Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 23, 1937, edition 1 / Page 1
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T . TTX7EATHER: ff Generally Fair and V - Cooler Today THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY Ul THE SOUTH 0 VOLUME XLVI EDITORIAL PHONE 4351 CHAPEL HILL, N. O, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1937 BUSINESS FHOXE 4116 NUMBER 6 ) V p S i - 0 1 . i. News . o By Frank Holeman Union To jGiye Ultra Modern Jazz Program Hal Gordon To Direct Japanese apologize New Music Concert to British office Tonight, 7:30 ' Tokyo. Sept. 22. Japan's ? - -Miniaia- TTvrTTimn- Graham Memorial's "Music nv Wized to the British Under the Chandeliers series Foreign Office in Tokyo for the will get underway, tonight at wounding of Britain's ambassa- 7:30, Director Pete Ivey said dor to China in an aerial attack yesterday, a jazz program pre hear Rhanffhai several days aero, sented by Hal Gordon, who is The ambassador, Sir Hughe the impressario of the popular Knatchbull-Hugessen, was ma- "Music Under the Stars" classi- chine-gunned in his car on Au- c1 music concerts. gust 26. - "Sooner than latest" records t ; raMae rt sv .the will be played over the RCA r,nt read, "that the JaDanese amplifying system of the stu mvernment will take suitable dent union building, said Ivey. steps, whenever it is established The program, which is schedul that Japanese, aviators killed or ed f or the hour from 7:30 to wounded intentionally. or 8:30, will consist of jazz songs through negligence, the nation- which will not be heard in mov oi0 of tfcird rmmtrv" ing pictures for several weeks, I The note maintained that the ne stated. shooting was in any case acci- The entertainment is a part dental of the regular program of Gra ft is believed that the mes- ham Memorial, Ivey said. "Jazz saee is acceptable to the British, music is just as important to and that the incident is closed, this campus as classical music, ; no matter what Tschaicowski LEGIONNAIRES SETHjHj Paderewski, Stokowski or Ber DOWN TO SERIOUSNESS linski may say," Ivey declared, New York, Sept. 22. The 1,- in expressing a belief that the 939 official delegates to the musical programs presented on American Legion 'Convention the campus should be balanced here turned today from revelry between the classical and mod ern. Enthusiast jc - - (....-nVf V r fmmi7'.: jrihli. (Ma Pre-Gsme Pep Eallies To Boost Spirit TomiglitjTomorrow Diminutive . Hardwood Ace Pete Mollis, whose Monogram clubmen will join with the Uni versity Club spirit-makers s in sponsoring a double-feature pep rally at 7:30 tonight and to morrow night. Ringing Of South's Bell Will Be Signal To i Campus Rameses IV Here Tomorrow night at 7:30 an old time,' outdoor pep rally will get under way in front of South building. The ringing of South's bell will be the signal for stu dents to gather from all parts of ;the campus to celebrate the Tar-Heels opening game against the Gamecocks of South Caro lina. Head Cheerleader Glenn Da vis will be on nana to lead a to business. Los Angeles, California was selected convention city for 1938. The resolutions committee was considering hundreds of resolu tions, of which many were high- ! ly controversial ! issues. A few will be acted upon tomorrow by the assembly. BUZZARD ROOST CASE AGAIN BEFORE COURT Washington, Sept. 22. The United States supreme . court heard argument today in defense of Greenwood County, South Carolina's proposed $2,852,000 power plant at Buzzard Roost. The case had been appealed by the Duke Power company from the fourth circuit court of ap peals. To the company's contention that the municipal plant would tJrr. cabinet programs; Eugene Brie ucJBxVi freshman work; Jim "From a practical standpoint it v . is inconceivable:that this small " rT L Z "We are fortunate in having (Continued on page two) Hunter Lists 'Y' Committees President Names 21 Boys For Chairmen Scott .Hunter, president of the Y. M. C. A., announced yes terday the appointment of ' 21 persons a s committee Teacher Gets Odd Request Nazi Asks Friederick For Education Aid v Due to one of the German Nazi regulations an unusual re quest has come to Dr. Werner P. Friederich of the German de partment. - A student in Berlin wishes to come to America to study but is unable to bring any money out of his country. To avoid this difficulty he has written Dr Friederich, making the follow ing proposition: . Expense Item If a family here in Chape' Hill will pay his expenses in (Continued on page two) . F. W. Ferguson wishes to see all members of Mono gram and University Clubs who are working in the Cheerio section at the South Carolina game at the YMCA today during the chapel period. : " Coed Transfer Finds Class Of Romantic Here Seeking Class of "Romantic Triumph," Susan Lumpkin Is Led To Al Barrett Morgan Added To Tnfirmarv SJtaff cha irmen for t h e Yniinff TWtnr Ts Fnrmer TTni- final demonstration of the stu dent body's enthusiastic - back ing of Coach Ray Wolf's charges. Rameses IV, successor to the late and lamented Rameses III, and mascot of the Tar Heels, will be on exhibition to show his approval of the proceedings. To lend volume and perhaps harmony to the singing the Uni versity band will assist Cheer leader Davis in leading the Uni versity songs. Ivey Seizes Idea That Will Create New 'Swap Shop' Graham Memorial Trading Cen ter To Be Opened In Near Future Susan Lumpkin, junior trans fer student, was lost. She was supposed to be in Dr. Raymond Adams's early Ameri can literature which uses a text called "The Romantic Tri umph." Although she had been there twice before, she could not find it yesterday morning. 15 Minutes Late Already 15 minutes late she stopped the first boy she saw and asked: "Could you tell me where I could find the class room of the 'Romantic Tri umph'?" "The what ! Oh yes, I know who you mean." He led her to a classroom aoor in jnurpney. "This is the one you are looking for," he said and vanished. But the foreign language class taught by Al Barrett was not exactly that for which Miss Lumpkin was searching. Initial 1000 Students Wffl Get Special Cheerio Slips Coach Wolf ToTalk Tonight at 7:30 the Mono gram and University cluljs will sponsor the first pep meeting of the year. Representatives of these clubs will pass through all dormitories to notify students of the meeting. Highlights of the evening will be a talk by Coach Ray Wolf and an introduction of the foot ball team. Co-Captain Andy.Ber- 38 19 3 7 - year. Those ap-pointed n. m were : ts 1 1 1 versity Student Of '29 cumxuxx iu " ; boys work; Bill Jordan, finance; i-zy. -tie received nis ivi. u forced reduction throughout the Npi.Wntt. social: Ellis from the University of Pennsyl Bullins. denotions : Charles Rob- vania. , ' I -wr 1 - l- inson. inter-faith: Manly Loo- "e was corn m uenson, mis, interracial; John Riggsbee, North Carolina, and has been radio forums ; Tom Holmes, Dr. William G. Morgan, a for mer student here at the Univer sity, is the newest addition to Camp bell, ne staff of the U. N. C. infir mary.- Young, blond Dr. Morgan re ceived his A. B. degree here and was a student during the years 1923-29. He received his M. D. entire Duke system.' ANTI-BLACK RESOLUTION MAY GET TO THE SENATE Dorchester, Mass., Sept. 22. Senator David I. Walsh, a Democrat, declared today that unless somebody convinces the senate that new justice Hugo Black is not ; a Ku Klux Klan member, a resolution requesting his resignation from the high court will certainly be proposed to the next senate. "Membership in the Klan is probably not ground for im peachment," said the Senator, . ""but under the circumstances surrounding the Black appoint ment it surely is ground to in sist on his retirement from the supreme court. .-. ROOSEVELT LEAVES FOR TOUR OF WEST : Hyde Park, N. Y., Sept. 22. President Roosevelt was prepar ing this morning for a two-week railroad tour of the West:1 He is scheduled to start today "at 4p.m. J"r'- ' On the ten car special train with the President will be Mrs. Roosevelt, - White House aides, and a score of reporters. The religious meetings and retreat; Brooks Patten, music; Howard Covington, religious vocations; Frank Turner, cosmopolitan club ; Bob Magill, conferences and conventions; Calbert Holt, literature; Bob ' Cunningham, (Continued n page Uoo) Dr. Ruark Issues New Text Edition (Continued on page two) There will be a meeting of the Monogram Club to night at 7 o'clock, prior to the scheduled pep rally. Treasurer Joe Murnick an nounces that all new mem bers who have not paid their dues do so imme Plans for a "Swap Shop" for Graham Memorial were an nounced yesterday by Director Pete Ivey, the trading center to be opened immediately. The in novation was suggested by L. B. Rogerson, assistant controller of the University, and seized upon by Ivey as a good idea. Instead of having lost, found and wanted notices scattered on every bulletin board, Ivey plans a central trade bureau, to be conducted without charge. NYA funds will be used to pay the persons ' who operate it, he de- (Continued on page two) Fetzer Talks To Freshmen Tells Of Opportunities In Sports Program rne iresnman class was in troduced to another phase of Carolina life yesterday morning in chapel, when "Coach Bob" Fetzer gave a short talk on ath letics here on the Hill. The important part that the freshmen are expected to play in the athletic program, "both in regard to participating in sports and in offering support to the tejims on the field, was stressed. "We offer enough different sports to make it possible for every man enrolled to find something that he can partici pate in," the coach said. In speaking of the game this (Continued on page two) Henderson Gives Math J?alk Here University Professor Appears Before First Seminar Meet shak will introduce the linemen and the backfield will be pre sented by Co-Captain Crowell Little. It was announced by Pete Mullis late last night that music would be furnished to spur tonight's rally by Freddie John son and his campus orchestra. After tle assembly has had a chance to. express its enthusi- (Continued on page two) Koch Traces Epic Of Stage History Of Playmakers Told In Lecture Ambassador Dodd Tells W&L Students Of Dangers From Minority Domination Future Carolina Political Union Guest Emphasizes Ameri cans' Historical Knowledge William . E. Dodd, United States ambassador to Germany, First Edition Of Junior-Senior who will appear in Chapel Hill Physics Book Successful under the auspices of the Caronj - . lima political union ssetvcemDer Dr. Arthur E. Ruark, head of 27 . told Washington and Lee the physics department, and his university students, in a' recent former colleagues t at the Urn- addresS, that '-'if minority domi- versity oi rircsDurgu isaucu uie nation of strat egic activity con- secona eaiuon oi meir uuume tinues, we are in grave danger ofAtomic Physics"; early this of losing the ideal political and summer, he announced yester- social life for which our ances day. 1 tors have contended - since the The textbook is designed fjrst half of the seventeenth especially for juniors and sen- century." iors, although it is sometimes I rjodd.- in emnhasizine- that used in graduate courses on the American and English people nature of matter. , hmnw wn nf fhwr miin: tries better than any others, widely used, especially in south- sajd the public men of the coun- ern institutions.. John Wiley and try rarely profit from the blun- Local Radio Club Will Meet Tonight In Phillips Hall All Members Urged To Be Pre sent At 7:30 For First Meet- ing Of Fall Quarter The y University Radio club will hold its first meeting of the : quarter tonight at 7 :30 in Phillips hall. All members of the club are expected to be present, since important plans for this year's program will be dis cussed. - - - Work on the new club trans mitter is. well under way. Last spring the various .licensed- op erators of the organization were very successful in their organi zation of the old 150-watt club transmitter. - This fall the trans mitter is being revamped, and the boys expect even better re- Yesterday afternoon the first meeting of the mathematics seminar for the session 1937-38 was held in Phillips hall. A pa per was read by Dr. Archibald Henderson on "Some Technical Peculiarities in Complex Func tion Theory." The mathematics staff of the University was represented at the recent meeting of the Amer ican Mathematical society at State college, Pennsylvania. Pa pers were presented by E. T. Brown Reinhold Baer and Na than Jacobson, the last two of whom joined the faculty this fall. This was the regular summer meeting of the society and was held ' in conjunction with the Mathematical Association of America. Over 420 persons were in attendance, and except for the summ(er meeting . of 1936, which was held in. connection with the Harvard Tercentenary celebraiton, was considered by many to have been the most successful summer meeting ever The history of the playmak ers from the time they were known as the Dakota Playmak ers and gave their presentations on the banks of a little stream in the . midst of tEe Dakota prairie with the stage and ac tors on one side and the audience sitting on the opposite bank, up through the early days of the Carolina Playmakers to the pre sent, was given by Prof. F. H. Koch last night. About a hundred persons heard Prof. Koch tell how he fired Maxwell Anderson, one of America's foremost modern playwrights, from the cast of the Dakota Playmaker's first Shakespearean production be cause he was such a bad actor. Prof. Koch said in connection with this: "And that is the part I played in making Maxwell An derson what he is today." He used this in making clear his point that potential playwrights of the future might be anywhere today, and do not necessarily have to be. good dramatists. He compared Paul Green's (Continued on page two) Freshmen To Cheer In Friday Chapel Davis To Teach New Men Songs And Yells Tomorrow Tomorrow morning when the- freshmen arrive at chapel, Cheerleader Glenn Davis will be present to teach them the words and music to the songs of the University. The "singing of these songs will be an important part of the rally that night- and of the cheering at the game Saturday. Printed copies of the songs and yells will be distributed at both student gates before the (Continued on page two) Sons are the publishers. , . , (Continued on page two) . (Continued tn page two) . held. . . . . game' Saturday. "
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 23, 1937, edition 1
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