Read, who comes from the heart of the South that still beats, besides being head of the University club, 1 3 leading Pari, sian hatmakers with his straw chapeau seen hither and yon ia the rain Friday. In Monday's advertising class the members woke up when Eli za Rose said, following an ex planation of the technical side of a Carnation milk ad, "But Mr. Taylor, that cow doesn't look contented to me." Professor: "I just want you boys to know I have no physical fear of ya. George Slams The Russian Season To the Editor, The Daily Tar Heel: I'm fast becoming a real Caro lina student. I've even got to the place where I don't get mad when somebody mistakes me for a sophomore. That's one of the things about this college busi ness, Janie ; the only bad part of being a freshman is that in an other year you'll probably be a sophomore. But that all depends on the professors. Oh boy, have we been havin' a fast skejule lately! I didn't exactly understand at first when I began hearing about a Russian period they were going to have. The funny part of it though, was that I heard the f ellows that would be Russian were Greek lettermen. That's still just one of those things men like Ein stein has to figger out. A guy has to be famous to make crazy things sound sensible. s. , ... ;K Gettin' Back Well to get back to the Rus sian period. They got things here called fraternitys, Janie. These frats (that's what the upperclassmen call 'em) send out little cards with your name and where you're from and where to come when. You go around to see them one at a time. They act like you'd just stole their marbles, though, when you come in the door. One fellow grabs your hand and shoves you over to a table where they take away your card and give you another one. Then they select one guy to pick on each fresh man. He drags them around the room and everybody -grabs you and says, "I've been looking for ward to seeing you. What did you say your name was?" I didn't understand that very well, but I didn't have time to think. It seems you aren't supposed to think anyway before you decide which fraternity you're going to join. A frat (I called a fraternity a "frat" the other day and no body said a word this certainly is a democratic college, Janie) is a gang of boys who get together. They call 'em "Social Fraterni tys" : I guess that word "Social" gave them the idea of calling it Russian season. The frat houses here are covered by something they call morgages so they tell me. I couldn't tell 'cause I haven't been here very long. They look like ordinary roofs like we have at home to me, though. While a fraternity is Russian you you find out that at least half the famous men that ever Rushing Hours Today 2 amounted to anything belonged to that frat. They have a sorta novel idea: each frat is divided up into chapters. Some of the guys just looked like paragraphs and subheads, though. But talk ing about being famous, I reckon I'll have to join one of the things if I ever expect to be Chief of Police like I told you I'd be when I grew up. Love, George. Elizabeth Keeler and Barbara Harris were among those with out a voice over the weekend Elizabeth, who does not like to be called "Ruby," still is speech less, but Barbara is now able to squeak a little. Ed Farish from Penns' Grove, N. J., is longing for a good old Northern meal. "Never," he de clares, "have I ever tasted any thing that would compare with your Southern pie. Once in the North I ate a pie and forgot to take off the cardboard bottom which compared favorably with it 7 to 9 p. m. Behind The Wheels Mrs; W. B. Stephens By Erika Zimmermann Greatly annoyed at the obstruction of the driveway beside Bingham hall by a parked car with no driver, Mrs. W. B. Ste phens, secretary to the school of commerce, flung her car keys to the janitor and asked him to remove it before "something happens to it." . j A car must be a very precious possession to this efficient lady, who has been secretary of the commerce school for the past six years. Laughingly she admitted that she must have the "world's record for commuting." Livings in Durham, Mrs. Ste phens drives the 12 miles to and front her office every day And she must fee in a hurry to get back at the end of the aft ernoon because she has a Rpvpn-vAar-nld daughter named Lois waiting for her in the tobacco city. Snapshots of Lois adorn her mother's desk, and Mrs. Stephens points with pride to one especially that of her daughter riding a horse which gives the girl lilliputian proportions. Hobby: Sweeping And while she was on the subject of Lois, Mrs. Stephens added that "keeping house on weekends" is her hobby. Her job here as secretary to Dean Carroll is manifold. Accord ing to Mrs. Stephens herself, some of her duties are "seeing that the students take the right courses, that they are fulfilling their requirements for a degree, and that they go to class." Also included m the day's work is watching over eligibility require ments. Busiest days for Mrs. Stephens are those before and after holi days. The period before is taken up with registration. "The stu dents are like lambs now-very well trained," remarked the sec- lel "ly f0rm 0ne Hne in the offi and the rest stay out m the hall." No Imps In this connection she added, "I have never, as long as I have. njT6' rUVCM a scourteo1 or at all ill-mannered boy. ?1 y n 211 f them on eneral Principles-some-Z,SStr yo" the nS W. But so far as courtesy is concerned, they are the nicest boys I have ever seen." And then she came to the period after registration "They say women change their minds," said Mrs. Stephens, "but I Low SLJUL courses the way boys do. They want to. change every course they register for." "But there may be an explanation," 'she mused. "A lot of boys SSSTf i ,fd 1fide o- Th simply don't know "It wn?twn th6y t0 fiDd out what th should take." "S6 maire? ln English and mino"d in education, fessel CUrSeS didD,t W ." e con- astwT!7'' v,MrS- StepW mr to "Wiry work W a?d tlTId..likJe t0 be teaching now- She loves her rSowo mLy yp3eoSe."redeemiDg featm f the is ettin eanlwnwT? the -"Car-s stfll there." Mean thing to do," she calmly interjected.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 14, 1936, edition 1
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