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SUNDAY. April a PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL 1 T The cfkial newspaper cf the Carolina Publications Union cf the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the TcankEsirmg, Christmas and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class matter at the post fke at Chapel Hill, N- G tinder act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, tZJOO tor the college year. J. Mac Smith Charles W. Gilmcre- TZilliam McLean Jesse Lewis Xditor -Managing' Editor Business Manager .Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Editoeial Writers: Stuart Eabb, Lytt Gardner, Allen Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour, Bamsay Potts, R. Herbert Eoffer, David J. Jacobson. Nrws Editors: WH1 G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor ris Rosenberg:. . Deskmen: Tom Stanback, Ray Lowery, Jesse Reese. SENI03 Reporter: Bob Perkins. - Freshman Repobters: Charles Barrett, Adrian fapies, David Stick, Donald Bishop, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey (Radio), Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Bill Snyder, Lawrence M. Ferhng. Rewrite: Jim McAden. Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon. Sports Editor: R. B. Howe, Jr. ' f Sports Night Editors: Shelley Rolfe, Frank Holeman, Laffitte Howard. . Sports Reporters: Jerry Stoff, William L. Beerman, Richard Morris, Martin Kalkstein, Leonard Lobred. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative : Dick Eastman .vr immmsTNf! ASSISTANTS Stuart FicKlm, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Andrew Gennett, Ned Ham ilton, Billy Gillian. - r . , Office: GHly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Al tfucK, Jim ocmeixer. For This Issue News: Gordon Burns Sports: Frank Holeman CMC Will Resume Weekly Broadcasts; Rabb On Program The "International Scene" Scheduled for Tomorrow Night, 10 O'clock, WDNC Baptist NO APPLE-POLISHING' GOOD CLEAN FUN Randy Berg is using 20,000 square feet of red and black crepe paper to make his stuaent-iac- ultv Varietv ball Tuesday night a success. Eight saxaphones, four trombones, two bull fiddles, and a pair of batons are parts of the two bands. Freddy Johnson and Jimmy Fuller are the leading parts. The boys will play 50 tunes; music will never 8 ton. Onlv costumed dancers will be admitted to the Tin Can floor for the three-hour ball. Nobody dis guised as a gentleman will get in. (Exceptionally shy faculty members can come per se.) . . . . . j. t .Chemistry majors may come aown m xneir aprons, but economics students will have to rhancre. r,orrtrrtuniats will be admitted only if they look Uy the Rev. A. P. Brantley. j. 7:00 Student forum. Recent reli- The dance is only one event in a full Student Faculty day celebration. The whole holiday will be given over to a program informally acquaint ing students with their professors. No apple-polishing, this just clean fun. Queen of the Nile Henry Nigrelli, president of .the Carolina League for International Cooperation, announced yesterday that the organization -will resume its weekly broadcast of the "International Scene" tomorrow night at 10 o'clock over WDNC at Durham. This week, in addition to present ing the weekly set-up of international events, Nigrelli promises to interview Stuart Rabb, campus writer and PU board chairman, on some international being the first campus personality to topic to be revealed tomorrow. Rabb will have the distinction of be guest on the weekly broadcast. Planned to appear on future pro grams are Mae Smith, Alex Heard, Miss Polly Pollock, DeWitt Barnett, Scott Hunter, Miss Ann Perry, and Jim Joyner. When, or until, the-campus has its own radio studio, the Durham pro gram is the only regular representa tion of the school on the air. The program has been enthusiastically re ceived by a number of other schools in the state. HORIZONTAL I Famous siren .queen pictured here. 9 She was queen of 13 Measure. 14 Incarnation of Vishnu. 16 Lion. 18 Law.' 20TadpoIe. 23 Toward. 25 Serrated tools. 27 Measure, of paper. 23 PIuraL 29 Kimono sash, Answer to Previous Punle tesiPfei CHINA did; M A M Pf 'A Ml grr 1C HAt fjARPjo fTRCOfjH Rpi PjO-OR ttpIaTipIrw AjaferiA rc gsCE 3iQk IT zIrIeIoIeI RED mS l With The Churches 46 Winter rains. 4a To accomplish 49 Snaky fish. 31 Gas aperture. 51 Bollow- 34 Ladies underwear. 36 To soften leather. 38 Aquatic mammal. 39 Parent. 40 Golf teacher. 41 To leave out. 43 Courtesy title. 44 Neuter , -pronoun. "horned ruminant. 52 Cavity. .56 Black haw. 58 Falsehoods. 60.Data. 62 Regular or cubic. 65 God of war 66 .Julius and Antony loved her. 67 To reside. VERTICAL 2 Behold. 3 To sin. 4 Burden. 5 Employing flattery. 6 Transposed. 7 Knock. 8 Cupid. 10 A glance. 11 Taxaceous tree. 12 Deck above the spar, 15 Beer. 17 She was a member of the family. 19 Pitcher. 21 Musical note. 22 She was the most woman of her times. 24 Death notice. 26 To clip. 30 In. 32 Those driv ing teams. 33 Venomous snakes. 35 Jewels. 37 Dry. 42 Stonemason chisel. 45 Rust fungi sorL 47 Not tp depart 50 Not to win. 53 Preposition. 54 Secular. 55 Pale brown, 57 Aurora. 59 Tone J3. 61 Spigot. V 63.Mother. ' 52 64 Company. POINT OF VIEty By Ramsay Potts 10 :00 Sunday school. Student class taught by Dr. A. C. Howell. 11:00 Morning worship. Sermon, "Jesus Meets a Skeptic," by Dr. O. T. Binkley. 7:00 Student forum. Presbyterian 10:00 Sunday school. Student class taught by Professor L. D. Bur ling. 11:00 Morning worship. Sermon, "The Divine Disturbance," by the Rev. Donald Stewart. 7:30 Vespers. ' , Methodist 10:00 Student class. Taught by Phillip L. Shore. 11:00 Morning worship. Sermon, I "The Tragedy of Misunderstanding," 3 H Z5 1Z4 19 36 4f 4? 56 !50 25 35. 7 31 I5T 63 I? 5c7 7 120 M7 16 14 k 27 16 133 52 64 ran 67 53 60 II 12 P 2d 36 40 N3 65 37 145 61 THE 1:30 GLASS By Bob Perkins 3 I Service ENGLISH DEPARTMENT; THANKS, ON ACCOUNT A "nrivate-room, special nurse" system for grammatically-weak students, be they great or small, is the most recent boon to "finished" stu dents of the University of North Carolina. It is an act of the Composition Condition con scious English department. No longer do its mem bers intend to have a haphazard program plugged with hopes that graduates will be able to punctu ate a simple sentence or write a respectable busi ness letter. Beginning officially with September, 1938 (ac tually the new plan is now working in more or less finished form), a student convicted, of com mitting a crime against simple English in any de partment of the University will undergo two pro cesses: 1) A diagnosis to judge ability to continue work in more advanced courses. gious books reviewed. Episcopal 11:00 Holy Communion and ser mon. 7:00 Young People's league. 8:00 Prayers and organ recital United 10:00 Student class. 11:00 Church service. 7:00 Student forum. ( Lutheran 5:00 Worship service in Methodist church parlor. Catholic 11:00 Service in Graham Memo rial, room 214. Christian Science 11:00 Meeting in the art studio,) Peabody. Friends 11:00 Meeting for worship on the first floor of YMCA. This Musical Movie Problem face that photographs well (in still life), a nice head of hair, and a better On The Air It was in the days before Law rence Tibbet's word was law at the Metropolitan. They were rehearsing a revival of Puccini's opera "Girl of the Golden West," from the David Belasco melodrama (1905) of the same name. A fellow countryman of Puccini was stage director. The director did not like Tibbet's bow-legged swagger, disagreed with him as to how to handle the two six shooters, and offered further instruc tions as to how a sheriff acted in the days when the "West" was ruled by bad men. "But I have seen the leading Ital- ... . - i, 1. T ian baritones piay xms roie. x m better qualified to judge than you," he said. Tibbet protested further, to nore- sult. Finally he twirled the two six- shooters in a business-like fashion, al lowing them to stop suddenly, point ing directly at his antagonist. My father," he said, "was a sneritt out west at the same time this story is proportioned body than Tibbet. These attributes stood him m well tor a- while, but with each successive pic ture, audiences are becoming more restless in their seats. The cinema has trained its public to look for action and drama, and this public may take to a new fad at first, but when these two elements are lacking, the fad wil soon die. "Girl of the Golden West" (Sun day-Monday) is the story of a cov ered-wagon child who blossoms into a sole saloon owner of a California mining town. Jeanette MacDonald in the role takes every chance to undu late her hips and drawl you-alls. Ed dy is even less convincing as an American orphan who grows up to be a dashing Mexican bandit. Accustomed as American audiences are to their Saturday westerns, M-G- M could not have picked a worse story to cover up Eddy's dead-pan ex pression and lack of undulation. Of It's easy to know how the business interer of the country feel if you take the foUoVi quoted letter as an example. Maybe a sense t humor is the most valuable asset "My dear Sir: "In reply to your request to send a check t wish to inform you that the present condition cf my bank account makes it almost impossible Mr snatierea nnanciai cuuuinon is aue to Federal laws, State laws, County laws, City laws, Corpor ation laws, Liquor laws, Mother-in-laws, Brother-in-laws, Sisters-in-laws and Outlaws. " 'Through these laws I am compelled to par a business tax, amusement tax, head tax, school tax, gas tax, light tax, water tax, sales tax, Uqucr tax, carpet tax, income tax, food tax, furniture tax, potato tax and excise tax. Even my brains are taxed. I am required to get a business license car license, truck license, not to mention a marri age license, dog license and hunter's license. "I am also required to contribute to every so. ciety and organization which the genius of man is capable of bringing to life: to women's relief, the unemployed relief and the gold digger's re lief. Also to every hospital and charitable institu tion in the city, including the Red Cross, the Black Cross, and the Purple Cross and the double cross. "For my own safety I am required to carry life insurance, property insurance, liability insurance, burglar insurance, accident insurance, business in surance, earthquake insurance, tornado insurance, unemployment insurance, old age insurance and fire insurance. "My business is so governed that it is no easy matter for me to find out who owns it. I am in spected, expected, suspected, disrespected, reject ed, dejected, examined, re-examined, informed, required, summoned, find, commanded and com pelled until I provide an inexhaustible supply of money for every known need, desire or hope of the human race. "Simply because I refuse to donate to some thing or other, I am boycotted, talked about, lied about, held up and held down and robbed until I am almost ruined. "I can tell you honestly that except for the mir acle that happened, I could not enclose this check. The wolf that comes to many doors nowadays, just had pups in my kitchen. I sold them and here is the money. "Yours faithfully, The American Businessman." Weekly Forum With DAVID JAY JACOBSON 6:00 Edward Arnold will be the ol an A Nnrma 2) Diagnosis showing weakness, student begins Talmad (WGN); Joe Penner, with meaningly and forceabiy Ben Pollock's orchestra (WBT). 7? no Oporce Jessel will come over tn hf tnipst sion on the young nf J.lc Kpt,t,v fWEAF or WSB). "But yes, of course, if your father supposed to have taken place. I will the five pictures the two singers have act as he would have acted. Savvy?" starred together m, this is perhaps the Hp thrust the nistols forward worst. lower English course, or a special English labora tory, to add enough rudiments of good speaking and writing English to justify his going on with further courses. No conscientious student can deny the worth of the English department's objective. Never more should there be a graduating student who, on getting his diploma, might say "Thanks, gov ernor," without putting a comma after "Thanks." Und Don Ameche (WSB). If you don't thank them for it now, reason the English profs, you ought to some day. The director looked at the pistols and then at the determined expres- baritone's face. Past Successes "Naughty Marietta," the first and best, owed its success to a story of j which the music was a part. Here the two voices, which appear to be the ' ... I tt 3 J?..n ,T V.Vvof Til ci vpA I Koct -f nf rcnn-rA-ntT rmrnncos r Vo Tinil 7:30 Guest of Feg Murray tonight eage caiauuy wa. ; 7 , , 7 is Phyllis Kennedy (WPTF) ; Phil the part as he wished, and won fur- m Hollywood, had a chance to carry Baker with Oscar Bradley's orchestra ther success as an opera singer who the emotional part of the story. Wit- (WBT). 8:00 -The Chase and acted instead of strutting about the ness. the dramatic effect on the au Sanborn I stage in the accepted Italian grand- diences of the staircase scene where JOBFOR A MAGICIAN Over in the political science department, we hear, there is a magician. He used to be financial adviser to PWA. With a few coins, a deck of "cards, a thimble, and a glass he can give an hour's impromptu per formance. He began magic as a boy in Los Angeles. The political science department can use a good magician right now. He can bring all its new European maps up-to-date. He can change the color of Austria with one wave of his wand. If it takes a magician to catch a magician, he can tell us how Mussolini and Hitler put over their force tricks on a gaping world. We'd like to know. This week, though, we wish he'd go down to the baseball field and make a few passes over our pitchers. We play State Tuesday. Hour, f eaturine Charlie McCarthy opera manner. M-G-M Version Q-nnTnan Blondell will be. Tyrone Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's version oi Power's leading lady in "Calling Dr. 1 the Belasco play does not have the TTindarp " in t.hp. Hollvwood Plavhouse I Puccini onera music. Instead it has (WJZ) ; Nelson Eddy sings as guest a collection of songs by Sigmuna itom star of the Ford Sunday Evening I berg, but not up to his usuai swu they sung "Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life." This was true again in the picture which made "Miss" Grace Moore into ereat star, if not singer. "One a Hour (WDNC or WBT). ards. ' ' - NpIsoti Eddv. although a Night of Love" is perhaps the best of the American "opera" films yet produced. The scene from Madam baritone, Butterfly" was responsible, it com- BIRTHDAYS " TODAY (Please call by the ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) . . -i 1 1 i nloiToil Viit I Vito f oon-pocKoanti'fnl mn. is not; tne villainous sueim i -"" Baritone Tibbet, but the Robin Hood sic well-sung and recorded, lnterwo om- vf Viq nisi-ir which was one of f!aruso's favorite roles. Nor has, nis actine improved. Although .several vears ago critics stated that he nad Tprfppt. haritone voice, tecn- T,i.nllv Knpnlcine-. than Tibbet, he Will ,7 T c7 ven with a well built-up emotional climax of a story which had glamour and simplicity. If "One Night of Love" had come at the end of the series of musical pic tures, Hollywood might have learned James Brown Craighill Emily Hughes Dickenson Janet Wallace Evans Joseph Hauptman Zeno Daniel Hoots, Jr. -Harold Frederick Jennings James Lawrence Johnson Patrick Regia Mulane John Frederick Munch never reach a position such as that its lesson. But coming at the first it fcpld hv Amprira's No. 1 singer. Tib- merely started a trend in which some bet. in addition to a compelling voice ot our oest singers nave strutted (ranging from baritone to tenor), has across the silver screen with no idea a dramatic intensity, which on the as to wnat xney were up against opera stage sweeps all before him. On the concert stage, his splendid ability as a mimic and his use of pantomine add to the audiences' appreciation. Eddy's contribution to the screen, in Tibbet started a new school at the Metropolitan. Who will start one in Hollywood ? Slap-Happy . . . "Love, Honor and Behave" (Tues- A rat's enamel. incisor teeth have no . f -1 1 T J 3 XT , TT 11 addition to a smooth, even hantone aay nas uaw nuteu mruugn .xiouy- i mKrh rprnrds beautifully, is a (Continue on last page) Prominent among world problems today is the civil war in Spain; the outcome of which is cf much social significance. With the capture of Catalonia by the Franco forces it appears that the war is rapidly coming to a close. The question, "Which of the two warring fac tions do you favor?" is in truth a delicate one if it is to be answered thoughtfully. The question was put to various constituents of the University with the following results: The opinion of Dr. Richard Jente, of the Ger man department is, "If the Franco party repre sents a type of fascism, such as we see in Italy and Germany, it is a form of government that I cdunot sympathize with. The national govern ment seems to have communistic leanings which are also not in line with my sympathies." vvnen confronted with the Question. Dr. W. Thrall, of the English department said, "My syna- wmies are with the loyalists party because ot my emotional reaction Spam by Germany and Italy and partly through the hope that the cause of democracy will fare better if the loyalists win." Students Said southern student Delmas Hendrix, "M sympathies are with the loyalists because I think that they rightfully won the government control, which is, by way of the ballot box." Inasmuch as the loyalists are defending the existing government of Spain, which is a democ racy, ' said Mortimer Stang of Phi Alpha, "It 13 only natural that any American should favor that which upholds democratic principles." When asked her opinion on the Spanish situa tion, Miss Mary Winston Long of Jackson t replied, "Of course, I am a Loyalist. isn t? Sometimes I should like to be in sympathf with the Fascists just for the sake of argument However, I am a Loyalist mainly because of Pre judice, and because the Fascistic form of govern ment towards which the Insurgents are tendM seems to me to.be a backwards step. Should the Loyalists stage a comeback, and defeat Franco forces the new government will probably beco SPl? S front on the order of the Kussian state with all its shortcomings "
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 3, 1938, edition 1
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