WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8 J 193)
PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Losers weepers? Not always. Don't burst into tears until you've tried the classified ads.
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PRITCHARD CHOSEN
PRESIDENT OF YRC
Mashburn And Mase
Are Other Officers
Jeter C. Pritchard of AsheviUe was
unanimously elected president of the
Young Republican club yesterday af
ternoon at the club's weekly meeting,
Pritchard comes from a distinguished
Republican family, his grandfather
was elected United States Senator
from North Carolina in 1897, and his
father has served as congressman
from the 10th district.
Other officers elected yesterday
were: Edwin Mashburn of Marshall,
as secretary, and Borden Mase of
Beaufort, as treasurer.
POLITICAL SURVEY
A survey of Madison county politics
was presented by Jeter Pritchard in
which he told of corrupt politicians
endeavoring to destroy the Republi
can stronghold in the county for the
past 15 years.
Bob Wright of Asheville gave a re
port on the Republican strength of
Buncombe county.
The retiring president, Billy Gilliam
of Richmond, Va., presided over the
meeting, at which a large number
attended.
Naiad Ginger
On The Cuff
(Continues from firs page)
idea.
"Well, Ducky can't say he wasn't
warned. He may wish he had a Clint
Frank or a Larry Kelley But he
should have known this was not the
year to expect anything except a good
headache.
Before the season opened, Greasy
Neale, the astute football strategist
who bosses the Yale line, sadly told
all newspaper men who would listen
... If you thought last year's
Yale team (which won two games)
was terrible, wait until you see this
year's.
Mr. Neale was not guilty of under
statement. State is reported to be preparing
:for Duquesne. Is DoopNewton teaching
the boys to get out of town under cover
of darkness? t
Any afternoon now, Wallace Wade
will report he fears the VMI Cadets.
Which will prompt a wise-guy to
quary Wade, who walked into the
thing with his eyes open, "where, in
the trenches?"
. ,
' This is a dull month. Here it is the
seventh of November and there hasn't
been one story about Tony Galento or
the Yankees.
That was a fine Carolina column
Jake Wade turned out in Tuesday
morning's Charlotte Observer. That
should prove to some of the quad
rangle boys who are intent upon
conducting a tar-feather and neck
tie party on the person of the Ob
server sports editor, that Mr. Wade
is one of Carolina's staunchest sup
porters. Pealings
(Continued from page two)
driving) those Express chairs about
the fair. But they got fed up pretty
soon. Some people don't like New
York. Bob McManus auditioned for
an announcer's job, but couldn't lose
his southern accent. Stella Cuddy
came ud and I didn't see her. Hated
that.
Frances Roughton and the rest of
the NC Exhibit staff are sightseeing
for another week. Voit Gilmore, of
course, left a couple of months ago to
enter school in Washington. If you
don't know Meriam Johnson of Aber
deen, you should. She was one of the
fairest of the .Fair and a great addi
tion to the NC Exhibit.
Sanford Stein and his sis came by
one night and I went with them to
the Aquacade. Was always running
into such people as Olive Cruishank,
Jerry Stoff, Mac Allen, Lib Spencer,
Virginia Bower, and oh, I don't know
who all.
Those northern "eruys" I worked
with were all for our football team.
Many of them knew George Stirn
weiss and appeared to be even prouder
of him than we are, if possible.
Hall Conly worked in Eastman
Kadak, lecturing occasionally on
"what makes your camera take a pic
ture." And Va. Giddens! Pear old
Smoky Jo! She also worked there,
modeling sun suits made from a
newly-discovered mineral for which
there are about 1001 other uses.
Great show, the Fair, any way you
look at it. Surprise you? Did me.
But it did have a tough time this
summer.
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A swimming enthusiast of the first
water is Ginger Rogers, sparkling star
of RKO Radio's "Fifth Avenue GirL"
playing today at the Carolina theater.
The top-ranking favorite is pictured
here by the fresh water pool that's
right next to the lovely tennis courts
on the grounds of her Hollywood home.
Southern Economic
Association Elects
Woosley President :
John B. Woosley, professor in the
University commerce school, was elect
ed president of the Southern economic
association at its annual meeting in
Charleston, S. C. Friday and Satur
day. Professor Woosley served for
the past year as vice-president in
charge of program for the organiza
tion.
Professor Clarence Heer, who is on
leave from the University commerce
school faculty to work with the fed
eral security agency, presented a paper
on "Trends in Income in the South'
before the convention.
Included in the record breaking at
tendance at the meeting were the
following members of the University
economics and commerce faculty: Pro
fessors Buchanon, Spruill, Woosley,
Schwenning, Bernstein, Cutmann,
Cowden,! Blaine, Lear, Bonnell, Don
ovan, Waller and Myers.
State Officials
(Continued from first page)
Harold D. Cooley, A. D. Folger, Carl
T. Durham, J. Bayard Clark, W. O.
Burgin, Robert L. Doughton, A. L.
Bulwinkle, and Zebulon Weaver. Sen
ators Josiah W. Bailey and Robert R
Reynolds are expected to be present
to participate in these discussions.
"Ten years of co-operative effort by
public officials, private citizens, and
teachers and students of civics and
government culminates in the open
ing of this building, the first govern
mental laSoratory of its kind in Amer
ica," said Mr. Coates. "It will house
the governmental demonstration lab
oratory, training schools for officials,
a library and clearing house of in
formation, club rooms and facilities
for housing visiting officials and citi
zens, and the Institute staff offices. .
LABORATORY
"To this governmental demonstra
tion laboratory successive generations
of public officials, citizens, and teach
ers of civics and government may
come to see illustrated in one center
the methods, practices and techniques
they would now have to find in a hun
dred county courthouses, three hun
dred city halls, and scores of state de
partments and federal agencies
Through this laboratory, they may to
gether raise the standards of govern
mental performance in North Caro
lina by lifting the poorest practices
to the level of the best."
On display in this building at its
opening will be the results of studies
by the Institute's staff members dur
ing the past several years of the
workings of governfnent in city halls,
county courthouses and state depart
ments. Out of these studies have come
more than 20 guidebooks in the fields
of tax and finance administration,
criminal law administration, court ad
ministration, public works adminis
tration, public health, welfare and re
lief administration, and federal-state-local
relationships.
"These guidebooks and special
studies are now being used by officials
throughout the state and are forming
the basis for a training program which
will reach thousands of officials, citi-
of civics
Coates con-
zens, teachers and students
and government," Mr.
eluded.
Duke, VMI Coaches
(Continued from page three)
Allison (Pooley) Hubert. Pooley ab
sorbed all those detailed fundamentals
that every Wade-coached footballer
knows by heart, and he led the Ala
bama eleven of 1925 to a stirring 20
19 victory over Washington in the
Rose Bowl. '
Now Pooley Hubert is a member of
the coaching profession, himself. He's
head man at VMI, and he has carried
to that institution the same conserva
tive, dividends-paying system that
Wade taught him at Alabama.
Saturday's battle will mark the
first time Wade has sent one of his
outfits against a team coached by his
former star. And the masterminding
duel between teacher and pubil should
prove a mighty interesting one.
Telephone technicians report
Brown university has the best college
communications system in the coun-
ry.
Underdog Deacons
(Continued from page three)
is not afraid of Clemson. He saw his
boys outplay and outfight Duke and
lose by one touchdown to a nationally
ranked Blue Devil team. He has seen
'em come apart in only game against
Carolina. But the Tar Heeels were
beginning a climb to a position among
the first ten teams in the nation.
It will be a brilliant battle. Clearly
the standout of the Southern confer
ence day what with Duke and Caro
lina marking time before their Con
test on the next week-end.
Tar Heel subscription: $1 a quar
ter, $3 the school year.
Undefeated Mangum
(Continued froin. first page)
for mention on all-star teams but
most outstanding of all was the pass
ing of Wooten and the brilliant de
fensive and offensive work of Ham-
brieht. Branson. Rose. Summer and
Austin. Ulman and Gross starred
for the losers. The victors won the
game early by running up 35 points
in the first half and 20 in the last.
OLD WEST-LAW SCHOOL
Paced by Hank Feimster, Doc Stan
ley and Luther Hoderes. Old West
captured its fifth game of the season
by trimming Lew School, 14-8. The
winners put the game on ice in the
opening half and then coasted to vic
tory. Feimster and Brogden .tallied
touchdowns for the winners while
Winslow accounted for Law School's
touchdown.
Paced by Puckett, Johnson and
West, Ruffin captured its sixth game
of the season yesterday by downing
Steele 18-8.
Steele, led by Milner and Burnett,
took a 2-0 lead in the first half but
the Ruffin artillery rallied in the
final half to push across three touch
downs while Steele was scoring one.
This afternoon SAE will entangle
with Phi Delta Theta in what should
be one of the best games of the sea
son. SAHi will De attempting to ena
its regular season with a perfect rec
ord in order to gain a place, in the
fraternity play-off while Phi Delta
Theta will be out for revenge for two
straight losses.
Cornell University has launched a
project to determine whether critical
hinking about social problems can
be developed in high school pupils.
Send the Tab Heel home.
Endowed Colleges v
(Continued from first page)
nominational differences for which our
land is celebrated, our forefathers
sprayed higher education all over this
country, establishing a college or uni
versity, and sometimes more than one,
in every village and hamlet. Distance
and denominationalism have faded,
but the institutions they created re
main. The endowed universities can
no longer claim that they are all need
ed to advance knowledge and to train
scholars and research workers. As
we have seen, the state universities
are rapidly rising to eminence in these
activities.
NO GEOGRAPHICAL HANDICAP
"No single university can now rest
its claim to support on the ground that
if it were extinguished a large num
ber of people could not overcome the
geographical handacap involved in go
ing somewhere else. Harvard, Prince
ton, Yale, and Columbia might have
had such a claim at the date of their
foundation. None of them can make it
today.
Stating the case for endowed uni
versities, Dr. Hutchins sums up, his
position as:
"The reason why the State univer
sities are doing well is that they have
the example of the endowed universi
ties before them. An endowed uni
versity has its limitations; it may
be hampered by donors, by alumni
and by trustees. But it is freer to
exercise its independent intelligence
for the good of its students and the!
advancement of knowledge than an in
stitution which must make its case to
a legislature.
So we cannot be sure that the state
universities can continue to do well
unless they have the leadership of the
endowed universities. I can think of
OVER THE
-: ETHER :-
By .
Rush Hameick
5:00 Les Brown's band: W PTF.
7:00 Fred Waring: WPTF4-
7:30 Burns and Allen: WBT.
8:00 Al Pearce's Gang: WBT.
8:30 Paul Whiteman: WBjT, WDXC.
Avalon Time: WPTJF.
9:00 Town Hall Tonight: V. "PTF.
Texaco Star TheaUer: "WBT,
WDNC.
10:00 Kay Kyser's Kolleie: WPTF.
11:30 Benny Goodman:
ace Heidt: WPTF
jWBT. Hor-
no important ideas or movements i
American higher education in the last
seventv-five years that did not
nate in the endowed universities."
fl laic aTcrxai iiuiLi a i.t 11 1 Li t U-
tions have royal charters, William and
Mary College is the only oVe in the
country which has a royal) coat f
arms.
CLASSIFIED
LOST A brown reversible overcoat
with light plaid stripes, unavoidably
exchanged for another reversible
after the Grail dance Saturday night.
Would like to swap the coat I am
holding for my own. Notify Roy
Parker, 308 Old West.
LOST A brown zipper purse contain
ing fountain pen and vanity case in
the vicinity of Spencer Hall and Al
pha Delta Pi House. If found re
turn to 2 Cobb Terrace or telephone
7711. Reward.
IIIIS JVORDHOIF
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Authors Of MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY,
THE HURRICANE anf THE DARK RIVER
" "
VICIOUS CIRCLE: Introducing the happy-go-lucky Turtles of Tahiti, who
couldn't go fishing without gas for their boat. Couldn't get gas without
money. And couldn't get money without fishing!
mm
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"THE MORTGAGE LIFTER."
On this bird the Tuttles gambled
their last stick of furniture but
nobody knew if the cock could fight!
BEGIN THIS NEW NOVEL
THEY C0ULDNT EVEN DIE SUCCESSFULLY.
Pastor Tearo held memorial services for four
Tuttles lost at sea . . . but he talked too soon !
PUZZLE: The Tuttle boys caught a for
tune in fish and then discovered they
didn't know how to get it home!
IN THIS WEEK'S POST
ARE ENDOWED COLLEGES DOOMED?
Are colleges like Harvard, Columbia and Uni
versity of Chicago on the way out? With mil
lionaires vanishing, taxes rising, investments
dwindling, how can these schools compete with
state-supported universities? Robert M.
Hutchins, President of the University of Chi
cago, suggests some about-face tactics in his
article, What Good Are Endowments? in this
week's Post; (Required readingf or allstudents.)
IN THIS SAME ISSUE : A new big game fish
ing story by Philip Wylie, about an overstuffed
politician who goes after newsreel-sized fish
and pulls a trick no sportsman could stand for
bribes or no bribes! See There He. Blows!
AND ... a lively football story about the great
pro star Packy Farr and how he played A Ball
Game for Delia by Ben Peter Freeman.
PLUS a yarn by Harry KHngsberg in which
the assistant District Attorney has a hunch
that astrology might sometimes be spelled
m-u-r-d-e-r. Read Remember Galileo . . . And
a romantic story. The Crusaders by James
Street.
ALSO . . . Helen Hayes' unique story. Second
part of eight ... A timely article, Let The
Neutral Beware... editorials, poems, cartoons-
all in this week a Post.
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