Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 18, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 193g PAGE TWO ! 3)e Batlp ar Xieel Tie cSdal newspaper of tke Carolina Publications Union of tha Unirersity of North Carolina at Chapel H22, -tfbere it ia printed daily, except Mondays, and the Tlmnfasiyisg, Christmas and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class matter at the post cSce at Chapel TiJ, N. tl, trader act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3j00 lor the college year. J.vMac Smith. .Editor Charles W. Gilmore. William McLean Jesse Lewis -Manaeiasr Editor Business Manager a .Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Editorial Wbttebs: Stuart Eabb, Lytt Gardner, Allen Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour. Nzws Emtoks: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor r ris Rosenberg. Deskmen: R. Herbert Boffer, Tom Stanback, Tim Elliot, Jesse Reese. Senior Reporter: Bob Perkins. Feeshman Reporters: Charles Barrett, Adrian Spies, David Stick, Donald Bishop, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey (Radio), Miss Gladys Best Tripp, BiU Snyder.. Rewrite: Jim McAden. Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon. Sports Editor: R. R. Howe, Jr. Sports Night Editors: Shelley Rolfe, Frank Holeman, Laffitte Howard. , Sports Reporters: Ed Karlin, Harvey Kaplan, Jerry Stoff, Fletcher W. Ferguson, Larry M. Ferlmg, William L. Beerman, Richard Morris. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative: Dick Eastman. uocal Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Andrew Gennett, Ned Ham ilton, Billy Gillian. x . Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, Bob Lemer, Al Buck, Jim Schleifer. For This Issue News: Gordon Burns " Sports: Laffitte Howard CARO-GRAPHICS by Murray 5 DO YOU KKWJ YuUft STATE? CORTi LTriS HEW CENTENARY CHURCH W ,VNjT0-5AlM HA5 110 ROOM DIP YOU UHOVtriAt HQKM CAROilHA IS OHE OF TriH 6 STATES Triflf FAUr BP TO CONTRIBUTE HMD FOR RBUEF TO THE FEB GOVT. DURING T1E5YR$. ENPINCV . JUNE 30, 1935 & 0 w f f v v 1 i ir SffljG 'lICfiA com 6R0WN OH 91 OF Ali JU HOSTH CAROIJNAFARMS fill N0RW CAROLINA 15 RATED THE FIFTH V PRODUCING 5TATE,YFr IT RATE5 26w IN W0RKER5 INCOME DIDYOUWiOVTHAT THE 1933 6011. A55EMBIY ENACTED THE GREATEST RELATIVE REDUCTION IN 5CH001 SUPPORT EVER RE CORDED IH WE HISTORY OF A STATE ? THfc EDITORS OP CARO'GftAPHtCS IffVlTe YOUTO SEND IN INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT YOUR. COMCWflHTY Letters To The Editor Over 250 Words Subject to Cutting speaker last night and then i hear that it8s not content just to have herr dieckhoff 8s slant on world affairs but is going to get other foreign and some capable homegrown authorities to ap pear with other viewpoints, i sorta got lost getting around the pipes 01 tnis arcnitecturaiiy screwy university and when i "TAXATION V WITHOUT INFORMATION .. Few students are adequately informed of the exact amount that they will be obliged to pay at hopped ud in the auditorium alex the University before they leave their homes to neard wag Just saymg that the come, either as freshmen or as iransiers. a ne ambassador couldn8t answer any University Catalogue does not list Class ees, more questions toniffht. does not itemize the f Matriculation Fee,,, labeled thought the german looked re- blanketly at "$15.00." Self-help applicants and lieved when alex said that too . . . - n a j I 7 those who contact Mr. itoy Armsirong are iur- soon as ; ot to the heel nished with explicit expense accounts, itemized. office stuart rabb came in and These men are indirectly given the chance to started worrying about a p u b -prepare" their parents. surplus, i think he could ret rid The rest of the student ooay is not cieany in- 0f nis eighteen thousand koneks formed, before they get here each year, just what pretty easy by letting those fel their expenses will he, what lees tney win oe com- nows who jte nuote column pelled to pay, what fees they might technically forward unquote call all the dic- waive. tatnrsnf enrorjA hv lono- distance - mm mm m m m m I This situation should be remedied, oy a more and interview them. thev complete catalogue explanation, by a description couldn8t call moscow because in the freshman handbook, by an officially print- the capitalist nhbne operators ed slip to every comer. - don8t have an international line to there, i think it8s pretty in chapel hill and i can8t see what every- Gordon Burns Ready To Receive Eight-BaUs WE'LL STUDY HOW TO PLAY National authorities on education are concerned body worries about fees and ra dio studios and politics when it8s so pretty when you8re out doors. i8in pretty tired now. On The Air over the "problem of the new leisure and have nicked the University of North Carolina for a national conference about it next fall. At the University of Minnesota this month of ficials representing 30 colleges and universities agreed that universities must make immediate plans for .training skilled workers in recreation leadership. The first conference adopted a "corrected cur-j 1 f :j: .1 x. i j 3 i- 1 piv.iuii.j5 vnv ou ovuu6.i c v,Hxw. o.qq Lucille Manners, so- to take as part of the first two years of under- on th Citieg con .1 A 4 1 1 3 XI J I graauate siuay survey courses leaamg mem 10 1 cer. wiV, i"- v,..j . S:30 raul Whitemans or- A New York "Times" article reports that plans cnestra (WBT) ; "Death Valley xui suui a vuj.xcv.vcvi. vuiiivuiuiu aucaujf I Dav5 I WT7l aer way at tne universmes 01 iNortn jaroima, Oklahoma, Minnesota, - Georgia, and Louisiana LQUise State University, bourses stressed under tne plan would be biology, the humanities, the so cial sciences, arts, crafts, flrama, sports and group activities. President Roosevelt has been asked to cooper ate with the group by calling a nation-wide con- (Coniinued from first page) Piccaninnies" as an" introduc tion to the performance. Address ' His address is scheduled to begin promptly at 4 o'clock. Cross-fire comedy and harmony numbers from the Cabin Kids will begin promptly at. 4:01 o'clock. The latest campus dignitary is planning to have golden keys to the campus made which he will present to the piccaninnies immediately upon their arrival. Statement In a statement to the press late last night, he regretted that his room would not permit the "five watermelon seeds" to stay with him there, but declared he would see that they received "the very best accommodations avail able," Burns was appointed to the position by Pete Ivey, director of Graham Memorial, sponsor ing the performance. Motive behind the announcement is Burns' connection with the dis covery of the piccaninnies. His cousin, Anna Canova, who is a sister of Judy Canova, fa mous movie actress, heard the quintet perform . for neighbors in their home town of Asheville. Herself a star on Rudy Vallee's radio show, she took the kids back with her as guest stars. Hit They scored an immediate hit, and have since featured in Paul Whiteman's radio program and Bing Crosby's motion picture, "Mississippi." At present they are in the midst of a tour of some of the largest entertainment spots in Meeting Sigma Gamma . Epsilon will meet this afternoon in 401 New East at 4 o'clock. T. D. Lance and R. M. Barbour will review current literature. All majors in geology and geography are invited to attend. WORLD NEWS (Continued from first page) operation by Germany are: a better attitude of the German press toward Austria; stop of Nazi party activities in Austria; lowering of foreign exchange barriers to permit German tour ists to visit Austria; participa tion of Austrian industry and agriculture in the German four year plan for economic suffi ciency; and investment of Ger man capital in Austrian busi ness. 9:00 Humphrey Bogart, Fazenda, and Frank MacHuffh will be heard in scenes from "Swing Your Lady" the country before the arrive in the "Hollywood Hotel" Hollywood, loaded down wun w I J 1 fWHAS : Abe Lvman's waltz contracts tim fWEAF. ' - I A 1 11 t - Ages 01 me penormers range ARMY BOMBERS BEGIN ON GOOD-WILL FLIGHT Miami, Fla., Feb. 17. Forty- nine officers and men began good-will mission flight to Bue nos Aires from here last night in six of the new U. S. Army "air fortresses." Maintaining regular radio communication with the station here, the squadron reached the equator approximately 10 hours after taking off. Although held up by a strong headwind, the planes were ex pected to make the non-stop trip to Lima, Peru, on schedule. At Lima, they will remain over night before beginning another 2,532-mile flight to Buenos Aires, where they will take part in the inauguration exercises of President-elect Roberto M. Ortiz of Argentina. 1Ann TIia Mnrlisnn Snuare ference "to consider the vast social implications Garden heavyweight bout be- f rom seven years 10 14 and they mvinveu. xn eaucauonax, governmental, auu wpp rpnT1 ralPTitn and TTarrv appear ararea in nair nuuuns, 1 i . j I " " " 1 . -i i , - 1 eveutuauy in lay-circies, me movement seems ues- Thomas will be broadcast blow starcnea aresses, suits vr wya, tined for vast significance. This University gains the label of progressive ness by its selection for the next conference. But more than for the mere glory, students here are fortunate in being so logical, and so welcome an experiment as that of better training for handling the socially-im portant quota of leisure time. by blow (WJZ or KDKA) ; and other appropriate regalia. X 11C OUIlg OXlVp HillVJ WBT). or 11:00 Poetic (WHAS). Melodies! archie pays a visit archie the cockroach used to write like this, he was'a little cockroach who lived off the copypaste in a newspaper8s editorial office and who couldn8t "1 - 1 l.il T 1 " A. J 1 - 1 use capital letters wnen ne typea Decause ne 1 ynjjam Griffin Arey, Jr. couldnSt stand on tne sniit Key and nit anotner uenry ciay glair BIRTHDAYS TODAY (Please call by the ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) key at the same time. now that don marquis, the man who created archie, has died, archie has been disconsolately roaming the country, we were lucky enough to have him visit the daily tar heel office the other day and he agreed to write a few potshots about Harry Grady harp, Jr. the campus alter ne naa iuoea arouna a wnue. HerDert jrying strong he ate a cupiuil 01 paste, men cumoea io tne top of the underwood and began bouncing onto dif ferent keps and climbing up again, with this rfr suit Names of the ebony quintet, bestowed unon them by their stepmother, are "Sweetie,1 Honey," "Sugar," "Darling, and "Precious" Faculty Men To Address Society (Continued from Page One) j ing from Dr. R. D. Connor, Ar chivist of the United States, who was formerly head of the his tory department of this Univer sity. Students' Eccentricities: Whew!! To the Editor Dear Sir: The attention given in the Daily Tar Heq, 0f February 17, 1938 to the eccentricities of profes sors prompts us to make known what we consider some equally interesting data taken from our re searches on the eccentricities of students. Our statistics on undergraduate foibles lead to the conclusion that there is a much closer correla tion between a student's standing in the course and his own annoying habits than there is between his standing and the instructor's mannerisms; furthermore, this study of student peculiarities rests on actual experience in the classroom rather than on a canvass of campus prejudices, whims, and inferiority complexes. Are You Guilty? The expected annoyances attendant upon the actual work of a student in the course may be passed over without much comment. These in clude written work done in an unreadable scrawl, apparently with a slate pencil upon scratch paper, and then turned in late; the constitutional inca pacity to come to class equiped with the proper books, any book, or even writing materials; and the invention of so many excuses for being absent and alibis for not handing in assigned work that instructors have filled commonplace books with data on this subject alone. Private Pride More fundamentally annoying to the most len ient professor is the prevalent notion that the student when he comes to class must be dressed as if he were going to a barn dance. Bedroom slip pers, unshaven jaws, and uncombed hair might occasionally be overlooked. But chronically un pressed pants and antique leather jackets worn over tieless shirts open at the 'neck can hardly be rationalized as an extension of Carolina liber alism. Chest hair, displayed to advantage by this traditional get-up, may legitimately be a source of private pride, but it is hardly fitting for public exhibition. Contortionists The final and most important cause of displeas ure to the instructor comes from the upsetting activities of students in the classroom. Some clump into class late on hobnailed heels; others on their arrival try to creep unnoticed into an in conspicuous seat at the back. Once the ordinary hullaballoo has subsided, most students flatten out along their spines, sit cross-legged like Boy Scouts at a camp-fire meeting, spread out over two or three seats, thrust a leg over the seat in front, or cock a knee over the arm rest. Such postures make attention improbable and note-taking posi tively dangerous. These contortionists stare hyp notized out of the window, fidget in their seats, yawn out loud, and read the Daily Tar Heel (heresy!) or Film Fun. Others more active in their inattention try to sidetrack discussion with pointless argument. Some attempt saucy or hu morless interjections. Some cackle to their neigh bors, fiddle with the back of a playmate's coat, or punch him slyly in the ribs. Many students who (Continued On Last Page) Ivey Reveals Honor System Violation (Continued from first page). Classical Moralists," "Schopen hauer," "What Is Beauty," "Sci ence and the Modern World." "Essentials of Scientific Meth od." POP QUIZ By Bob Perkins "RlancViA f!nrhf.t William Haskell Levitt Grail Sets Limit Katharine Elizabeth Mejtcalf To Sale Of Bids Willian Milton Miller Walter Palanske Mortimer Strong Latane Potter Wright (Continued from first paae) prizes for the. first two couples to arrive. Last This will be the last Grail dance of the winter quarter. Tia MJecvc- ItTiata -will . -nrobablv be three A. Alw XAAiJV AW V VVU VW a - . the c u interested me right off. it had a good sipp were built in 1717. more during the spring, A man had a chicken farm and S100 which he wanted to invest in moife chickens. The roosters he wanted to buy cost $10 each, the hens $3.00 and the chicks 50 cents. He wanted to increase his stock by exactly 100. How many of each could he buy so as not to exceed his $100? Answer to yesterday's quiz The watches would be correct if the men were standing at the north or south poles. (G. M. M. Thanks for your contribution but it was run last fall in Pop Quiz. If you have any more would appreciate them.) POINT OF VIEW By 'Ramsay Potts "He's always so eager to greet his friends that he knocks over a couple of chairs when someone comes in," said Nell. "And he talks about the most well known things like they were obscure and hidden away some- wnere up in the mountains. Everybody knows the Reader's Digest or a man like Ernest Hemingway, but Tom Wolfe designates them as 'that little new book,' and a friend of mine who writes, perhaps you ve heard of him'." Baron added. Nell and Baron Harkins Pntprfcnned Alumnus Wolfe this summer in Asheville. It was his first visit home since the publication of his novel "Of Time and the River," and he found the people who nm formerly been most bitter about the direct ness of his writing now anxious to acclaim him. -out he took it all in stride. "He's too ingenuous i!iG Any sma11 scho01 y could arrange to have a board of directors meeting if he wanted to get away from people, but not Tom Wolfe. He'd stay there all night, just because he wouldn't know how to get away," said Nell. Author Tom Wolfe has recently published a short story in the Saturday Evening Post He plans to interrupt his series of autobiographical novels, of which "October Fair" was to be the next, to write a more modern story about Ne York tenement life. "This is not to be taken as a turning away from my original plan, but I' afraid the public is tired of the type of novel I've been writing, so I thought I'd try something dif ferent." Wolfe has explained his plans in that way. i ff I i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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