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FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1938 PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL )t Batlp Car 2eel - 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. . - Business and editorial offices: 204-207 Graham Memorial Telephones: news, 4351; editorial, 8641; business, 4356; night 6906 Allen Merrill Editor Will G. Arey William McLean Jesse Lewis. ..Managing Editor ..Business Manager ..Circulation Manager " , Editorial Board Voit Gilmore, Frank Holeman, Bob Perkins, DeWitt Barnett, Tom Stanback, David Stick, Walter Kleeman. Feature Board Jesse Reese, David J. Jacobson, Sanford Stein, Miss Virginia Giddens, Adrian Spies, Miss Edith Gutterman. Technical Staff News Editors: Morris Rosenberg, Laffitte Howard, Raymond Lowery. Associate News Editors: Donald Bishop, Carroll McGaughey, Jim McAden. Night Sports Editors: William. Beerman, Charles Barrett, Buck Gunter. Senior Reporters Bill Snider, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Lawrence Ferling. Heelers Ed Rankin, Fred Cazel, Martin Harmon, Noel Woodhouse, Gene Wil liams, Ben Roebuck, Bob Barber, Bob Berbert, Britt Beasley, Ed Hoffman. Sports Staff Editor: Shelley Rolfe. Reporters: William L. Beerman, Martin Kalkstein, Richard Morris, Leonard Lobred, Billy Weil. 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, Bill Bruner, Ed Hart. Office: Gilly Nicholson, Donald McCoy, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Al Buck, Jim Schleifer, James Garland, Archie Lindsay. For This Issue NEWS: MORRIS ROSENBERG SPORTS: CHARLES BARRETT o "Time Marches On" Following close upon the declaration of war, the com mencement exercises of 1917 pulsed with a spontaneous, vital patriotism. Colors waved, drums rolled, and the campus thrilled with patriotic fervor. But the commencement of 1918 was pitched in a different key. . There had been a decrease of 14 percent in the enroll ment since the year before. Less than half of the senior class which started in the fall were present to receive their dip lomas. The others had been drafted or had volunteered in some branch of government service. Scarcity of men had made jobs plentiful, but no one knew what the future held. Under such circumstances it was impossible to recapture the fervor of the year before. However, as the procession moyed across the campus to the familiar tune of "Over There," the current of patriotic feeling made up in depth what it lacked in fervor they could "carry on." Today the graduating class faces equally unsettled condi tions. With business still bad, and only a small number of seniors with jobs in view, some may wonder what good the future can hold for 600 more individuals cut from their col lege apron strings and faced with reality. But depressions and wars come and go leaving in their wake many unsolved problems which if solved might pre vent strife and hardship in the future. The purpose of higher education is to furnish us with pro per tools for carving the correct answers to such problems. Some may say that it only furnishes in most instances a nebulous background that can be substantiated only by ex perience. It cannot be denied, however, that the class of '38 has had the possibility of acquiring more actual experience in the past four years than most graduating classes. They have lived through a period of national strife and hardship, watched and studied attempts to correct conditions, and in the class rooms have compared these attempts with know ledge gained from studying other periods. They have a better understanding than the class of '18 as to what the commencement speaker of that year meant when he said: "Tremendous forces that have been set in motion towards industrial democracy, state socialisms, and the or ganization of nations as a great industrial and social unit, intersect profoundly in the health, the education, and the efficiency of the people." Times and conditions change, but so long as we combine the ever increasing knowledge we gain from the past with the spirit to "carry on" history has a less chance of repeti tion and the education process fulfills its purpose. Bill Dawes To Wed Goldsboro Girl Tomorrow A Matter Of Opinion There are going to be some mighty tough examinations next week, and there are going to be some questions asked in them to which there is more than one answer. Professors insist upon asking these controversial ques tions in examinations, backed up by suitable logic, of course. Sometimes they get the student's individual opinion. More often they don't. The student knows full well, that if he gives opposition to the professor's views, his grade in most cases will fall proportionately, even though his thoughts may be backed by better authorities than the 'professor. This arrogant attitude is not widespread at Carolina. But the small amount of it here is a detriment to straight think ing.W. K. Law School Senior To Get A Wife For Birthday Present; Happy About Whole Thing William R. "Bill" Dawes, law school senior from Rocky Mount will marry Miss Olive Spence of Goldsboro tomorrow afternoon at 6 o'clock in Goldsboro, it was announced yesterday. Dawes, manager of Aycock dormitory, has just finished his final year of law school and plans to take the state bar examina tion this summer. Miss Spence is a graduate of WCUNC. "I get a wife for a birthday present," he said yesterday, just before, leaving , for Goldsboro. "May 28 a good day." Asked about immediate plans, he said that after a short hon eymoon, he would return to Chapel Hill for summer school to prepare for the state bar examination. "Otherwise, our plans are in definite," he finished. 13 Father of His Country ; ' i HORIZONTAL I First Presi - dent of the U. S. A., George ,10 Bottom. jI4Liauid part of fat. , 15 Money, 17 Wrath. 18 Evergreen. tree. 1 9 Makes' true. 20 To observe. 21 Slum dwellings 22 South America. 24 Upon. 25 Skillet. 26 Chest bone.'' Answer to Previous Puzzle C0ATOM ... OF PERU OHM IS r T .OF O k 1 in c. i mam PERU pfeEffi rjfp rcnu TEMPS I ULERTlRSpODE BAN SOP AC EDp5TAR TSEM aBtESR AJNpAL COPOF ALC ATgpAJLS jftldNUrvHlDlElsl lAlNlDlEfSl 13 Electric unit. 16 Coffee pot. 18 Moor. 20 He gained fame as a 39 Street. 40 Swimming organ of a fish. 41 Wedlock. 27 Tennis stroke 46 Divided. 28 Measure of 1! .area. 29 Prophet. - 30 Action. 32 Inlet. j 33 Snaky fish, j 34 God of war. ! 35 Insane. 1 36 Half an .em.1 3-7 To soak flax. 48 Stir. 49 Blue grass. 50 Furnished with rattan. 51 Trumpet, sound. 53 He was a s as a young man. 54 He became a man of VERTICAL 1 Grief. 2 Stranger. 3 Withered. 4 To hasten. 5 Within. 6 To smile I broadly. 7 Gastropod. 8 Bone. 9 Short letter. 10 Crude. II War flyer. 12 Permanently attached. '21 Small flap. 23 He had great as a statesman. 25 Seed bag. 26 Long grass. 27 Meadow. 28 To help. 31 Sea eagle. 32 Rodent." 35 Threat. 37 To tear stitches. 38 Mother. 39 Nose noise. 40 Fright. 41 The hand. 42 To scatter. 43 Road. 44 Evils. 45 Land right. 46 French coin. 47 Beam. 49 Postscript. 51 To exist. 52 Exclamation. Looking Over The Magazine By Lytt Gardner Fox To Take Pictures To Tell The Truth (Continued from first page) members at work. Miss Call To insure the success of the picture, Mike Ronman requested that all boys who have boxed either on freshman or varsity teams, or in physical education classes to show up at Kenan for the pictures. The visit is not the first to Chapel Hill for Cooke. Eleven years ago he took the pictures of the opening of Kenan stadium. "I remember that," he said, "I rode down to the stadium with -I n r -n P "NT 1 governor rncwain oi norm ui- We have tried to tell the trutu 1 3 1 TT T 1 I oiina aim governor xiuny xyiu We haye geen the dail paT)ers Of international amnestv. threats, warnings, and never seen a prettier lay-out and tragedies. background than you nave Here. We have read them and been New Gym moved bv them. And we have "Another thing, that new gym felt that students should at least is about the best I ve seen. If TTqm75" r : : b it " 5 ii ri - ' fe 47 ' 46 P" 1J , 51 5Z M 1. 1 1 I 1 I Hl I 1 rhl By Adrian Spies uiina xiu. uvivcxi j Ve have seen the daily papi of Virgina. And let me tell you, and read the grim portents I've taken pictures in a lot of war imperialism, internatio stadiums since then, but I've aTT1T1pStv. threats, warning. be introduced to the various un- irnii nc-n rrof on lYrf OTfVllocn QP I i . ,1.1 11. j wut w" u """" aercurrents oeneatn tne worm s swimming meet, an exhibition by stormy sea, and be made to real some big name swimmers and ize our cioseness to all of them, divers, or a girls' swimming And in doing. it we have tried to show, I'll be down to take some ej the truth, pictures of the pool next fall." Now, with vacation looming Cooke will take some pictures upon us, the truth comes to us. in North Carolina this summer Most of us are leaving the se that he promised would bring quester of school buildings. We the state plenty of free advertis- are going home to those news ing. paper stories. We are going Release Wednesday home to the recession, to military The pictures photoed today preparations, and to the frenzy will be rushed to New York, de- 0f the world trying to catch up veloped Monday and released with itself. nationally Wednesday. For trouble and danger are In 20 years, Cooke has been the truth of today. We could around and had a lot of interest- hide from them, and burrow in ing experiences. to our books. But we have been There was the time he was off more or less doing that all year. the Virginia coast snapping the We could forget them and go fleet manoeuvers. He was tak- fishing. We could laugh at them ing pictures of the Lexington and go courting. But they will and Saratoga when a big fog be there waiting for us. x Then for four and a And so we, who have been half hours out 75 miles from languidly trailing the truth all shore he and his pilot couldn't year, have little choice. The days get back to the Saratoga! and of quiet vacation, and the secur saf etv I ity of position, and well planned He was White House camera- futures are gone. The future is u . J JI- o ,Tu;i v;r,o. Pvdcdo Deing corn xoaay ana we are Coolidsre and Hoover. today. m ,J x We are Guisseppe Naparano in mine explosion at Grundy, Vir ginia, in which 47 men were killed. He's liable to be called on to cover anything. Working out of New York, Cooke covers Virginia, North Carlina and South Carolina. Philosophy Courses Are Changed itaiy, ana iauara urooan m Czechoslavakia, and Laughing Boy in China. We are people in a world which is being tried. And the wisest course is the edu cated one. We must learn to judge the headlines of the day and evaluate them. 'We must be prepared to understand the pro posals that fly at us from Wash ington, and the rumors that cut at us from Europe. We must build up a comprehension of the conflicts of today and be pre pared to take an intelligent stand. That we are in for trouble is the truth, We don't have to be college students to know that. And, unlike the world of our pa rents and parents' security, it does not leave us as indifferent spectators. It is creeping upon us from the Fascist threats in South America, it rubs elbows with us in the Mexican insurrec tions, and it entangles us in In ternational commerce. We have felt trouble coming closer with each new distressing headline, and it may soon be up on us. It might come this sum mer while we ftsh, or work in j i i a sxruggnng ousmess, or go courting. Trouble may invade us in a subtle guise. We might be chal- enged by some of the propagan da which is spreading through our land. We may be orated to by red-shirts, or silver shirts, or green shirts. We may be urged to follow Fascisms, or be argued into Communism. But we have been confronting truth all year, and we ought to meet these "or ganized patriotic drives" intelli gently. We have an idea of the trag edy so present in our world. We know what forces brought them about. We. the students of the young order, must be prepared to deliniate, and to avoid a study of religious values. 71 the philosophy of science, was originally given only to ad vanced undergraduates and gra- (Continued from first page) the spring. Several other new courses will duates, but has now been lowered also be offered during 1938-39. to junior-senior level and will be 58, which concerns the develop- presented in a simpler fashion ment of Christian philosophy, is 124 deals with the philosophy of given as a background for 96. the nineteenth century. 18 You can't, we're told, marry ten pretty girls. Conversely, ten pretty girls had a hard time keeping unified their article "Half-Measure in Coeducation" in John Creedy's new Magazine. But in spite of the many cooks the broth was far from spoilt, - and the article in its episodic way said some things that will prove very interesting to the "average male student." Like Carrie Chapman Catt the girls take up their hatchets in protest, this time against the discrimina tion allegedly shown towards co eds by students and faculty. Lois Latham's story "Wisdom of the Serpent" might strike some oh-too-familiar chords in those allergic to mountain man nerisms such as "beholden" and "snake-bite yarb," but its narra tive of little old Stubby and his rendezvous with a memory is col orfully done. Paddling his peculiar raft once more into the galleys of campus publications, Charley Gilmore dares to express his twisted philosophy of journalism in "My Last Day." Merrill's duty as a writer, he says, is "to write what his readers want to read." Gilmore gives a good ac count of the process of bedding down the Daily Tar Heel, and those who have had the pleasure of working with "Shorty" Hoe nig will immediately recognize Charley's picture of him. To most people Med Student Joe Farmer's cover photograph "Southern Gothic" is a striking ly good picture, to fine-grain photo friends its's phenomenal. Taken with a mass-production Argus lens at f.ll on ultra speed (and therefore coarse gram) film, the tiny negative yet gave infinite detail. Adrian Spies' aptitude for ex pression already exhibited in several of his. Daily Tar Heei features is evident in his story Money Is Our Calling Card," although the content of the story; is somewhat meager. Adding a slightly Steinbeckian note to the Mag, Ralph Miller draws on his background of ar my life in "The Rabbit under the Shed." He writes the story of a dead rabbit, two little boys, and "gover'ment property." Mark Taylor Orr gives what amounts to a yearly report on the activities of the Southern Coun cil on International Relations. "For better or for worse," he 11 1 1 J A oiooay imitation oi Europe m America. And we ought to have an idea of the shape of things to come. For, if we fail, it may be in the form of War. And if War comes, you and I will exchange our text books for rifles. We must be able TO TELL THE TRUTH. The first Olympic games for women were held in Pnria 4n - - MAAtJ Ali I says, "the ten Southeastern states of the United States are married to an economic system that is world-wide." Then he tells in detail what the Council has done. In the same expository and statistical vein Sam Hirsch plugs for the Playmakers in his "Dra ma" page. This is a great year for the Playmakers, he says, and . from Poppa Koch on down they are absolutely the hardest workers on the campus." Illustrated by capable Marga ret Munch's linoleum blocks, Al- mon Barbour's poem "To the Stars" makes us want to go out some starry night just to see if maybe we won't feel that way too. Edward Megson utilizes the end snap in his little story "So What!" It's scene is laid in an industrial plant, and it's plot is built on union organizing. Although the writing in John Creedy's first opus is hardly up to scratch, there is contained a variety of reading matter seldom found in an issue of the Maga zine. In his "Editorial Com ment" he promises never to be dull, and as we know him he y- j probably won't be.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 27, 1938, edition 1
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