Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 8, 1936, edition 1 / Page 1
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mm f ) VOLUME XLV CHAPEL HILL, N. C, NOVEMBER 8, 1936 E?rronAL ncaa m NUMBER 45 Half Of Glass Must Decide On Budgets Audit Board Has Power To Withhold Money From Groups Will Check Funds Before any class expenditures :are legal during the present school year, a meeting of 50 per ;ent of the class must be held for .approval of the class budget, it was announced yesterday by Student Body Vice-President Fred Weaver. ' Weaver's ruling followed the council's recent legislation aimed to end unauthorized spending of funds by class officers. No Shekels Any class which does not have a, ou per cent attendance at a meeting for budget approval will not be able to spend any money in its account. At its next meeting, the Stu dent Audit board, which writes checks for each of the classes, will be instructed by the Student council to withhold money from all classes which have not legally sanctioned their budgets. - Weaver explained that one. of the council's chief purposes in requiring the class budget meet ings is to make it necessary for a majority of each class to know the use to which its treasury is put. Phi Assembly The Phi assembly will hold its weekly meeting Tuesday night at 7 :15 on the top floor of New East. A bill carried over from the last meeting on grades will be broadened to a bill on education in general. A report will be made by the committee appoint ed to study a special topic under grades. PHILOSOPHY CLUB TO DISCUSS ART Harland To Speak First On November 17 A series of meetings has been arranged by the Undergraduate Philosophy club at which time they will have faculty represent atives from the various fields oi fine arts to speak on the artistic standards of their specific fields. On November 17. Dr. Har land will speak on architecture; November 24, Dr. Smith on painting; December 1, Profes sor Paul Green on drama; De cember 8, Dr. Swalin on. music. Professor Green is anxious to appear and will do so unless call ed to Hollywood too soon after nis return from New York this month. The- previously announced meeting for November 10 has been postponed as there is no speaker available for that date. The meetings of the above-men tioned series will be held in the Grail room of Graham Memoria at 8:30 p. m. on the dates men tioned. All undergraduates are invited to attend these meet ings. ' . Bull's Head Tea Dr. J. P. Harland of the Greek department will be the speaker sit. tho wppIcIv Bull's Head tea Tuesday afternoon at 4 :30. Dr. Harland will sneak on Ttino- Tnt-Ankh-Amen. He wil illustrate his lecture with lan tern slides. Dr. Harland is loiown in the field of archaeology for his work in excavating. Rules We aver Duke Tickets To assure each student of a seat at the Duke game tickets will be given ut at the Y. M. C. A. on Wednes day, Thursday and Friday, between the hours of 9 a. m. and 6 p. m. Details concern ing the exchange of pass books tickets for seats will be printed in Tuesday morning's Daily Tar Heel. PARKING BARRED ON CAMERON BY NEW REGULATION 1 . t - Policeman In Uniform Will Patrol Area Closed To Use Beginning tomorrow, parking of', automobile arming ,,, building and on Cameron avenue oetween swam nan ana tne ar- boretum will be prohibited bv l the administration. In announcing the new ruling, the Campus Traffic Regulations committee yesterday stated that it had acted "to protect the saf e- ty of students from the danger of automobiles operating in that zone." , Drivers will be required to park in the restricted zones be hind Memorial hall, Phillips hall, Steele dormitory, Manning hall, Alumni building, and Smith dor- mitory. Arm of the Law A uniformed policeman will patrol the non-parking area and remind drivers of the new law. Signs will be erected to indicate authorized parking areas. - The committee spent the past month ' studying traffic condi- ions. and has based its new. or dinance on the danger it believes students face from speeding cars in the prohibited areas. Composing the committee are Assistanj; Controller L. B. Rog- erson. Dean R. B. House, Dean Francis Bradshaw. Dr. W. C. Coker, P. L. Burch, director of T ?J 1 i 1 1 J J university pnysical piaii us, aiiu J. L. Caldwell, Chapel Hill city manager. Olllllll LlJL AA1CIVCAOUXI To AddreSS Meeting Of Scientific Group Cellulosic Films, Bridge Truss Stresses Are Subjects The 371st meeting of the Elisha Mitchell society will be held in 206 Phillips Tuesday at 7:30. At this meeting of the society Sherman E. Smith of the chem istry department will discuss "Permeability of Cellulosic Films," and T. F. Hickerson of the engineering department will speak on "Secondary Stresses in Bridge Trusses." Sophomores To Meet An important meeting of the sophomore class to be held at when I was working on my dis 7 :30 Tuesday night at Memorial sertation over twelve vears ago," hall was announced yesterday by Bud Hudson, presmenx oi tne claSS. Hudson urges air members of the class to be present since new regulations require 50 per cent of the class to be present to ap- prove the budget which will be urooosed. Dance leaders will be j. chosen for the Sophomore Hop and further progress with the dance wiil be reported upon. Dormitcrv Resident Grope In Darkness When Li3hts Go Off i Intrepid Men Take to Oil and Wicks in Emergency to Continue Studies V By Bob duFour When the lights cease to func tion in both quadrangles once a year, that's not much to write home about, but when that un happy occurrence happens, twice in one week, dormitory residents are very liable to abandon letters and telegraph home for candles and flashlights. Monday's dilemma was taken as a matter of course, after the first five minutes of mass howl ing and yelling. The unfortu nates either congregated under the street lamps and engaged in much small talk until illumina tion again became apparent, or roamed in thfeSark halls playing boogy-man;r One poor -foul, caught taking a shower, found himself not only incarcerated, out, on nnaiiy ' J 3 1 l f 11 groping his dripping way to his door, -foil rt( ih at. Vi i s r nrnn m ap had departed into the darkness l fortunate one alternately drip ped and shivered for an hour I until some Samaritan threw him a blanket. When Thursday evening rolled around, the Monday incident had iuontmuea on last page CELLIST TO PLAY AS SALON ARTIST Student Union Concert To Feature Soloist Today At 5 Kathryn Kennard and her ceno win oe ieatured m a con 11 11 1 A I 1 cert at Graham Memorial this afternoon at 5 o'clock by the Carolina Salon ensemble. Miss Kennard will play Rach maninoff's "In the Silence of the Night" and the "Intermezzo from Goyescas" by Granada- Cassado. Wilton Mason will ac company her on the piano. The first part of the program is to include "The JSvening Star Song" from "Tannhauser" by Waempr. and So.hnhp.rt's "Rosa. munde 0verture I TVTnrfprn ' Miiqh - The sec0nd part of the pro- rrYam ies fvmrraifl vF mnrlorn Urrill -nloir "r.riJa. ProoV' W T.n- mar Stringfield. the organizer and former conductor of the North Carolina Symphony or chestra. Nacio Herb Brown s by some people thequal of Ra Continued on last page) Largest Thoreau Collection Held By Dr. Adams English Professor Began His Collection While An Under graduate Here By Elizabeth Wall "I became aware that there was a dehciencv m the amount of avaiiable material on Thoreau Laid Dr. Raymond B. Adams of the University faculty and pos- Ispsam nf flip WnrlH's largest 1 Thoreau collection. For over twelve years Dr. Ad- ams has been collecting Tho- reau's books and letters, begin ning as a graduate student here at the University. He began with a small shelf to supplement his own study and since then has Continued on last page) H utchins, Lead Si To 26-6 Debate Squad Coaches Ml 1 Professors W. A. Olsen, left, have been prepping the University debate squad for their com ing clash with an English debate will be: "Resolved, That the United States' Constitution is a men ace to life, liberty, and the pursuit Freshmen To Name Candidates Tuesday Election to be Held One Week Hence; Place Undecided Nominations for freshman class officers will be conducted by the Student council in Memo rial hall at chapel period Tues day. Election will be held one week later. The Student council meets to morrow night and will set the place of election. It has been suggested this year that voting for freshmen officers be held dtiring more than one day and in more than one place on the campus. CONFERENCE HE AD ARGUESATHLETICS Fletcher Would Abolish Graham Plan As he charged 16 member col leges with violation of the spirit of the Graham plan, Forest Fletcher, Southern conference president, proposed in Richmond yesterday the scrapping of the plan as a means of stopping the proselyting of athletes. Fletcher asserted that he would suggest the plan's abolish ment at the' next conference meeting, and the enactment of entrance and scholastic require ments instead. Terming the plan "idealistic" and "impractical" he said that although no violations had been reported, every school was violating the spirit of the proposal. Of This University Graduate Women, Men Have Informal Affair Mary Sloane and H. A. Matthews Give Exhibition Dances JThe graduate women made good their promise to give the graduate men a big time when they entertained them at an in formal dance Friday night at the Archer house. Dancing was from 9 until 1. The house was decorated with fall flowers and ferns. Mary Elizabeth Sloan and H. A. Matthews delighted the guests with exhibition dances. Mrs. Victor Humphries helped the crirls serve nunch to about Little, Dashiell, Burnette looth-Glicking Carolina Team Win Over Scrapping 'Cats and E. J. Woodhouse, right, who group. The question to be argued of happiness.5 n INTERNATIONAL Y SCRIBE TO SPEAK TOMORROW NIGHT Barnett Will Conduct Open Peace Forum At 7:15 Eugene Barnett, general sec retary of international Y. M..C. A. work in 54 countries, will ad- councils tomorrow at I :io p. m. in the banquet hall of Graham Memorial. Mr. Barnett will snWIr a-nri . ffmiriiiff. r?n nrtPTi fn- nini nn'TiMM " Mr. Barnett has been in China for some 27 years and is a thor ough student of Chinese life and Communism in China. He will! speak on some of his. experiences at a joint meeting of the Union young people's forum and the lour x cabinets tms evening at 7:30 in the Baptist Sunday SChOOl room. ' T7l i Tl r T Li. roT two years ivir. xiarnett served as general secretary of the local Y. M. C. A: and as a graduate student. While here he was an active debator, Phi Beta Kappa man, and member of Al- Dha Tau Omesra f raternitv. All faculty members, students, and townspeople who are inter- ested are invited to attend the meetings. Bird Dogs Popular With UNC Professors In Canine Interview Apparent Campus Waifs Really Do Have Owners Among Faculty Members By Sarah Dalton Chapel Hill is going to the dogs. Freshman chapel will tes tify to that. But the question is, Where do all these dogs come from and to whom do they be long?" A great number of them be long to the professors, and, after all, the professors do need to have something around that they can get a response from. The most popular dog here on m ii m i campus seems to oe tne Dira dog, sometimes kept for hunting and sometimes just as a pet. Dean Hobbs loves bird dogs and has always owned one. His present dog is a greyish setter named "King." Mr. Garner, pro fessor of mathematics, has a black and white pointer which he has named "Beau" and some times jestingly calls "Beau Continued on last page) Capacity Crowd Watch Tar Heels Roll Up Impressive Win Hurl Many Passes By Kaplax-Kablin Putting forth its big scoring drive of the season, a smooth- clicking Tar Heel outfit romped through to a 26-6 victory over a scrappy Wildcat eleven in the feature attraction of Davidson's homecoming yesterday. Following the opening kick- off, Carolina stopped the Wild cats in their tracks, and then opened up a powerful attack with Big Jim Hutchins polishing off the drive with a 16 yard jaunt for the initial touchdown. A capacity crowd watched Captain Dick Buck win the toss and elect to kick. Burnette's kick carried to the Davidson 3-yd. line from where Armfield returned it to the Davidson 24. Teenie Lafferty, sophomore star, was injured on the play and re moved from the game. After two line plays failed, Armfield punt- f,d he ,Carolinf ,42 f"- tie fell after making the catch. Three plays gained little yard age and Burnette kicked out of bounds on the Davidson 10. After one running play had been smeared, Armfield kicked to Lit tle who returned the ball from his own 48 to Davidson's 47. Burnette Attacks Opening up a real power at- taCK, ISUrnette Sliced OH taCKie Ifor 10 yards and a first down. A pass from Hutchins to Buck who lateraled to Watson brought (Continued on page five) i IGORDON TO TALK ON JAZZ TUESDAY Fuller, Benton To Aid I Tn Aflicio Prncrrnni I O Jazz its past, present, and future" will be the subject of a lecture Tuesday night by Hal Gordon, of the German depart- ment and authority on jazz. The lecture will be given in Hill Music hall at 7:30. Mr. Gordon has for eight years been a critic and reviewer of modern music swing and sweet. He reviews records for several of the largest recording companies and has a collection of many thousands of records, modern and classical. His lec ture Tuesday night will be illus trated by numerous selections from his collection of jazz. Past, Present, Future In his lecture he will endeavor to discuss and illustrate how jazz developed, its present mani festations, and its probable fu ture. Jimmy Fuller and William Benton will assist Mr. Gordon in his lecture : Jimmy Fuller as technical adviser and William Benton as caretaker of the pho nograph upon which Mr. Gordon will play his records. The ma- (Continued on last page) "College is the place where pebbles are polished and dia monds are dimmed," Ingersoll says. The editorial on page' two points oat a university trouble. 1 1 t ! f i i 75 guests.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1936, edition 1
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