Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 27, 1937, edition 1 / Page 1
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Ill VS. 111 E I jr V ft 2 VOLUME XLV EDITORIAL PHONE 4JJ1 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1937 EUSKESS THOSE 4JS6 NUMBER 118 ipffloM- Garmval. Be Meld. .iMCDCDir P;Uv Board Sfeiks Council Ruling On Staff Elections John Parker Promises Interpretation At Monday Meetings Campus May Vote Through Voit Gilmore, secre tary, the Publications Union board yesterday called for a stu dent council interpretation of the ' section of its constitution describing1 campus election i of editors-in-chief of campus pub lications, as a result of the reso lution of the Daily Tar Heel staff Thursday 'to', elect its edi tor rather than nominate him for campusrvote. me ciause m tne section on the duties and powers of the board - being called for interpre tation is that which reads : "To appoint' and set, forth' the duties of all : other paid officers on the various publications, excepting "that the editors-in-chief of the various publications are elected I by the Union." Entire Student Body As defined in the publications constitution, which was revised and approved by the student hndv last, snrino- trip "TTnion'M Tneans the entire student body. tt t.i-- .:jx. -e -u I student body, last night stated xnat tne stuaent council win n i j 1 i f i i hi consider the clause and issue an interDretetion ' at a meeting Monday night. He termed it most significant " Thursday afternoon the news- -paper staff passed by a vote of 33-8, the resolution, "That the . . . . . . I Daily Tar Heel staff elect its editor instead of. nominating him for camnus vote." Council Must Decide of thf vrelution dent council. If it does not recog- nize the resolution, a campus 1 referendum may-be called, with the staff asking the student body td vest the power of eJec- ( Continued on last page) National Officer Of YW To Talk To Campus Unit Mary Jane WiUett, Y. W. C. A; Secretary, to Speak' Twice Monday to' Coeds Miss Mary Jane Willett; na- - ..j .vx . ... w. jete- ivey, master of cere A. will address the local unit of monies. introduced Deaii Spruill the woman's organization at two who made a short' talk. A "Hill meetmgs Monday. , Bfllv"' trior of Ivey amateur rni ..mm mere win oe a caomex meex- ing and luncheon in Graham Memorial from 12 to 2 o'clock in honor of Miss Willett and a general open forum meeting I Monday night at 7 o'clock; in the forum room of the Presbyterian church. District Meet All Y. W. C. A. units in East ern North Carolina, comprising one of thirteen southern dis tricts, will meet in Chapel Hill Saturday for a general assem- mTZ Cuilfnri WAiinmi n A ..wvwu UiUW WWV Miss Willett and Miss Celestine Smith will attend'both services. -Da ul j ufioi a sift rni a:i, na"7 :;:br6wWX desired. Twenty-five their problems of effecting a ,'.:..., .. . Jepson Will Sing r IniMemorial Hall At 8:30 Monday Metropolitan Soprano Is to Appear as Second Winter Quarter Performer Acclaimed by critics as the "radiant find of the year," Helen Jepson, Metropolitan opera star, appears Monday night at 8 :30 in Memorial hall on the student entertainment series. Says the New York Post of Miss Jepson: "Tall and blonde, she reminded one yesterday of a young and svelte" Jeritza. In fact, if Mr. Gatti-Casazza were Mr. Earl Carroll he would consi der Miss Jepson the first among the lady singers at the Metro- politan. In Review "The audience was at her feet hAfnrP. slip linri cnnnr o nno Tf'a I - m not often, even in these favored days, that opera stars look like that and sing so well. She gave a thrilling performance," accord- mS to the Washington News. : Following her debut at the Metropolitan opposite Lawrence l i hhpt Miss JpnsnTi m thp naat two seasons has sung the lead- inn1 cvrTsn: rnl&s i U'o dnt " I """ auai' i Pagliacci, La : Boheme, "Martha .'"Thais," "Louise," I rswnr M w I A ales ot Jlotlman," and other I operas. She has also appeared as guest I artist, with the Chicago Grand I J ; j-i i j i I "Pra aurmg xne lasx xwo years, I and has been acclaimed the sue- jcessor to lviary uaruenin that city. FreshmenSmoker - JleialnbWainHall Ivey Amateurs Are Highlights Ul Aiiair a m A 5. a.w- wlC0uflu.?w iuat, S Plle;s? d .tvf ars"i7a' "tTj". tra, tne r resnman smoKer began last night ' at 8f ' o'clock in Swain haU. During1 the first of the pro gram while retreshments were being ' ' served, MacPherson's Buccaneers gave a short con- cert of syncopated swing music with vocal renditions by Randy pAftT,pr. ' ..- - night1 f amer swung- forth with the "St. Louis Blues" followed by another amateur-nightster, Geddie Monroe, who sang . up ing, at the SaV0y. Bill Olsen, public speaking professor, lead the freshmen in (Continued on last page") Freshman Picnic The Freshman Friendship coaihas invited all members .. . , . X Ineir ciass w a weiner rui4St AriZTZ . cu.u"c" "" 1 1 resnman wno wisxies auenu is reuueowu tu meet, o v? x at cents will be collected from each nprson attending in order to de - 'T Daniels Goes North To Marry Plans for Future Wife of Weis- ner Include Skiing, Cooking University, and until a few days ago, employed by the local ad- vertising firm of Gray and Thompson, Lydia "T Daniels K A . . . ,;., took leave of the campus Sun- A jomt editorship of Bill Hud dav morning and turned north- son and Nlck Read .was endorsed ward towards Swamnscott. Mass., and her impending mar- riaee ' "I've a 1- ways hated June wed- dings," . "T" vol unteered, "so I'm going to be differ ent. That's why we have nicked May instead of the c a nventional June." .. j When May rolls around; DicK Wiesner will be on hand. "T's" plans for the future include ifarnmg xo ski anu vouiung: up - . . . j i . -i . a bit on the art of cooking. Ends Tonight fiaymaKers lO JTresenx LlAvrr' ivniM' 'I AnifVhf jl iava AKaiii xumgut The 48th bill of new Ameri- . . , t - I can plays to be presented by tne Playmakers closes its three- night run tonight at the Play- maker theater. -r-k t i n ji -i a; I directed ana proaucea entire- ly by students in the dramatic arts department, tne piays were cnosen as tne nest examples oi dramatic writing done this year i li t i i j? in the playwriting classes of Prof eSSOr F. H. Koch. Under the! general supervision oi oamuei oeiaen oi xne nay- i. r i rt1 j ni I makers' staff, the scenery was Ml 1 1 TTT 1J T . J J I nesignea oy waixer rresxon ana Don watters. and constructed .bv T0hn Walker, sreneral stasre manager, and the stage crew. Lighting is by Joe Jbeidman. es In Court Poll Balloting To Continue Through Monday For the first time since the pblls were opened;, thje voting : I 'ZL NewtPla yBill Vote inang was definitely against President duction, in which Katherine Cor Roosevelt's recent plan for Su- nell is now playing in New York, preme Court revision in yester- day's balloting at the survey be- ing conducted by the Carolina Pnlit. i union. Yesterday's nt ielded 23 against the plan with 13 in favor and 3 un decided. A count taken of the total votes cast during the poll so far revealed a total of 255 votes in favor, of the proposal and 229 against it with 42 undecided. Continues Monday The polls, now open in the Y, will continue to be open I - ... . 1 f -1- through Monday night, at wnicn me V . W " concert to oe neio in juu - lorial hall. , jranK mcuiinn, presiaeiiv w tne uaronna iruuxicai union uu personally in charge of the vot- hng, announced recently that the 1 riinri hM set 900 aa the total Staff Names Hudson, Read Mag. Editors imbJ. . nxcii- x-.oii xu HJlttOrse Action Ul Student Daily the Carolina Magazine staff Iast niht as their official nom- mauon oi eaixor ior lyf-as. The Hudson-Read combination defeated Ralph Miller, the only oiner candidate. Jim Daniel, present editor, who presided, would not announce the final count. After three ballots, the Maga zine staff deadlocked on the mo- tion made by Miller to support the action of the Daily Tar Heel yesterday in . electing in stead of nominating its editor. First Ballot On the first ballot the Maga- zjne staff voted 9 to 4 to sup- port the Daily Tar Heel's ac . . ..... tion. Un the second ballot the writers stood again in favor of endorsing the action of their sister publication, with a vote of 8 to 7. Editor Daniel, how ever, cast his vote against the proposal and threw the issue into deadlock. The Read-Hudson Combina tion was nominated by Shelby Foote,: .who. explained that the dual arrangement would - guar- I . J i rf 1 A t J 1 anxee representation oi Doxn xne artistic and reportonai phases of editing the publication. "This irregular arrangement . . .. . win lumu a long-ieit need, Foote said. Associate Editors Both Hudson and Read are at present associate editors of the MnW-ziTiP Antf-'warmnv fTiP?r UhirA vPnr nnT-iKnW h Hudson non-fraternitv. now in charge of reviews in the . daily Tar Heel; has served on t.wp -sfff nf tliP .nmniis Hnilv 1 1, o,-o ex tt ia au t; ttsa- sity club( whlcH Read heids this (Continued on last page) Play Reading To Be Given Anderson's "Wingless Victory" On Bill "Wingless Victory," Maxwell Anderson's latest Broadway pro- will be read by Mrs. Urban TV Holmes tomorrow evening at 8 :30 in the Playmaker theater. Anderson's story' of the mar- riage of an eastern princess to a New England sea captain, and the reaction of the hide-bound villagers to the match has won the almost unanimous praise of the critics; who agree that as the Princess Oparre, Miss Cor- nell has one of the more power ful roles in her career. Largely in Verse Written - largely in ve'rsei I MTTTJ 1 TT!. J.- i .A' w mgiess victury rises tu ura L puu ujr pasaea in xne inuueru jnsuvii&xu. "VWiUiUs Wi .. Koch, it is particularly 'fitting that Anderson's play be read at this time since three of-his mtnes- Threaten Many Old Records International Y' Worker To TalE Here On Tuesday Sherwood Eddy, to Describe Lives of Share-Croppers at Memorial Hall " Y" Secretary Harry Comer said yesterday - that Sherwood Eddy, international "Y" worker who will speak in Memorial hall Tuesday night, is an authority on share-cropping as a result of his recent interests in Miss issippi delta farming. Eddy's talk will be on the lives of share-croppers, based on his experience as operator of a co operative farm experiment with a number of tenant families. Dollar a Year Before confining himself to this country, Eddy was a "dol- lar-a-year" international secre tary for the Y. M. C. A., travell ing in 50 foreign countries. As a special interest during recentyears, Eddy has led spec ial study tours, of students and professors from the United States to the different troubled countries of . the world, parti cularly in Europe. Class Is Halted By Robin VT isit Bird Returns Dr. Adams Visit Of Several Weeks Ago A robin, one of the famous Orange county' roost of a month ago, recently stopped an English 22 class to return a visit to Dr. Raymond Adams, which he had paid the robins when' they stop ped here. The class was discussing Shel ley's "To a Skylark," led by Dr. Adams when the social robin an nounced his visit in a very loud voice just outside the window. At first the class was startled but then listened to' the robin's shrill conversation with animated in terest. When the robin ended his visit as abruptly as he had be gun it, the class resumed its studies, understanding what Shelley meant by', '"profuse strains of unpremeditated art." Public Utilities Expert Addresses Students, Faculty Dr. Bauer Discusses Aspects of Municipal Ownership of Public Utilities Public utilities' expert Dri John Bauer addressed a group of students and faculty members Thursday night in the auditor ium of Bingham hall on the aspects of municipal ownership of public utilities. From the experience accumu lated as present director of the American public utilities bureau in New York and as former member of the Princeton uni versity faculty, Dr. Bauer ex pressed the conviction that re gulation of public utilities, in which public interest is exten sive, by private individuals for private prof it had always prov ed unsuccessful. Practical Questions There is a larger economic Forttf-Six Teams Will : Take Part In 8th Annual Meet Olympic Men Here By. Ed Kahlxn - Entries representing 46 teams will participate this afternoon and tonight in an attempt make Chairman R. A. Fetzer's eighth annual Southern Confer ence Indoor Track meet the big gest and most successful of all time. Festivities start in the Tin Can promptly at 1:30, while the evening part of the program will start at 6:30. Plenty of fireworks are as sured the spectators in all four divisions, as one of the best fields ever assembled below the I Mason-Dixon line leads an at- tack on the old records. Thirteen teams are entered in the Conference division, among whom are found four newcom ers. The old standbys of the Conference, Clemsbn . Duke, N. C. State, North Carolina, South Carolina, V. M. I., V. P. I., Maryland and W. and L., will be augmented by the four teams who have previously competed in the non-conference division. These are "William and Mary, Davidson, Richmond, and Wake Forest. Scores of records are expect- ( Continued on' page three) Five Professors Attend Meeting At New Orleans Trabue Speaks at Annual Meet Of National Education Ajssociatiorf Five members of the Univer sity's department' of, education returned to Chapel Hill yester day from New Orleans where they attended, the annual meet ing of the National Education association. . . . The five delegates from the University were Dr. M. R; Tra bue, Dr. E. W. Knight, Dr. C. E. Preston, Dr. J. Minor Gwynn, and Dr. George Howard. On the Program Dr. Trabue appeared on the program of several important sections, according to Guy B. Phillip, general college 7 adviser. On Saturday morning the de partment of education head spoke on "Articulation of Rec ords and Research for Guid ance Purposes". before the American College Personnel as sociation. . "He also spoke-at a luncheon meeting of the National Voca tional Guidance association," said Mr. Phillips, "and partici pated in the afternoon in the discussion of a yearbook on 'Reading prepared by the Na tional' Society for the Study of Education, to whose board of directors he has just been' re elected for another three year period.- ; . .. Dr. Knight, former president of the Society of College Teach ers of Education, participated in discussions . of the yearbook of that ' society) which deals this ;year "Backgrounds of Edu- 11 ; i r f i' - ;? "' 1 n i 1 ; 1 1 ; it "- .': I 1 it i n i : !l If II 1 1 -1 i;-t- 3 ' it, i " 'f wirn rna notinn!) ffrnnn - - i . - .- ni,.n-01.: i; r I iC.n,i.A MLhLxfoaafi (Continued on last page) cation.'
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1937, edition 1
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