Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 18, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO Kht 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 toe 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. J. Mac Smith Charles W. Gilmore. William McLean Jesse Lewis. - .Editor -Managing Editor Business Manager .Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Editorial Writers: Stuart Rabh, Lytt Gardner, Allen Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour. News Editors: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor ris Rosenberg. Desk men: R. Herbert Roffer, Tom Stanback, Tim Elliot, Jesse Reese. Sroirnn Reporter: Bob Perkins. Freshman Reporters: Charles Barrett, Adrian Spies, David 7,. Stick. James McAden. Miss Jbucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey, Winston Broadfoot, Miss Gladys Tripp. Rewrite: Donald Bishop. Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon. Sports Editor: R. R. Howe, Jr. Sports Night Editors: Jerry Stoff, Frank Holeman, . Laffitte Howard. Sports Reporters: Ed Karlin, Harvey Kaplan, Shelley Rolfe, Fletcher W. Ferguson, Larry M. Ferling, W. L. Beerman. Stafp Photographers: Herbert Bachrach, Frank Bowne. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative: Dick Eastman. liOCAL Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Morton Bohrer, Ned Ham ilton, Bill Clark, Billy Gillian. - Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, George Har ris, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Ed Kaufman, Perrin Quarlea, Jim Schleifer, Henry Smernoff. For This Issue News: Gordon Burns Sports: Laffitte Howard CARO-GRAPHICS by Murray JONBSjJR DO YOU KNOW YOUR STATE? 5 , i 1 ' JTi 5 1 f . TriREWEREOrUY39i5 HOURfOFJlWHINE CQvU wIFif IN RALBaH 1AST MONTH UP Till 1855, FREF NEGROIf IN HC.C0UirYOTE?mWffl YEAR, A COHSTITUTIONAi AMENDMFNT WAf PAS5EP DENYIHA AIL NKROH AND ZI SXUf WERE CAPTURE) IH PURHAM COUNTV PURING I9J6 ITTOK21YEARJTODU110 ClPJOirWATUHf.? PER SONA! 50UC!TMG TOURS BYTrfE UNIVERSITY)" PRK, 10TTERIE5 AND OTHER WAN MUlATTOCTrfE RKWTT0 VOTE ' "-KWEUS ADPRE55 M CAMPOBEUA WERE USED TO RAlfFFUNW J STATE RER FROM POiK COUffTY f THE EDITORS 0PCARO'6flAPHICS INVITE YOtfTO SEND IN iNTeRESTlNG FACTS ABOUT YOUfc. COMMUNITY CAMPUS NOMAD LLL-J By Voit Gilmore U5 group, interested enougn to be prepared, which can meet occasionally with the faculty committee on curriculum would stimulate both student and fac ulty thinking on the "educating act." The field is probably the most nearly "unexplored" - one now open to student leadership which wants to make a valuable A WHOLE NEW FIELD Students originally "went off" to school to ac nirt Irnnwlprlo-A Vv cenrlano' in the curriculum. I . ., J o - - contnoution rather tnan grao a They built around the classroom a network of I charm or a picture the extra-curricuia enterprises, tne nuuun oi stuuent yackety-Yack seiA-guveiiimcub, auu au. ciauuiatc aj,i.aM. pw6iui. Fwrvliftrlu On Tnaa iTT.-xi. n a ; n- w riveryuuuy un ioet vvitu an mc iiivxCiiiS wiuu, """" AH of us, faculty and stu- call the "college life" the students have demand- are w foet &t ed, and have been encouraged m their demands m& thin much of the time on by liberal educators thenght to participate the eXperimenter-white rat le a witii Wc xauui, in tnC iiiaiia6CinCxi. sometime on mere the white "T;"1; , x . , x , A rat level. If the white-rats could At Carolina the degree to which students par- d M rti . postively uwpate, nave tu uFpuxtuxutjr in the process, the matter should is very high, as high as anywhere m the country. . f th . . , . , Student voices are heard in the business office Qne party dMn,t at aU and at South building through the Student Advisory the other party yery nttle into committee, in the Dean of Student's office the gt'age in which both parties through the old Student Activities Committee or cared so much that the other was the Student Welfare Advisory board. But these ep. on s QQS LETTERS To The Editor To the Editor. Dear Sir: Congratulations, or if you prefer, an orchid, to Mr. Heard for his opinion that tne pictures of the "Memorial Day Fight" at Republic Iron and Steel should be run after instead of before Mr. Girdler's appearance. ; Liberals must always be on their guard lest they defeat their own cause through lack of tolerance. Mr. Thomas repre sents socialism, with no practi cal experience in business man agement. Let us hear him. Mr. Girdler represents capi talism with the necessity of pay ing out thousands of dollars every week in wages and over head in the face of constantly rising expenses ana changing are the formal channels; informal, personal con- As for immediate develop- governmental regulations. Let tact with the business administration (handling ments, for Bob Magill to call to the physical set-up of the University) or with the gethej! those students he thinks Dean of Student's office (handling general stu- interested enough in the problem dent social and extra-curricula adjustments). to be vaiuable members of an in- The Classroom formal committee would be ex- There is only one field in which a channel for cellent. Others that Bob does student participation does not exist, about which no know personally could join student voices have had little to say; and that is jn. The faculty committee on the field of the curriculum itself the classroom curriculum would in all prob- the Number 1 point in all of our coming to abilitv erant. as thev did last J G , 4 year, an audience to the group. If the informal machinery could produce any results at all, we basis. On The Air By Carroll McGaughey school in the first place. We have encouraged this student participation in the college life on the theory that such activity and interest is of vital educative value, that it will then be in a position "to see breeds "deluxe editions" of men. In order now to I about" its being kept going on iuiiy exploit tne wnoie iaea, it wouia appear that a permanent student-faculty student activity leaders ought to place a new em phasis (and the administrators encourage them in it) upon student responsibility in respect to the main object of a college its quality of teach ers and the material it offers. When the question of why students might play a part in educational life arises, someone might suggest that the students ought to have some say as to what they came here to sret for their money. But, as a matter of fact, they have very little to 7:30 Famous Actors' Guild say, and it is the opinion of many of-them and of Presents Helen Menken in "Sec many of the educators that could not possibly ond Husband" (WHAS). have "anything of real value" to say. Few con- u 8:00 Another episode in sumers pay as much for something and care as Town," with Edward G. little, as to what the goods offered may happen Robinson and Claire Trevor to be in quality and worth to the consumer as (WBT and WHAS) ; "Johnny do students. The athletic policy, the fraternity Presents," with Russ Morgan's relations, the matter of "student rights" to enjoy Orchestra (WSB) . cuts, longer holidays, reduce this or that activity 8:30 Al Jolson's Show, pre- fee, these are what take up virtually all of the sentmg John Barrymore as thought spent on student activity or in "student uest (WBT) ; Mrs. Polly Pet leadership." tit, founder of New York Schol Honor Svstem of Display, will be tonight's Annroaches to tho field i(rM hp mad thrmitrh guest for "It Can Be Done" the "Honor System" end, but the fact that the (WHAS). very nature of the curriculum is built all too of- 9:00 "Watch the Fun Go ten around a nsycholoerv which induces students By ' with Al Pearce's Gang to cheat marks not knowledge being held the (WBT) ; Horace Heidt's Briga aim of college courses discourages hope from this diers (WSB) . quarter. "Student-faculty relations" might lead to 9 :30 "Hollywood M a r d i a worthy contribution in the field of education but Gras," starring Lanny Ross and it will probably be limited to "social relations" Charles Butterworth. "Beetle," rather than the problem a student faces who finds Phil Baker's ghost-heckler, will himself wasting his time in the room of an incom- appear as a guest-ghost-heckler petent instructor. (WSR or WEAF) ; "Schnozzle" What appears to offer the best local opportun- Durante and Gene Lester wil ity for getting down to "brass tacks" is the notion be guests of Jack Oakie (WBT of the curriculum committee, either formally ap- and WDNC). pointed or informally, composed of interest cam- 10:45 "How to Win Friends pus-men, which grew out of last winter's fierce and Influence People," by Dale "educational war" of the Tar Heel. A student Carnegie (WEAF). us hear him. A state-supported institution is wholly dependent on taxes col lected from somewhere. If pri vate business is not to be allowed to make profits on which taxes can be levied then the course of government itself must make the profits to use directly. But wait a moment. What is the gov ernment? Power lodged in the government has always been won back to the people through blood and tears. Power in the hands of "60 families" is always lost after a comparatively short period with little social incon venience however inconvenient to the families themselves ! It is a curious phenomenon that so many young people at the mo ment have great faith in strong central government. What was the "Magna Charta" and what the cause of all revolutions? Again congratulations to Mr. Heard. A mere visitor at the Inn, F. G. Hale. Council Makes Invitations Regulation (Continued from first page) authority to set retail prices and determine remuneration of sell-1 ers and distributors. All transac tions shall be subject to the re view of the Student Audit board and shall be fully publicized in the Daily Tar Heel." The regulations were passed unanimously by the council. Following his statement to the Daily Tar Heel last week, Har rison, a senior, reemphasized the point that he was not attack ing individuals or charging any group with graft, but was only pointing out that the possibility for graft in the future should be eliminated. His request came as the result of discovering while employed by an engraving company that there was "quite a gap" in a company's whole sale prices and what the students pay for invi tations. Senior Class President Joe Patterson in a statement follow ing Harrison's request revealed that this year's contract had al ready been signed. Under terms of the contract, the Charles Elliott company of Philadelphia will furnish Dutch fold invitations at seven cents each, cardboard back invitations at 17 cents each, and leather back at 33 cents each, wholesale price. The retail price to students has not been passed on as yet. Graham Memorial Last Friday Senator Josiah Bailey called "America's 60 Families" a book of "garbage," said its author has a "diseased mind,' and flung a copy halfway across the Senate chamber. North Carolina's senior Senator scorned the chapter in Lundberg's "that says frequent wash ing of hands has always been a mark of a sub conscious feeling of guilt and that by the same token frequent bathing indicated a subconscio feeling of guilt." His next remarks about "Renegade Republican' Ickes's new interior department building, "honey combed with bathrooms," netted him a sour re tort in Sunday's papers. Ickes simply asked Bailey up some time to use his private bath provided Bailey bring his own- soap and towel. Greatest Show On Earth Norman Thomas didn't fling books or discuss bathing, but his talk here last week wasn't alto gether lacking in audience appeal. He and Sena tor Bailey would really hit it off in a forum on. something like sit-down strikes. "I am unwilling," Bailey said in Congress last December 20, "to put my money in an enterprise which other people can sit down on, and I know everybody else in America is, too.' Last week Thomas spoke in Murphey hall, "I believe in the right of labor to strike, whether it be by sitting down or walking out. If sit-down strikes are illegal, they should be made legal." Out in the state of Washington there's said to be an orchestra and a glee club to entertain legislators; and the lieutenant governor always taps a tune with his gavel .... Politics, is pretty funny business if you keep tongue-in-cheek. Maybe some day the CPU will be having three ring circuses. W. T. Foster Lectures Tonight (Continued from first page) of Bates and Bowdoin colleges, besides the time spent at Reed college. He is a director of the Pollak Foundation for Economics re search, and was a member of the Consumers Advisory board of the NRA and a member of the state planning board of Mas sachusetts. POP QUIZ By Bob Perkins Let us assume that the earth is a periect sphere ana xnai a band is stretched about the equator so that it fits snugly. Now if one foot is added to the length of the band, this would cause the band to stand off at a certain distance from the earth at all points. Would this distance be less than an inch, imperceptible, more than an inch, or nearly a foot? Answer to Saturday's quiz: The three men could enter the three doors in six different combinations. Letting X, Y, Z stand for the doors, and 1, 2, 3 stand for the different men, we have: X 1 1 2 2 3 3 Y 2 3 13 12 Z 3 2 3 1 2 1 Local Professors To Lecture Today (Continued from first page) permtendent A. W. Honevcutt will also speak on "Modern Trends." For the high school section, ur. rerry will speak on "Com mon Sense in Guidance" at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the high school auditorium. BIRTHDAYS TODAY James A. Joyce Preston E. Daveport R. T. Best Joseph Gayner Ingram P. Walters George E. Dey Sarah Peterson Hammett Cecil Fred Cochrane r i nriitniiiiilfiavfainnnnrimnnnnil My Day" OR Life On A Raft 3C$C By Charley Gilmore The freshmen are having photo trouble. They can't find 32 leaders renrp.spnt.ftt.ivf pnniich to grace their section of the Yackety-Yack. The only representative freshman I know is Mac Smith, and they can't get him away from the philosophy department long enough to pose. The boys are going to meet un in Memorial hall this morning and talk things over. Some of the freshmen got the idea the entire class should be pictured in the annual. That's never been done before. . Must Meet Last year the class met on Mannine- hall steps for a mass photograph. The idea that 686 first year men could be represented by 32 grew out of that meeting. However, Dave Thorpe couldn't find 32 fresh men leaders who were willing to pose. They all Know what happens to freshmen politicians m later life. Chris Siewers is facing the crisis nobly. He told his boys they could do anything about it they wanted to. That sort of stopped them for a while. It put them in the same boat as the faculty. Prediction It's pretty clear what the vote will be: For limiting section to 32 leaders 32 votes ; for in cluding entire class 650 votes ; not voting-Sie; wers, McRae, Hand, and Lambeth. V They could have a photographer at a chapel meeting some morning ano! catch the entire class unawares. Several matress companies I know of would pay a lot of money to get such a picture out of circulation.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 18, 1938, edition 1
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