Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 18, 1937, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TW6 THE DAILY TAH HEED SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1937 Wi)t Batlp Car Heel The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, ' Christmas and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class-matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year.. II CAROtGBAPHICS-M: 2S& gffl IflC ipt J. Mac Smith Charles W. Gilmore Wiliiam McLean Jesse Lewis Editorial Staff Editorial Weitebs: Stuart Eabb, Lytt Gardner, Edwin Hamlin, John F. Jonas, Jr. News Editors: Will Arey, Bob duFour, Voit Gilmore. Deskman: Ralph Miller. - Reporters: Bob Perkins, Robert Worth, Ray Lowery, Buck Gunter, Norman McCulloch. Rewrite: Walter Kleeman. ' Sports Editor: R. R.' Howe, Jr. Sports Night Editors: Gordon Burns, Morris W. Rosenberer. Jerrv Stoff. Sports Reporters: F. W. Fereuson. E. Karlin, H. Kaplan, Bill Raney, S. R. Rolf e. Exchange Desk: Tom Stanback, Ben Dixon, R. P. Brewer, Jesse Reese. -Editor -Managing Editor -Business Manager .Circulation Manager Business Staff Assistant Business Managers Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative Bobby Davis. Local Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halnerm. John Rankin. Rob Murchison. Office: Gilly Nicholson, Charles English, George Har- ns, Louis Barba. For This Issue News: Ralph Miller Sports: Morris W. Rosenberg WORLD NEWS LININGS ARE POINTED OUT All the fuss about the failure of the new regis tration system ought to be cleared up. There's no denying the fact that, as far as saving student time, this year's system was no better than last's. We joined everybody else in making cracks at the Remington-Rand Santa Claus, until last night we had it carefully explained to us that the delay in the lines was caused by a business office slip the Remington-Rand part of the procedure clicked beautifully. , In fact, it clicked so beautifully that the Uni versity will be saving money in the future keep- . ing the records on each individual student, j so beautif ully that the Deans were bragging about the few mix-ups in classes reported yesterday, so beautifully that from now on the personal his tory (grades from kindergarten up, self-help record, love for sweet milk, etc.) of each and every Carolina student will be located in one huge cen tral records office where it can be turned to in 10 seconds (instead of being compiled from every campus source in 5 days). The administration, therefore, is pretty happy about the internal success of the Remington-Rand plan. Now about the horrible time-strain upon the poor students. Mr. Rogerson explains several details of the machinery which were corrected ! ?.eredy e era of reconstruc- J..yrm....J. 11011 louuwiiig iue war aim cun uurixig me proceuure xnursuay so mat next ume IN 1897 IT WAf NKf HARYIfl AU IN T POU TO KHP ORDER IN TriE 5TATE itGlflATURT E0R6E IfAAC HUGHE? IIYF5 k'ERE. HE SCLITk 0iPt)I POFPA In TKt 1X5. WOYflU KNOKw IN 1760 REflPfHTS OF PAS QUOTANK & PERQUIMANS COUNTIES WRB REQUIRED EYlAWT0KJ11105QUJRRaf rn vr ad no oav a cimc nr IRmcm wort 'NH69THE Pf OPIE OF AN50N,0RA6EXRWAH 2 nm FOR EACH 5QU1RRU C01 ASKED WAT All tm$mE$S& UfWIR i50B5nTlEPBVAJURVWnHCUTiAVYr - . -. - .... THfe E. ITORS OP CARO'fiftAPBICS JNVITC YOlTO SEND IN lNTeRSTINO FACTS ACOoTYOOfc COMtWfUTY wdvouib;c:w AS EARlYAf !303Trf M.C IKlflATURE FROfWfPTrfAI TriE NATIONAL CCftGRItf BE filVENPOtyfRTO PRO HIBIT SlAYf TRADE . 7 Summer Nights Will Arey and I hate to brag, but we had a pretty darn good idea this summer. We didn't gOi to summer school, but we came down here off and on to do a little work. Will would run over from Shelby and' I from Winston-Salem; we'd work a littler then we'd go eat in Swain Hall r. and while we ate we'd think: about things. Our idea was a money maker,, but it was really a little too riske-' to try out, and besides the ad ministration wouldn't have been: behind it. It was to supply our- (Continued from fir st page) Copeland 240,140, LaGuardia 55,837 for the Democrats, (63 election districts missing) . Republican votes in the pri mary gave L.auuardia y,obZ, Copeland 46,560, (46 districts missing). Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuar dia, head of an anti-Tammany fusion movement and also a friend of the new deal, wrested the Republican nomination from Tammany's candidate by more than 30,000 votes. - PRESIDENT HAILS NATIONAL THINKING IN ANTIETAM SPEECH Antietam Battlefield, Md., Sept. 17. President Roosevelt said today the nation during the past four years has been "not only acting but also thinking in national terms", for the first time since the war between the states. He spofce iai? exercises com memorating the 75th anniver sary of the bloody conflict here in which Union soldiers turned back the southern forces. Deploring the "sectionalism" SAND AND SALVE By Stuart Rabb Clothes Make the Man New Division Of Education selves with hammocks and rent them out in t,het Arboretum on luscious ' June nicrhts. Since we wouldn't want to go around in the campus love? spot collecting tolls, we designed a little meter which would do the collecting for us. Every thirty minutes a clock device would set off a whistle, and! to stop the whistle the boy would have to insert a nickle. Of course that way one couDle could loll in. the same place all evenincr. for. sav twentv - w 9 r and "misunderstanding" engen- registration time should be limited to one hour at the most. Actually, he pointed out, late students Thursday did shoot right through in a jiffy. It was only the crowd which came just before 11 o'clock (which included out of ten upperclassmen nine wanting to defer payments) that really suf fered. They sped . through the class scheduling part but had to waif in the business-of f ice line. Rogerson soon supplied the eight "or nine extra tables to relieve the pressure. It was precisely at this time that some of us were wasting five hours of the best part of our Jives. Granted, then, that this week's registration, as far as most of the students were concerned, took just as long as ever; it must be made clear that the Remington-Rand plan is going to make the administration happy for many more such occa sions, and that the business office has located the immediate cause for the wait this time. trastinsr it with the .national omore had left the hall of spirit of today, the President said that we appreciate the dis tress of any part of the Union and stand ready in all parts to lend a heloinsr hand to those who need it most. He dismissed discussion of "the rights and wrongs" of the conflict, telling the commemora tive throne, "we can but wish that the war had never been NO FLIES ON kOUR MED SCHOOL v ! The announcement of the plans for the new med building, and of the increase in the faculty, prob ably brings much gladness to the hearts of those who feared, two years ago, that such "two-year" schools as ours here might be abolished. Presi dent Graham, and others at the time, won their plea, kept the set-up we had then, and continued to plan for the improvements just now being an nounced. . The increase in the faculty, long needed it is understood, should give the small number of med students such personal attention that they ,might not be able to get even at the large full-fledged schools. (There'll have to be a big hospital here before there can be a four-year med school.) Comment out in the state, tempted to extra vagance, of course, by alma mater love, is preach- in c that Carolina will have absolutely the tops of the country's two-year-med schools, the haven for Southern boys who must get as much as pos sible of their medicine in first-class style at sou- Smith Will Speak To Frosh Council (Continued from first page) omore "Y" cabinet at its first meeting Monday night at 7:15 in the YMCA. The officers in the cabinet include r.DeWitt Barnett, presi dent; Gharles Putzel, vice presi dent; Roy Clark, secretary; and Tom Stanback, treasurer. Men's Glee Club Plans Tour (Continued from first page) a closed club dance here in Octo her. in cooperation with the 1 ., . . , -i Women's Glee club. Prof essor Toms, faculty mem ber associated with the club has this' year arranged for the singing of more popular num bers than the club has used in previous years. Thad Jones, vet eran club member, is now pre paring the song arrangements to be used on tours. ., Men's Glee club rehearsals be gin Monday afternoon. Profes sor Toms and Club President Leonard Weaver welcome any applicants for membership. On Monday morning Ex-Sen ator Hugo JiacK will receive a package containing two black robes made of the finest French silk. Mr. Black will wear one of these ninety-dollar garments on his maiden voyage to the United States Supreme Court bench. He will, ' if he can, convince Mr. Roosevelt that he is not a mem ber of the Ku Klux Klan. One pre-supposes that Mr. Roose velt will ask Mr. Black about the Klan. Mr. Black is qualified to join the Supreme Court because : 1. He was judge in a small-town police court; 2. No matter what the President has proposed Mr. Black has always said yes. So' it may be that Mr. Roosevelt will not ask Mr. Black about the Ku Klux Klan. - - Meanwhile facsimiles and photostatic copies of Mr. Black's membership certificate in the Klan are being freely circulated n Washington. Republicans and Democrats alike say that : Mr. Black committed perjury when he took oath to support the con stitution. Mr. O'Neill, Demo cratic representative from New Jersey says that Black has "per- netrated a moral fraud on the American people." So it would seem that the Klan has replaced the Liberty League as the only organization more obnoxious than the Re publican party. This merits pub licity, if not distinction. It's a safe bet, we decided, that students from (Continued from first page) college and the graduate school with all academic deDartments participating in the program of cents 1x1 the avenue got too low we figured teaser trainiTicr we cuuiu laxe a wnisue oi our own. Diow it real: For a vear or two there has Moudiy, ana iooi everybody into an extra. tolL. been criticism of such a radical program, but some of the best Where Were YouT minds in the field of education Reallv. thousrh. wp lnf m this country have recommend- thoughts than that. One, for. example, was what ed and enthusiastically approved our friends in the North and South were doing- the program. Dr. Graham said. I that weren't around th a Mm mi a wao oom Pending , the arrival of Dr. rather astute conclusions. Douglass in the spring, Dr. A. TVAV 11VU r- IIIU11CV LI1J1II I T 1 1 1 S. fr T rfl ITI Tk- TIT Tr:l,4- CI! T J I .v, v. j-rwuwwcoa HO LLiKS X ttU- . , kee initiative and the Southerner's taW-Pv inspr tr crrnrinntP Rf.iin atita mi . . . . -1 vvxuaxc iw juuxoeu w iiaL your lrienus from "Mnrth nnil RnnVi rf V.r "RTocnr. t:-- i -i ii t j ? i "-" wv.va vfx iiaouu-iyiAuu jiuc regular wur. m uie ixiswry ox did f, . vj,pqHoq eaucaxion. , Phiiiinc AiviAr Joseph Friedman, a junior m economics from r I XTriw AT.V rZ4" 3 T i i PmWrnnrT? Phiiiin will Avv -tUi " "ageu jacnie ooogan s oana be the adviser to' undergrade Jn its East-coast tour. The fast-talking little fol ates in the division and will con- 1(?w .workef a.da but he has plenty of ti Q t,o -fonnixr stones ana aoSh to show for it. Jack Atwood, irc ft, rnor-ni r.Mcr aiiasea as Kobm Hood, ran a chuck-o-luck game I of VhaimrAA 1?A.Ani TTT2 i ! i He will also be in charge of the "ir" x ""l Wisconsin, ana uvea oniy. Teacher Placement bureau and " J" ""lLl maintain University contacts Down South aristocratic places like New Bern. with the public school people of Wilmington and Robeson county were vacated as the state. senior joe Patterson, Freshman Tom Wrisht A second new member of the! and Just Mac Smith hit it high in Europe. As a rule, you'll find friends from the South were travelling, visiting, resting; those from the North were on the go, making money , when pos sible. 1 - Record Number Expected To Register (Continued from first page) ply of entertainment books is exhausted, and the supply of athletic pass-books is low. new supply has, however, been ordered, and students who were unable to get their books at reg istration will be able to procure them at the, business office in South building next week. Around 900 freshmen are ex pected to enter the University as members of the class of 1941 The total has already reached well over the 850 mark. This figure is slightly smaller than the expected 1,000. - The record registration is due mainly to the return of the larg est number of-upperclassmen in recent years. Prosperous times in business have been given as a probable explanation for the great number of returns. ' - department, Professor Ruben J. Maaske, will give courses in in troduction to education and sec ondary education. He will also be available for consultation. His appointment here is for one year pending the arrival of Dr. Douglass. Psychology Dr. A. M. Jordan will.be in charge of work in psychology and will give particular atten tion to problems of testing and measurement. Members of the practice teaching staff will be Professors A. K. King, C. E. Preston, J. M. Gwynn, H. F. Munch, P. C. Far rar, and Hugo Giduz. Dr. R. W. Morrison and Dr. W. J. McKee will carry on the department's extension pro gram. - - One new feature of the pro gram will be special : Saturday courses offered during the fall and winter to enable teachers in active service to continue their training. ; Students Vs. Fire Hobbs Opens University Session V (Continued from first page) fundamentals of human life and personality," Dr. Graham said. "If emphasis on these three ele ments be neglected, then comes tragedy in spite of everything else we remember and empha size." ' ' The three speakers were clad in academic gowns, and the na tional and state flags adorned fthe wings of the stage. The Rev. Donald H. Stewart s of the Presbyterian church con ducted the' devotionals. Send home.v the Daily Tar Heel Those who stuck around Chapel Hill picked un some rare little yarns during the hot months. One of the best ones features Chapel Hill's fire de partment versus over a score of hilarious students at a West Franklin street fire. ' Just as the last of the celebrants at the last dance of June finals were going home, the village moo-cow fire horn sounded off. Minutes before the volunteer firemen and the one truck arrived cue jrouug spons were nnea up outside the blaz ing Negro office building. Confusion reigned as sleepy firemen strucnri to connect hose, start pumps, clear their nostrils -uin : i , .... Ui uwlg smoice, ana push their way through boys and girls in evening dress to the endanger- ea store room, barber shop, and vacant office. Fighting the fire at one end of the thrw building would get well under way when some of kUC ucusieu aroima gentlemen would shout, "Say, it's burning like the deuce down here at the other end." .... Down would dash the hose men to the other end; then a mob at the other end would re-echo the cry, John Parker, last year's student body president added endless pigment to the colorful scene" Full dress tails flapping behind him in the early-morn-ing breeze, he dashed hither-and thither greet ing new comers, urging ever onward, and even as sisting, the firemen's brave attack. His climactic actwas a mad dash through the front line into a chair of the barber shop where he seated him self caref ully, and began to cry for a hair cut. l1 sorts of campus dignitaries f illed the street but in a strictlyunpoised manner. It was a perate situation for the wearied Fire Chief Af SJnSfS?nJ!t?f frUit'eSS fightin chaos still reigned, the buildmg was still ablaze. He stepped to the center of commotion, slung down his metal 22S bTd ttTo heU Thus goes the new year's Legend No. 1. Hero John Parker got out alive. Go see the remain! yourself-the thing reaDy burnt up!' ' mams
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1937, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75