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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1933 Cije Batlp 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 circulation, 6476. Allen MerrilL Will G. Arey. Clen S. Humphrey, Jr... Jesse Lewis '. Editorial Board Voit Gilmore, Tom Stanback, DeWitt Barnett, Waiter Kleeman, Donald Bishop. Feature Board Miss Virginia Giddens, Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Adrian Spies, Sanford Stein, James Keith, Ben Dixon, Larry Lerner, Miss Edith Gutterman. - Technical Staff News Editors: Morris Rosenberg, Jim McAden, Carroll McGaughey. Night Sports Editors: Martin Harmon, Bill Snider, Ed Rankin Associate News Editors: Fred Cazel, Gene Williams, Rush Hamrick Senior Reporters Jesse Reese, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter. ' , x Reporters Bill Rhodes Weaver, Ben Roebuck, Bob Barber, Fred Brown, Tom Dekker. Heelers Jim Vawter, Miss Doris Goerch, Miss Louise Jordan, Miss Dorothy Coble, Louis Harris, George Grotz, Elbert Hutton, Edward Prizer, Jimmy Dumbell, Charles Gerald, Bill Ward, Miss Jo Jones, Arthur Dixon. - .. Sports Staff Editor: Shelley Rolf e. Reporters: William L. Beerman, Leonard Lobred, Noel Woodhouse, Richard Morris, Jerry Stoff, Buck Gunter. Assistant Circulation Manager: Larry Ferling. Business Staff ...... Local Advertising Managers: Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Ned Ham ilton. ' . Durham Advertising Manager: Gilly Nicholson. Durham Representative: Andrew Gennett. Office Managers: Stuart Ficklen, Jim Schleifer. Local Advertising Assistants: Bob Sears, Earl Alexander, Alvin Pat terson, Marshall Effron, Warren Bernstein, Bill Bruner, Billy Gillian, Tom Nash. Greensboro Representative: Mary Anne Koonce. Office Staff: Mary Peyton Hover, Phil Haigh, L. J. Scheinman, Bill. Stern, Charles Cunningham, Bob Lerner, James Garland, Jack Holland, Roger Hitchens. For This NEWS: WILL AREY the Passing Of Script The administration announced yesterday that it had dis continued the use of script money on the campus except in Swain hall, giving as the reason the expense of keeping up the present system. It may be fortunate for the sake of the campus the ex penses forced this move, for the script has many disad vantages. ,t . . The administration has admitted that parents have been complaining over-the excessive price some students are pay ing for food. This means that students are spending script under false pretenses. However, it means more than that. It means that the Uni versity is providing its students with a false incentive to spend money. When a boy spends script he doesn't feel that he is spending money, but that he is spending paper. All of us are familiar with this illusion. Yet the statement is heard that "I couldn't keep enough money on hand to eat with, if I didn't buy Swain Hall tickets." This means that the administration is "wet-nursing" the students. Instead of giving them the chance to learn how to spend money, it takes away that chance by giving him the illusion of being able to tie his money up in something which on the campus has been nearly as negotiable as money itself. Even so, the use of script is convenient, but it may be un constitutional. The Constitution of the United States says that no state may coin money or emit bills of credit. The University is an agency of the state. Perhaps the removal of script from the campus is a bless ing in disguise. W. K. o One 1938 Senior . . . . was pretty discouraged this summer a few weeks after graduation in chemical engineering at the end of the sum mer session. Job prospects seemed almost hopeless. This senior had a few good contacts in industry and had banked on them to help him land a place in chemical engineer ing work the "pull" along with his qualifications in that field. Business conditions, however, were against him, and all his letter writing and interviews were of little avail. About the middle of September he paused to take inven tory of himself and of the situation. Since he apparently wasn't going to find any employment immediately, he decid ed that he might as well pick out the kind of work he liked best and concentrate his efforts on that. The soybean industry looked interesting to this fellow. Here he could combine his farm background and his training in chemical engineering to good advantage in any phase of soybean development . . . from the actual growing to the manufacturing into various oils, paints, foods, and a hun dred and one other processed materials for which the legum inous beans were being made use. "I'm going to learn so much about soybeans," he said, "that the manufacturers can not afford not to hire me." So he read books the few of them already published on the relatively new commercializations of soybeans and pamphlets, and he talked to chemists who were experiment ing with soybeans. He jotted down notes on what he heard and read, and made a bibliography. Last week this graduate received three offers of employ ment from soybean manufacturers ... all of them jobs with futures. -Purdue Exponent. ; Car Heel -Editor Managing Editor ..Business Manager -Circulation Manager Issue SPORTS: ED RANKIN Letters To Over 100 Words Editor's note: names in the form of initialed signatures will be re vealed on request. WE STUDENTS To the Editor, Dear Sir: Gene Turner raised a good point in his letter to you yesterday, and we're glad of the chance to answer the question. Students have gotten President Rooseevlt here. Students will greet him at Sanford. Students will sur round him on the platform Monday. Students are handling his reception, the NBC-CBS broadcast, and every thing else from the time he detrains in Sanford to the time he entrains in Durham. President Graham and Governor Hoey have a total of about four min utes on our program, and they have that because it is fitting and proper under all rules of etiquette. Natural ly the University is having to co operate with the CPU to see that plat forms get built, seats get erected, and whatnot. The President's visit, we are proud to say, is a non-political affair. All the politicians will be in the concrete stands. Just the CPU, the President's party, Governor Hoey, President Gra ham, and Dean House will sit with the President. Our student body will have reserved seats nearest the platform. The students have planned every thing, and they've even gotten a special treat arranged for the Presi dent that can't be announced until Monday afternoon. 1 We students, Gene, are running the show. I believe our visitor will like it. Sincerely, Voit Gilmore, Chairman CPU. THE LAST Word By Jane Hunter Some precocious problem child sure started something Wednesday when he kicked the slats out of his cradle, cut three teeth, and prematurely gurgled his first words to be published in a University newspaper all in one day. It is true, as the editorial comment stated, that the request for a gossip column came mainly from coed head quarters. But the latest returns on feminine opinion vote down "Confi dentially" as a bit of childish back biting, and voice regret that the author neglected to employ the rest of the Mischa Auer quotation as his heading. O High . potentates of the Yackety Yack office have announced that this year at least part of the beauty sec tion of the year book will contain pic tures of University coeds. The beauty section is strictly the province of the editor to fill as he chooses, and here tofore it has usually been split be tween the editor and "the business manager and its eight pages adorned with glamorous gals from home, ' or some place. Just how the campus winners will be chosen has not been decided. It may be by public vote or by a student committee. Or it may be done by sub mitting pictures of the most likely candidates to a reliable critic like Petty, Ronald Coleman, or McClelland Barclay. At any rate, the change in policy will help to make the annual student publication of much more in terest and value to the general cam pus. Don Jackson Libel Case (Continued from first page) 45 stations in the country. George E. Quigley, of New York, attorney for Jackson, in an interview yesterday afternoon said that Jackson was not even in school at the time of the exposure of the ring, having been previously suspended by the Honor council on another charge. He also stated that Jackson applied for re admission to the University on April 23 of the same year and was accepted. Following the broadcast ' Jackson brought suit, accusing the broadcast ers of libel, but the case has been held up until this year by legal en tanglements. Making a special trip from New York this week, attorneys for, the litigents came to Chapel Hill for the purposes of taking depositions before a notary from witnesses here and in Raleigh, before the case is brought into court. Student council records of the case were not reviewed by the attorneys, following the council's policy of main taining secrecy in regard to its ac tions. However, the council's brief re- The Editor Subject to Cutting O FDR A COLLEGE STUDENT! To the Editor Dear Sir: Mrs. Roosevelt told a small gather ing last week-end that her husband was going to become a child again during Thanksgiving. She said he was going to swim with the small chil dren at Warm Springs, play games with them, and eat turkey with them. And then a week later he was coming to Chapel Hill to be a student. But how will Mr. Roosevelt actually feel when he comes here? Will the surroundings be very different from the numbers of talks' he has given be fore state officials, college faculty members, and local "big shots" all crowded around on the speakers plat form? The college atmosphere, that Mr. Roosevelt evidently would like so much to see, will be mixed in with the hundreds of visitors who have come here to hear the President. Surely he will not be able to feel like a col lege student in this set-up ! Actually, whether the president de sires it or not, this occasion should be a student affair. .It is mainly through the efforts of Voit Gilmore and the Carolina Political Union that Mr. Rooseevlt is coming here. So why not have students on the" platform with Mr. Roosevelt? Why not have important campus officers in the place of state politicians and faculty? Why not have students make the necessary introductions and thanks of appreciation? Why not make it a stu dent affair? Let us make Mr. Roosevelt feel like a student again. We owe it both to ourselves and to all of those later on who will be asked to step aside for their elders. ' Sincerely, Chuck Loomis. port to the administration, concern ing the nature of the violation and action taken, was given to the attor neys after having been verified by Jim Joyner, president of the council. Joyner said last night that, as the actions and testimony of the council are taken in strict confidence, the records could not be shown to the representatives. ' Francis F. Bradshaw, dean of stu dents, explained the policy of the Uni versity in regard to the council's ac tion. According to Dean Bradshaw, the administration regards the council as autonomous in dealing with viola tions of the Honor system, and there fore at liberty to withhold such infor mation as it desires. The Dean fur ther explained that it was not a case of attempting to obstruct the actions of the courts, but simply that both the council's records, and the cumu lative record of each student kept by the University are regarded in the same light as confidential medical records and can not be thrown open for inspection. Juniors, Seniors To Play Today (Continued from first page) E. Dickerson, Pat Patterson, Ken Royal, K. Gant, W. Vinson, Z. Carver, D. Berini, C. McKinney and R. For rest. The following will be raising the colors for the senior class: Gilliam, B. Miller, Nethercutt, Thompson, Niven, Topkins, Peacock, Fleming, Pearson, McCord, Beattie, Shell, Wil liamson, Southerland, Sitterson, Innes, Bill Daniels, Clements, Bill Jordan, J. B. Brame, Kuklish, C. Lynch, B. J. Lamb, Hancock, J. Rowland, Albert Maynard and Harvey Hines. Spectators present are promised a truly rip-snorting, tear 'em up, ram bang pigskin battle. Geologists Meet Today Dr. W. H. Irwin, of the geology department, will speak this after noon at 4 o'clock to the members of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geological fraternity, in 401 New East. The subject of his talk 'will be "The Geo logy of the Grand Coulee Dam." Pick Theatre TODAY 1938 ACADEMY WINNER SPE1ER TRACY LORETTA YOUNG GLENDA FARRELl - ARTHUR HOHL WALTER CONNOLLY MARJOR1E RAMBEAU - DICKIE MOORE A FRANK BORZAGE PRODUCTION A Screen Guild Ficture AColumbia Picture CAMPUS RS0WALITIES By DONALD BISHOP :-:-:.--- :-. :v:-:: :: v . .-. . J.v j s If you see a handsome young Bo hemian of the chivalrous old South skulking down East Franklin street in diligent search for choice cigarette butts, he may be Carl Pugh, "exalted floogie," or editor, of the Carolina Buccaneer. Carl took off on a jaunt to New York last summer after his unopposed election as the campus jester. He carried with him a head chockful of ideas for humor magazines and a couple of pockets chockful of empti ness. So, according to his honest con fession, he had to stoop to a low level, lower even than editing a college hu mor magazine. He had to partake of second hand cigarettes and existed several weeks on bread and water. Through all his trials and tribula tions, however, his head remained proudly high. He would pick up Fifth Avenue ducks only and ate' the best that could be had in Italian rolls, at two cents each. The gods smiled on him for the rest of his meals, for wdter was everywhere plentiful. But, as Horatio Alger would have it, our young hero could not be downed. Genius asserted itself, and cartoonists began accepting sugges tions. This meant cash for the Pugh pockets. .-He has crashed all the big publications that print funny car toons, except Esquire, and he hasn't given it up yet. Demonstrating that he has been ex posed to higher mathematics, Carl calculates that his cerebral processes produced a cartoon idea every two and a half minutes last summer in New York. Not all the ideas made the grade though, and thinking is hard on humor magazine editors. Still, by selling about 20 per cent of his car toon suggestions, he earned his way in the big town. He is back this year, majoring in archaeology and turning out a maga zine designed "to please the readers." "Some smut if they want it, but not too much," is his answer to any Puri tans that might be in these parts. Next year he will set out again in the cartooning world, not drawing but depending on his originality in cartoon ideas to make a living. He hopes eventually to go into advertis ing or some related field. $1.00 Value ZIPPER MANICURE SETS 49c 2-Quart HOT WATER BOTTLE Fully Guaranteed 24c 3-Way Approved HEATING PADS Fully Guaranteed $1.29 FREE Cannon Wash ClothWith CAMAY 3 Cakes For 15c No. 1 Thin Shell Diamond Brand ENGLISH WALNUTS New Crop 23c Per Pound 111! Tj Maronic, Watson Accept Bids (Continued from first page) being chosen. However, ne assured Gunter that a "capable man from this section will handle the job. Each team is allowed a roster of 22 men, either professionals or col lege seniors whose amateur stand ir.z will not be affected in any war. Training will continue after the regu lar season is closed, and all players are required to be in Montgomery not later than December 28; two workouts will be held daily at the stadium there. Coaches Thomas and Meagher arc graduates of Notre Dame and pro teges of the late Knute Rockne con sequently, it is expected the South ern team will use the famous Notre Dame style of play. Proceeds of the I game will go to relieve unemploy- meiii, turn vo neip individual uniortu nates. Maronic, who received national no tice for his place-kicking feats, has already made one Ail-American eleven plus numerous other "All selec tions. Watson was runner-up to Easy Eaves, of Duke, in the vote taken to find a winner for the Millis blocking trophy. The battle of the Blue and Gray, with the Mason-Dixon line in the same old role of separator, will be made an annual affair. Plans are now in progress for a complete renovat ing and enlarging of the Montgomery "Bowl" stadium. Student "Chums" With Roosevelt (Continued from first page) ing over the holidays. He reported that the hunting had been good, and was taking several quail back with him. Approximately 40 people had gathered when the couple started to leave at 4:30. BIRTHDAYS TODAY Please call by the ticket ffic of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) K. L. Coxhead. F. A. Green. H. A. Snyder. ' D. P. Whitley. DAND INSTRUMENTS Q E P A I CI E D Greensboro Music Co. Greensboro, N. C. 207 W. Market St. 5-Pound FAMILY BOX CANDY QO Nuts, Fruits AO. Ot Cream Centers tOC FREE! Old Fashion Fruit Bowl With 25c Size O X Y D O L Only 21c Y A R D L E Y Shaving Bowl With Yardley HAIR TONIC IDEAL GIFT $1.00 $1 Value BATHPOWDER With Bottle TOILET WATER Ideal Xmas Gift 39c 25c Sizes C. M. POWDERS 2 For 25c ',. Factory trahwd experts. . I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 2, 1938, edition 1
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