Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 29, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR 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 the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered 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. " ; .v-': . . v v v Business and editorial offices: 204-207 Graham Memorial . Telephones: news, 4351; editorial, 8641; business, 4356; night 6906 Allen MerrilL Will G. Arey. William McLean Jesse Lewis. ; .Editor -Managing Editor -Business Manager -Circulation Manager , ' Editorial Board Voit Gilmore, Frank Holeman, Bob Perkins, DeWitt Barnett, Tom Stanback. Feature Board Jesse Reese, David J. Jacobson, .Sanf ord Stein, Miss Virginia Giddens. Technical Staff News Editors: Gordon Burns, Morris Rosenberg, Laffitte Howard. Associate News Editors: Donald Bishop, Carroll McGaughey, Jim McAden. Night Sports Editors : Frank Holeman, William Beerman, Raymond Lowery. ' Senior Reporters David Stick, Charles Barrett, Bill Snider, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Miss f Gladys Best Tripp, Lawrence Ferling, Adrian Spies, Buck Gunter. , Heelers Ed Rankin, Fred Cazel, Martin Harmon, Noel Woodhouse. Sports Staff Editor: Shelley Rolfe.- Reporters: Jerry Stoff, Martin Kalkstein, Richard Morris, William L. Beerman, Leonard Lobred. j Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative: Dick Eastman. Local Advertising Assistants: Stuart Ficklen, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Andrew Gennett; Ned Hamilton, Billy Gilliam. v Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Al Buck, Jim Schleifer, James Garland, Archie Lindsay. For This Issue NEWS: GORDON BURNS SPORTS: WILLIAM BEERMAN o Peace For 200 The chairman of the Carolina Political Union murmured a fairly polite "damn" the other night. On a warm, beautiful April night, not over 300 people had come to hear His distinguished speaker from Idaho, Senator James Pope. Not even half as good as the turnout for a Ku Klux Klan wizard one damp, wind-swept night last fall. Now Alex Heard can' join the ranks of disillusioned organ ization chairmen, lecture sponsors, and campus-sentiment-rousers who have pledged themselves to write a treatise on why not have public entertainments in the spring in Chapel Hill. Several chapters of the treatise will discuss varsity sports, which are forever sending dozens of athletes away on trips; and intramural sports, which tire many on long spring after noons that a dormitory bull session is all they're good for after supper. But social life dwarfs the significance of even sports. Everybody's club all of the campus' 400-odd extracurricu lars has to have its spring outing. Half a dozen dances on the camp'us this week-end lend support to that. And there's something Mr. Heard and disappointed friends t will find hard to describe in their treatise. That is simply ! "the lackadaisical philosophy that comes to at least 2,500 students in. the spring. Shouldn't there be a reward for two quarters of high-powered learning? Isn't spring a logical time for an intellectual let-down? And the answer is sheer disregard for opportunities for cultural uplift. Mr. Heard and his brother-sponsors sadly learn in the last of their final year that this student body doesn't care if war is at stake, doesn't care a bit about the night, and doesn't give as much a "damn" as they themselves when nights get warm, when school is nearing its close, and when learn . ing is just one part of college life. V. G. A Thousand Dollar Habit May Frolic-ers paid over a thousand dollars for their dates' corsages last week-end. Buying corsages for dates is an expensive habit that has grown up in the last three years, says Dance Committee Chairman Randy Berg. John buys roses for his date mainly because it is the vogue. At Mississippi, Sewannee, Princeton, and - a number of other universities corsages are forbidden. Our committee in tends in the future, says Berg, to discourage the habit here for the benefit of our parents. What'is the reaction of those who wear the flowers? One coed .says that corsages are "nice," but when a sorority sister "gets orchids and I get rose buds, I wish there were no corsages at all." "Say it with flowers," urge the florists, especially if it takes a thousand dollars to say it. Press Institute David Stick's North Carolina Scholastic Press Institute opens here this afternoon at 1:30.- One hundred and twenty-five delegates are coming. They will register in Graham Memorial. Stick says his purpose is to form a closer union of high school journalists to let them see and hear real newspa pering. They will see the Daily Tar Heel. They will hear Anthony McKevlin, sports editor of the News and Observer; L. S. Lepraid, editor of the Durham Herald ; W. S. Howmand, news editor of the Winston-Salem Journal; and Carl Goerch, editor of State Magazine. Stick is forming his "closer union" on the Carolina campus, and today the University moves one step closer the high schools of the state. F. H. Local Students Leave Today For Blue Ridge Meet About 75 Delegates From . State To Gather At Nawakwa; Will Train YMCA Of ficers This afternoon will find 18 repre sentatives from the University YMCA and YWCA headed for Camp Nawak wa, YMCA conference grounds, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina where. they will join in the last official conference before Blue Ridge in June. Approximately 75 delegates from colleges all over the state will gather at Nawakwa to train the newly elected "Y" officers and to serve as resources in maintaining a unified "Y" pro gram. Speakers Outstanding speakers will be there to make this one of the most impor i tant meetings of the year. Discussion groups and recreation will fill the rest of the representatives time. Mrs. John E. Toms, wife of Dr. Toms of the music department, is to be in charge of music and recreation. Carolina students attending the con ference are: Margaret Evans, Rachael McLean, Claire Whitmore, Olive Cruikshank, Polly Pollock, Lillian Howell, Marian Williams, Mary Greene, Brooks Patten, Gene Turner, D wight Brown, John Riggsbee, S. B. Bradley, David Sessoms, Tommy Keys, Billy Hand, and Ed Maner. I Five Local Students Leave For Social Workers' Conference Members Of Social Workers' Club Will Visit Catholic University In Washington, Five members of the U. N. C. Social Workers club leave today to attend the Eastern Conferences of Students of Social Work ,at Catholic university in Washington, D. C. The Eastern and Southern student organization is affiliated with a re cently organized national association. Originally scheduled for New York City, the conference has been moved for the convenience of the local group. Purpose of the conference is to dis cuss the problems of social work stu dents and to select delegates to the annual meeting of the American As sociation of Social Workers. This meeting will be held in Seattle, Wash., this June. Those delegates attending the con ference in Washington, D. C. are Wal lace H. Kuralt, Stanley I. Hirsch, Leora German, Victorial Bell, and Mr. Isabelle K. Carter. Faculty Meeting There will be a meeting of the general faculty today in Bingham hall, at 4 o'clock. The business in order will in clude: Comprehensives ; report of Composition Committee; Mr. Hoyle's motion concerning Student-Faculty Day; and other business. On The Air By Walter Kleeman Musical Genius. HORIZONTAL ; il, 8 19th century musical composer. 13 Tiny skin ) opening. 114 To help. 16 Opera melody. ;17 To abound, jl 8 Heron. 20 Narrative ; poem. 22 Half an em. 23 Colored gem. 25 Timber tree. 27 Negative. ,28 Banal. 29 English titles. 31 To hasten. ! 33 Barrier. 34 Imitated. 36 To bow. 37 Genus of I fresh-water ducks. . '89 God of sky. 40 Within. '41 Exists. 42 You and L 44 South I Carolina. Answer to frrerioos Pnxxle EfLiolGlEjisUut mc cmHg ur "fe gjo Ltd m pfzM RfTfe ft DHN 0,0 It U LpM 3kD JPR JDE JSHjIC from pressed grapes. 48 Custom. 50 Feminine treble voice. 52 To devour. 53 Merchants. 57 Neither. 58 Sheltered place. 0 Assumed name. 61 Wand. 62 He was a native . It 15 Degrades. 17 He struggled 1 to acquire fist - cn ffcs. piano. 18 To sup. 19 Hair crnamenl 21 He was well- J liked as an j orchestra 243.1416. 26 Railroad. 28.To scatter.. 30 Mineral sprinj 32 Electrified . " particle.' 33 A lure I 35Being. 38 Exchanges. 43 To sin. i 45 Rhythm.. 46 Telegraphic code. 47 Indian boat the composers oi last century. VERTICAL 2 To unjiose. 3 Garden tool. 4"Coat of mail. 5 Compass point 49 Auction. 6 Bird of prey. 50 Gunlock catcha . 7 Title of I courtesy. 9 Sun god. 10 Small area. II Side bone. 46 Refuse matter 63 He was one of 12 Principal. 51 Bows. t 54 Hastened. "! 55Morindin dye. 56 Te excavate. 4 59 Type standard 61 Right yap H p I 16 17 I d p 0 ttl I2 j 17 ; la"" iS""" ' S5 2J 2d ; & ' ' 55 56 " JF 37 SB 5F . Xit W ' 42"" 45 W wv 52 153 154, p5 56 " 11 I 1 hi" I I I 1 1 1 h FRIDAY APRIL 29, l93s "My Day OR Life On A Raft By Charley Gilmore Press Institute Opens Today (Continued from first page) ing, there will be a series of talks on the various aspects of newspaper work. Among the speakers are An thony J. McKevlin, sports editor of the Raleigh News and Observer; L. S. Leprade, editor of The Durham Her ald; Charles McDevett, managing edi tor of The Kinston Daily Free Press; and William S. Howland, executive news editor of The Winston-Salem Journal. Saturday evening at 6 o'clock there will be a lawn party, sponsored by Graham Memorial. Carl Goerch, edi tor of The State magazine, will be the main speaker. The press session will be conclud ed tomorrow night at a general meet ing to form a permanent organization, elect officers and make plans for next year. According to Director Stick, each school has three delegates and a faculty adviser, but some schools are sending more and paying their own expenses. The only expenses of the delegates are meals and some rooms, Stick stated. Professor Poteat To Speak Here May 9 Professor Hubert M. Poteat, of Wake Forest, will speak Monday, May 9, at the University Lodge and Masonic Temple. Professor Poteat is Past Grand Master of the Masons in North Caro lina. All Masons are urged to attend. Conferences Freshmen and sophomores are ask ed to go by and see their advisers for mid-term conferences by the end of the week. Plyler Solves Old Mystery 4:30, May we hear a Tar Heel vic tory from the Penn Relays over WWNC . . . 5:00, George Hall's Or chestra on WDNC . . . 5:30, Boake Carter as usual from WBT . . . 5:45, Compare with Lowell Thomas on WLW . . 6:00, Your daily potion of the Andrews Sisters and Jack Fulton on WBT . . . 6:30, Mark Warnow's Orchestra on WDNC ... 7:00, Songs by Lucille Manners while Frank Black, NBC Music Director wields the baton; however, Russ Morgan fans tune in WLW . . . 7:30, Paul White- man will soon be at Duke but hear him on WDNC . .'. 8:00, Step up the pace with Ken Murray, Oswald, Fran ces Langford,, and Frank Parker on WBT, or Tim and Irene plus Graham McNamee on WPTF; settle down with Abe Lyman for waltz time on WTIC . . . 8:30, CCs take notice: Spelling bee on WPTF . . . 9:00, The Songshop singf est on WDNC, or first rate drama with the First Nighter on WSB (the leads ranked two and three in latest popularity poll) ... 9:30, Jimmy Fidler and his bells on WLW? WPTF presents the Junior League ball with Paul Whiteman and others . . 9:45, Dorothy Thompson speaks her mind over WLW . . . 10:30, Two smooth orchestras: the slide trom bones of Will Osborne on WDNC, or Ruby Newman's violin over WPTF I from the Rainbow Room V . . 11:00, Preview of Junior-Seniors : Red Norvo over WBT. The next time no one else is listen ing, ask yourself this question: Would I give marriage a "fair" trial? Strike At State Averted Marriage, a beautiful institution based upon unselfishness, faith, and devotion, costs practically . nothing. And it's heaps of fun too! (Continued from first page) advised instead of general consolida tion, physical consolidation. This, he said, would have meant the abolishing of State college and the re moval of the school from Raleigh to Chapel Hill. He argued that any un favorable publicity to the college would likely result in such a move now. He was first greeted with boos and hisses which were finally checked, ac cording to report, by students who insisted that he be heard. His statements were violently ob jected to from the floor as students expressed the opinion that he was at tempting to evade the issue. They claimed that this had been the case since the faculty first passed the rule against the dance in February and had not informed the students until they started preparation for the oc casion the first of this month. Harrelson was also asked why he had not secured a quorum for a meet ing of the faculty council when it was petitioned to reconsider the isssue af ter 1,122 students C96 percent) had voted in favor of the dance and only 39 voted against it. Many of the students hacking the dance "maintain that this is the chance to put an end to the faculty control which "does not recognize the student government, and maintains an . un- y?otnpTatic. dictatorial, high school VA w W ' jurisdiction over the student body.n (Continued from first page) energy, and finally transferred across the room where it is measured by a sensitive meter which operates the light beam. "And what have we found? Oh, just; that the atoms of both poisons have common particles between which there is an attraction, but an attrac tion not detectable by any chemical tests. "It's all kinda complicated. But when whiskey counteracts carbolic, and carbolic acid takes the kick out of whiskey, it's a pretty crazy world anyway." Pharmacy Hops Begin Tonight (Continued from first page) all of the dances is being furnished by Johnson and his orchestra. Student officials of the pharmacy school will lead the figure scheduled for the dance tonight. They are as follows : Watson Allen, president of the phar macy school, with Miss Bernice Brant ley of Mooresville; John Hicks, vice president of the school, with Miss Er nestine Barber of Goldston, N. C. Perry Waters, chairman of the dance committee, with Miss Nelda Spruil of Washington, N. C; Jimmy Fox with Miss Julia Stewart of Clinton; Jimmy Creech, with Miss Beverly Brown of Chapel Hill ; and Freddie Johnson with Miss Mildred Whitaker of Durham, A freshman English instruc tor named Gwynne Daggett has discovered how to get work out of his students. He just stands on his head. That's a lot bet ter than sitting on som et h i n g else. When he asked the class if he should stand on his hands to im press them, the boys gave a very positive response. They wanted to see a professor who was head-over-heels in love with his work. How To Win Friends If Acrobat Daggett has the right idea, our whole philosophy of persuasion may be changed. When Dr. Graham appears be fore the faculty this afternoon, don t be surprised if he throws himself out of joint. I understand Student Partv members practised calisthenics at their meetincr last nijrhL Next election Mitchell Britt will do forward somersaults, and Bill Cole is working out a back flip that should be worth several hundred votes. Shot From a Cannon Yesterday Alex Heard wrote Barnum & Bailey. He wants to sign the Great Pinellis for his next CPU speech. If that doesn't drag 'em out, he might as well throw in the towel. Even at that, if he throws the towel in deftly enough he should be able to draw a fairly good audience; or else Instructor Daggett has got an act that's only good for a one-day stand, if you know what I mean. The whole place has gone topsy-turvy. Over in Phillips, Professor Plyler says that a drink of carbolic acid won't hurt you if you chase it with whiskey. A slue: like that wrould make anyone stand on his head. They say the secret of stand ing on your head is putting the right foot upward. Miss Kane, Pianist A large audience, last Sunday, heard Miss Helen Kane of Chicago give a highly meritorious recital of piano music. Her program contained a varied as sortment of classical, romantic, and impressionistic music. The opening selection was a short Sonata by Scar latti. . This was followed by an ex cerpt from one of the English Suites of Bach, and the Variations in F minor by Haydn. Of particular in terest, was the exemplary reading of the Bach work by Miss Kane. It was one of the finest contributions on her program. Bach's English Suites with their brilliance, clarity, and homo geneity evince the true Baroque spirit in music. His art is like the sculp tured figures, the niches and the em bellished ornaments of the Baroque cathedrals. The Haydn Variations, in Rococo style, were given a thoroughly musical rendition and deserved the expressions of enthusiasm that Miss Kane's play ing evoked from those who heard her performance. It is to be said that Miss Kane is a thoroughly conscientious and capable artist. She will undoubtedly go far in her career, if one may judge from her potentialities, careful application, and fine training. Let us hope she will visit our campus soon again. A. C. B. BIRTHDAYS TODAY (Please call by the ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) ' RohertT. Lubin . Thomas Frederick McWhirter Walcott Woodridge Merrow David Mass Moore Harold D. Padgett Kennon Swift Rodwell Sidney Shiller. Israel Addresses Hillel Session Tonight (Continued from first page) Breat, France, during the year of 1919. Upon returning to this coun try he pursued the rabbinical acti vities for which he was prepared. He was summer lecturer at the University of North Carolina in 1927, 1929, and 1930. Last year he deliver ed a lecture before the Hillel Founda tion. The campus is cordially invited to attend.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 29, 1938, edition 1
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