Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 6, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
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t&be Batlp tar t?eel . of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Monaays, anaine Thanksgiving, Christmas ana opring xxuuuajr en tered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, suDScripuon price, $3.09 for the college year. J. Mac Smith- Charles W. Gilmore- William McLean Jesse Lewis. - .Editor ..Managing Editor Business Manager -Circulation Manager Editorial Staff tr'Tvrrmrr at. Wurrrais: Stnart Kabb. Livtx uaraner, Edwin Hamlin, Allen Merrill, voit liumore, uod du Four, Herbert Langsam. News Editors: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor Yi R.nspTibpre'. nir3TrMKNr ? Tnm Stanback. Laff itte Howard, Jesse Reese. SwTJTnn RppnRTFRt "Rob Perkins. Freshman Reporters: Charles Barrett, Adrian Spies, David Z. Stick, James Mc Aden, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McUaughey, Winston isroaaiooi. Rewrite: Donald Bishop. Exchange Editor: Ben D4?on. Spopts F.nrrffli ' TL ft. Howe. Jr. Sports Night Editors: Jerry Stoff, Ray Lowery, Sports Reporters: Ed Karlin, Harvey Kaplan, Shelley Rolf e, Fletcher W . Ferguson, Larry M. n eriing, W T. RppTmnTi. . &r aw Photographers: Herbert Bachrach. Frank Bowne. Business Staff Advertising' Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey, riTiRHAM P.F.PRFi?F.NTATivE: Dick Eastman. t.fnr. AnTOBTisiNfi ASSISTANTS Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Morton Bohrer, Ned "Ham ilton. Rill Clark. Billv Gillian. Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, George Har ris, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Ed Kaufman, Pemn Quarles, Jim Schleifer, Henry emernoii. For This Issue News: Will G. Arey, Jr. Sports: Frank Holeman CARO-GRAPHICS by ZS WitY A. TAXES DO YOU 1UI0W YOUR JTATE? T I I 'ill - i mi in mvmms were auowed to pay MIRTAXffWJTH RICE AHD FEATHERS MDY0U IUIOYthat W FIRST AUTOMOBILE 1AW IN N.C.YArPA55rP rt 1074? IT SAID TdAT THE NEYR0AD STAr1ERS''C00iPU55'WH PUBLIC ROAP OFTHE 5TATB fit 't1-- Ml QARKWASlHEYOUWEfTIAWER EVER TO APPEAR BEFORE WE U5. SUPREME COURT 1799, JAMES qiAS60VM.C55EC. 0F5TATEjPi0TTFP TO BURN UP TrtE STATE GtfJTOUN ORDER TO DESTROY WE RKDRtfftlF. P10TAVAS DISCOVERED AND CYtt EARLY ACADEMY Iff CAIDWEU CO. 0SEDT0 rnycrjTED BY ANDREW JACK" RcyUIRtTHAi IHt jlUPhnl) fcjtl WKII IJkH" - SON f MISSION FROM THE FACULTY TO BUY IIQUOR TH6 EDITORS OF CARO-GRAPHICS INVITC YOU TO SEND IN INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT YOUR. COMMUNITY My Day OR Life On A Raft ' 2?i Charley GUmore THE WINTER QUARTER IS SHORT, BUT NOT SWEET TIia Winter Quarter is suDTjosed to be the in door" session of the regular year. Already scheduled for "withm-these-walls" are a long string' of basketball games, boxing and should be developing, all along. The program of the Graham Memorial and Co-ed teas and the rare fraternity dinners, on the part of the students, and, the Sunday afternoon and night ses sions at the Graham's, or the Katsoff 's, or the Bradshaw's, or the House's, on the part of the faculty, are an every-week, not yet every-day, extension of the same sort of thing. We may not be able to inau- wroalino- pnomorATYipnts t.Tip. Southern Conference ; ra,v mopf Mirf.Wintpr norman club gurate a full-time tutorial sys dances, two or three Grails, the appearance of Nor- tem, because of the financial and Tfcn nrifl .tVr H P. TT lecturers, the Stu- traditional limitations, but all of dent Entertainment programs, the new Y. M. C. Hs here are certainly getting our a ' "cii.vw t t iP- ti,, ti, money's worth, indeed we are o. ir, T-Tnmnn Pointinns Tnit.iite gettmg more than the law al- 1VTnri rtf l,o trnrnl Pllpfir. rrn- s" Ul most big Schools, by eX- cram will be carried on "indoors." The shortness Pelting the opportunities n -Tio nnovfor onrl rnvYOGnTirlir rr cf if -fnPQQ ryf the work should drive many of us to the inside Hh intelhnt Personalities reading lamp, even on these "southern" winter nights. And there is the consistent fact that long of Amphoterothen, the unorganized ones of the . dorm store or the lounge in Spencer hall The hypothesis to be drawn from all this evi dence : the winter quarter, usually held in popular for acquaintances that live with us here. Newspaper Institute To Convene Here One Frederick Koch Killed (Continued from first page) alive,r for at that moment he was giving a talk on "Teaching Playwriting" before the Ameri- can UJaucationai rneater- asso ciation. False Report So the news report, that started in Minneapolis, Minn., and was relayed to Mr. Green and Professor Selden in the New York hotel by way of Charlotte and Chapel Hill, turned out to be false as far as our Frederick Koch is concerned. The explanation is simply that a Minneapolis man named Frederick Koch was killed, and the news agency was just trying to check up on the possibility of its being the playmaker head. Infirmary Annex To Be Started Today The intellectuals of this ca'mpus often have cri. ticized this column as laciang thought or con structive meaning. Therefore I turn today's col- umn over to an easily-recognized literary fig an intellectual, so to speak. "Of course I often have not heard of it even if it is well known but there are lots of places in America that have enormous collections of some thing very often the best anywhere and there are not well known at least well yes not well known, and besides Chapel Hill was the first state uni versity in America and I had never heard of it and did not know that it was. so of North Carolina.-However there it was and we liked it. "We liked Chapel Hill we liked the hotel, you ate well, we liked the professors and the men and women and I liked walking and then there was a place a sort of tower and it had newly planted box hedges around it and it looked like a water tower and when I went inside to read what was cut into it, it said that it was erected by a family the name was given and that was all there was to it. No war no peace no anything, there was a family and it had a name there was a tower and there were lots of box hedges around it and they were small now but sometimes they would be Auto- (Continued from first page) South Carolina will install heat ing facilities. Construction of the infirmary larger." Gertrude Stein in "Anybody's annex is a part of the medical biography." expansion program wmcii wa Forgive me if I add that it's a pretty good de begun two years ago wnen uie scrition when you think about it. government, particularly inter ested in health work here, desig- nated Chapel Hill "as the center ' for the training of public health officials in the South. A grant was made through the State Board of Health to finance the program. NEW SHIPMENT ARGUS FOISTER PHOTO GO. CAMPUS NOMAD By Voit GUmore (Continued from first page) news photo service, New York. Duke will be host to the edi- conception to be the one time of the year for con- tors and publishers Friday eve- secutive, leisurely, monastic scholasticism because ning at a dinner session when of the absence of fall football or spring politics the speakers will be President and parties, is really likely to turn out to be just Russ; Henry R. Dwire, director as "jammed-full" as the next one, with the "in- of public relations at Duke, and doors" feature of it a uculiarity. It is largely out John Temnle Graves. III. of the of this popular delusion about the glorious free- Birmingham News-Age-Herald. ness of the wintertime, plus the actual shortness of the quarter, that most students end up with work of a lower grade calibre than that of either of the other two quarters. There is a large body of campus opinion which holds that winter grades are generally disappoint ing. That professors feel better at Christmas and Maytime may have some "contemporaneous peda gogical signification." The sessions, opening Thurs day evening, will continue through Saturday noon, Jan uary 22. . Greene To Give , Lecture Tonight (Continued from first page) Greene was introduced to phi losophy by Professor Alexander Meiklejohn. Later, as a gradu ate, he studied at Edinburgh under Professor Norman Kemp I Hatch. THE GREAT DAY IS COMING The Annual Student-Faculty day has been silently shifted by the planners working under Smith. Chairman Randy Berg to the spring quarter The Greene is well known as a lec occurrence this year of the new Y. M. C. A. "Reli- turer at Princeton, where his gion in Life" conference has caused the schedul- talks have a particular appeal ing of the "Gala Day," when students and prof s to a general audience, drop shoulder-chips for a moratorium on the or- " dinary barriers between the two, for May instead 1 ItOSe Contined of February. - Eight names were on the in- The change has the advantage of the weather's firmary sick list yesterday: support ; tne disadvantages ol the same spring Milton Kind, Molly Albritton, scneuuie complications which blocked the first w. G. Newby, E. C. Gass, W. H. projected occasion of the kind m the spring of '34. Little, H. W. Kitchin, J. M. Da urigmany designed as a day of (1) no .classes, vison, J. D. Morris, and H. T. W exhibits trom every department (to make everyone here, students and teachers as well, Uni- versity conscious), (3) exchange dinners between - the two groups, and (4) an afternoon sports pro gramoriginally designed on this mild basis, the plans for the holiday have each year seen a steady trend toward the carnival. Enthusiastic participa tion in the conviviality by the faculty has encou- 3 xi- ; j ! i raseu tins development. The following words, in the TVi a Qlvanfoivaa 4-n. "Un J.'...J 1 1.1. ' T T I - . ..... ,u,i,ta6Co w uc ucuvcu ov me..univer- same order m which thev are sity from the One Holiday are not confined to the printed, can be punctuated so twelve hours of the actual occasion, but should that they make perfectly good rigntiy inciuoe tne long gestation period during sense. wnicn time we au can taiK, as we are doing this That that is is that that is not morning, about the advantages of proving to both that that is not is not that it the students and the faculty that the other is it is. 1 ' m . I composed 01 numan oemgs who are more than an Hint: The subiect under dis- entry in the roll book or a name in the catalogue, cussion is outlined in the first Student-Faculty day is merely the big, external, three words. The next four tell artificial Holiday which celebrates an "ideal" in what it is, the next five, what it tHis particular relationship which should exist, or is not. The rest'is verification. ' , j m? If , j TO ! :i ! '' ,? ! South Building Tommy Meder dropped out of school last October after the wreck over near Henderson which severely injured him, and killed Robert Danish. Almost over that, he had an attack of appendi citis and underwent an operation that kept him home on Long Island until snow and cold winds arrived Christmas. Just before he came to school last September, Tommy stepped off a curb in New York City, and a five-ton truck rolled over his foot. "Before that," says he, "I was a hale and hearty man." New Year New Deal But Tuesday and Wednesday, Tommy, for all that he had to forget, seemed pretty cheery. The turn of a year does lots toward soothing ill feel ings, restoring crushed -hopes, and recommencing old efforts. Like Meder, most of the 253 students who "bust- ed" last Quarter and rpf nrnpd for rpnrtmissinn also are in pretty good spirits. They seem about as happy now as the 30-or-so who made all-A's. Tor example, the fellow who last fall made the first D that ever has hppn viwn in Tlr liarland's Archaeology 85 course has made quite a laugh able joke out of it. So, gauging by temperaments and general feel ings, everybody's off on the same keel this quar ter. The quarter; will roll by smoothly and with out event if everyone just keens his head above water. Or. bv trvintr tit. TTrirnoTTY! arm's t.OTllCI Rise bright and early each morning, then chirp 'Every day in every wav I am frrowinsr more sub limely happy." POP QUIZ By Bob Perkirtm RURAL telephone wire not in cables can now . go underground where bad weather and grasa fires can't harm it. ;: - .To make this possible, an entirely new kind of wire had to be developed. Special insulating com pounds, special splicing methods were devised. Then a simple, economical method of burial had to be found. A special plow solved this problem one that digs a furrow and tucks away the wire in a single operation. Just one more step in the process of making Bell System service constantly more dependable. Why not telephone home tonight? Rates to most points are lowest any time after 7 P. M. and all day Sunday, m Letters To The Editor V Over 250 Words Subject to Cutting To the Editor, Dear sir : I am in a fix. The German club officials wfll not tell me when they are going to have Mid Winters. I must know, for I have a hard enough time arranging for my date's arrival as it is. And I certainly hope that they get a splendid wettra 1 have heard from reliable sources that the fall dances, came out so successfully that, without an additional fee or possibly without even as high a fee as before, we may expect something m the way of a band that can "really go." Last year we had Thorns TWor w a chan rearrangement in bookings. Do not let them fa i must kn t hP heve -v, It- LI 1 I 1 1 IT HI. 1)111. C. X me; there are others dates. m my same boat as re gards An Old Easter
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 6, 1938, edition 1
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