Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 21, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWQ - THE DAILY TAB HEEL The official nwaper cf the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel HOI, 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 EilL N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3X0 for the college year. 1939 Member 1940 Associated GoHe6ia!e Press Martin Harmon Morris W. Rosenberg William Ogburn - Larry Ferling MTIOIIAt. AMMTMM4 T National Advcrtisbg Service, Isc CtUttt PmUhbtrs Repretemts&M 420 Maomom Ave New YOWK. N. Y. On The Hill BY BILL SNIDER - The Ray Of Hope Snow and sleet had began popping over the frozen earth for hours and there was a firm sheet of ice cling ing everywhere when the taxi driver's telephone rang one night last week. A girl had been injured in a sled ride: would he come ouickly? You Circulation Manager I fet your ijfe he would! When he ar rived the eirl. a coed. accomDained bv - . . . . r 1 ' ' Editorial Writers: Ed Rankin, Don Bishop, am bnmer, jranic jioieman. her roommate slipped into the back REPORTERS: Bill Rhodes Weaver, Louis Harris, Doris Goerch, Dorothy Coble,! seat and in several moments the cab Jo Jones, Grady Reagan, Bucky Harward, Sylvan Meyer, Dick Young,! slid to a stop on Columbia street be Camnbell Irvine. Gene Williams, Sanford Stein, Philip Carden, Vivian I fore . the infirmary. Excited and a Editor . Managing Editor Business Manager Gillespie, Bert Premo. Columnists: Adrian Spies, Johnny Anderson, Mack Hobson. v t Technical Staff News Editors: Carroll McGaughey, Charles Barrett, Rush Hamriek. Night Spobts Editors: Leonard Lobred, Fred Cazel, Orville Campbell. Deskmen: Edward Prizer, Bob Thomas, Ben Roebuck. Sport Staff Editor: Shelley Rolfe. Reposters: William L. Beerman, Richard Morris, Harry Hollingsworth. Jerry Stoff, Jack Saunders, Josh Goldberg, Frank Goldsmith. Circulation Assistant Manager: Jack Holland. Office: Bradford McCuen, Larry Dale, D. T. Hall. m Business Staff, Local Advertising Managers: Jimmy Schleifer, little careless the uninjured birl handed the cabbie what she thought to be a one dollar bill, received her change and hurried into the infirm ary. It was only much later in the evening that the driver discovered her mistake. She had given him a ten dollar bill. The next day a coed down in Wom en's Dorm 2 had a caller, one who left with her nine dollar bills and the ad monition to be more careful next time. Somewhere in Chapel Hill this morning there must be a taxi driver who goes about his work with a lighter heart, whose smile is just a bit brighter because of what he decided to do that icey windswept night last week. There was an easier way to Bill Bruner, Andrew Gennett. Local Advertising Assistants: Hallie Chandler, Dot Pratt, Kuius bheucoff, I do it. Tom Nash, 'Jack Dube, Sinclair Jacobs, Buck Osborne, Steve Reiss, Spotlight On The News CPU boss Harry Gatton, BIRTHDAYS Edminster, Keith. Seymour, Edwards; Mary Tilson "Hall, Samuel Ervin Hanes, Frank Borden Herndon, Margaret Leah Holton, Frank Petty, Jr. Rawlings, William Henry Talton, John Thomas, Jr. Williams, John Brooks Williford, John Samuel Yount Marshall V. TOMORROW Anderson, Annie Bennett, Bert Lester Cohen, Joseph Roberts Hebbard, Russell Edgar Eennison, Elizabeth Perkins Leonard. Walter H Jr. Miller, Julian Sydney Murchison, David Reid, Jr. . Nash, James Mallory Nicholson, Don Gilliam Sedwick, Marian Dorothea Simpson, John Dillon Student State (Continued from first page) pi - BY RUSH HA3IRICK Pick HEATRE OBSERVATIONS at dance given by New Women's dorm No. 3 A VMI cadet who travelled 185 miles just for the hop (well, also a basketball game) . . A balloon dance which ended minus the balloons. . . . Many couples leav ing the dorm after the dance, and. after Mrs. Humphries informed them nega tively. ... Some of those receiving rashes were Kim Clark., Kitty Wil-i liams, Alice Murdock and Katherine Graham, the "graham cracker heiress . . . Typical reaction by the Carolina "gentlemen" to the dance was bw Stauber who came at 11:15 and left at 12 o'clock. CHANGEABLE A deadline had to be made, but when the time came, the Sigma Chi's had pictures for only five of their six sponsors for last night's dance. Hence a picture of Vi Barnard, "Bucket" Edwards steady, was pub lished in the state newspapers under the name of Mereody Edwards who really attended the dance with George Plonk, president of the chapter. -, EMBARRASSING Phil Ellis, SUNDAY f 9 ?Z1 ill U4 3. mm Leigh Wilson, Bill Stanback, Gnswold Smith, Junius Davis, Carrol Milam, Gene Tyler, Bob McNaugbton. Durham Advertising Managers: Bill Schwartz, Alvin Patterson. Collections Manager: Morty Ulman. Collections Staff: Sandford Goldberg, Morty Golby, Parke Staley, Dan Retchen, Mary Susan Robertson, Mary Ann noonce, Elinor juimtc, mu- licent McKendry. Office Manager: Phil Haigh. Office Staff: Grace Rutledge, Bill Stern, Sarah Nathan, Oren Oliver, Dick Freeman, Bill Vail, Mickey Grindlinger. For This Issue: News: RUSH HAMRICK TAG TROUBLE Safety Council Into Action The Student Safety council has begun to function, evidenced by the black and white tags gracing., student automobiles. The council was set up by the legislature as a possible means of partially eliminating student automobile accidents. Its success . may be great or nebulous, de pending on the cooperation by the students and the efficiency of the council. Students who have as yet not obtained licenses should: for after Chief Sloan's drive to sell city tags to the Chapel Hill driv ers gets underway, car owners without tags will be, put on the block and explanations might be embarrassing. Explanations unaccepted might result in cars returned to parents. The aim of the council, to make driving safer, deserves the coop eration of all, and, repeating, it might be a pretty good idea to get those tags. . Two-bits ain't much. SIGMA CHI Fifty-Year-OId Sweetheart' Alpha Tau chapter of Sigma Chi fraternity celebrated its fif tieth anniversary this weekend with a dance and other social af fairs. Members and pledges and invited guests joined in celebrat ing the half-century of Sigma Chi on the Carolina campus. Fraternities have a definite place in college life. They serve as a means of bringing together students of mutual interests and aspirations, and, for many stu dents, make college life more educational and more enjoyable. And at times they help the housing problem. In the early part of the 1920 decade there was a serious short age of housing on the campus; so fraternities were induced to organize here and to build lodges for their members. We join other well-wishers of fraternity on its fiftieth birth-; who is puttering around Washington' this weekend rounding up a flock of new speakers, explains that the radio hookup for Reynolds' speech made it necessary to dispense with oral open forum questions and substitute writ ten ones instead last Thursday night, By the way almost two-thirds of the open forum questions written by the audience were filled with enough childish derogatory words towards the senator to put that audience on the spot if they had been read aloud . . . Certain members of the local Kappa Sienna -fratprnifv Tiflvp hpn nnrlfr Sigma Chi in congratulating the fire from ihe gali at wc for remov. day, and wish it many more ing a number of -signs (Religious years Of happiness and prosper- Activities, College Tavern) from the Sports: LEONARD LOBRED ity. LEAP YEAR LIZ Or: Lover, Come Back To Me! Greensboro campus. According to re ports they were given until January 9 to return them to their proper po sitions, all manner of hell to break lose otherwise . . . Graham Memorial will sponsor a bigger and better open house this year for the Interdorm dances, second weekend in February. Sadie Hawkins day, already The Sparkle Of The Week celebrated at a number of uni-l It happened Friday nierht a week versities. will be brought to the a& but we stm think ii$s sood enough .. A. TIT J A I- i- :!. o,,o in V, 4- -P. Ai io repeal. v e were aiounu wiai inK"t , . - . . when a very flustered young man re- tant future by the Woman sAth- Leived his corsage for the leap year letic association. I dance sponsored by the coeds of New The Woman's Athletic asso- Women's Dorm 1. It turned out to heart the stirring plea of ASU Chair- speaker of the Phi, was strolling man Lee Wiggins to "analyze the is- through the arboretum rather late one sues," the Daily Tar Heel, after night when he overheard a girl say- much effort and expense, has secured line to her date, "When a boy ask the opinions of several representative J that of a girl, he ought to be ashamed students on the matter of whether wine I of himself. Are you?" . . . Don Hicks, or women has the greater effect on I a man of Mangum, recently got in the men. With few exceptions, the girls J wrong pew when he entered the ladies modestly picked wine, the boys hun-jrest room by mistake at the new Uni- grily chose women. Below are somejversity beanery. Moral: Stop, look, I of, the' replies : and listen before crossing the thresh- r i i I . . i v v"v r a ti rr saran KuarK ipronounceu .rook; : i old. . . . rieard at tne iuu, xioney,i Wine. It's cheaper. between vou and my accounting i Rpd Mphanr Women. I'm inst built Lnnrone T am nlwavs wratmed ud in! that way. ,' figures." Martin Harmon: The effect is about J WANTED The Daily Tar Heel's equal. I like to be overcome by both. J new photog and ex-photog on the Char NEUTRAL , lotte News, would like to have the most Jack Lynch: Frankly, neither one J photogenic coed to take to the Press of them bothers me. (This gives Photogs corn-vention in Raleigh on Lynch the unusual distinction of be- February 4. Address all applicants to ing the only male on the campus whose this column. equilibrium has not been upset by I DAN CUPID SAYS Tar Heel's I Eunice "Panther" Patton). I Vivian Gillespie cannot make up her Jeannie Connell : Wine. After all, J mind who she is in love with. Hot after i you can always keep on drinking. her are Ed Rankin, Bob Barber, Mor- Leonard Lobred (representing the I ris Rosenberg and Sanford Stein (as Lower Quadrangle viewpoint) : Wine. J usual). It is rumored that Rankin has It goes to my head. And women I been propdsed to on two occasions Tom Stanback: Women. I'm a tee-Jand as for Rosenberg well, after totaler in the other easel oil he's manaffiner editor Our eood Ed Rankin: I'd take women overjfriend Dollie Ericson has the amaz- wine, but beer AH! - nR ability of having boys cuss her Buddy Nordan: Women, since the out politely and then return for more. and PETES B. GOOD - Also MARCH OF TIME "Crisis in the Pacific" Shows how the Navy plans to defend Guam. Monday kick from each depends upon the amount of feeling you experience. " Charles Barrett: Women, cause I don't like anything obvious. You can put a glass of wine to the mirror and see through it. Latest example of such is Alex Bon- " f 1 T t ner. . . . .Becoming cupiuizea are iacK Fairley vs. Jane Moody, Joe Boak vs. Ann Bates, Grace Rutledge vs. John- lie McNeil, Lawrence Hooper vs. Diana Foote (Rear Admiral Percy Foote's be a very beautiful carnation for the buttonhole accompanied by a card on which was inscribed very prettily the They ran out of ciation won't say when. Thus all we can do is comment. 'We feel this organization is following words: an appropriate sponsor, to say sweetpeas. the least. I Heaven help us on Sadie Hawkins Step up, men. The price of day! cudgels is going up. 6 o d a y 11:00 Ralph Harlow of Smith college win deliver tne morning ser mon at the Methodist church. 2:30 Carolina Playmakers film club will screen "The Puritan" in the Playmakers theater. 5:00 Everett Stevens gives piano concert in Graham Memorial. 6:30 Campus radio group meets in radio studio. 7:15 Important rehearsal of Univer sity symphony orchestra. 7:30 Everett Clinchy speaks at Bap ' tist church. TOMORROW 2:30 All freshmen interested in try ing out lor football manager should report at Kenan Field house. 00 Freshman fencing meet with Augusta Military academy, Tin Can. 6:00 Junior-Senior cabinet of the YMCA meets at Presbyterian church. 7:15 Snnhomore counci olf the YMCA I - m m meets in the browsing room of I (JOnHTllttCG the YMCA. 7:30 Amateur show in Gerrard hall. ( onimuea rrom jirsx, page. 7:45 Important meeting of the IRC Phi Assembly and the Di Senate both m the Grail room of uranam voted for the proposaL whereas the Inter-dormitory council voted against By Lamp-Light The sprightly comments of the ultra-urban New Yorker magazine in sometimes side splitting fillers at the bottom of its pages revealed an error very much concerned with North Car olina last week. According to an Associated Press dispatch from Ra leigh (the NY says) our Tar Heel secretary of state, Mr. Thad Eure, has a very interesting hobby one of collecting envelopes on which his name has been mispelled. AX present he has 17 of them each mispelled in a dif ferent way. The New Yorker m its usual all-knowing style notes that the AP in its newstory provides our sec retary of state with his 18th mis spelling by printing his name "URE" instead of "Eure", jibbing slyly at the same time that the AP isn't one to go around breaking jinxes. How about it, AP? Dept. Of Enlightment . ' Last week Professor Phillips Rus sell dolefully revealed a passage from one of his student's papers which adds some interesting information to our store of bibical knowledge. "Solo mon had 900 wives," the paper stated, "700 of them were porcupines." We learn something new every day, don't we? ' Kathleen Lineback: Women. Wine daughter), Bob Hoak Vs. Gail Menivs, can't do much good until you have the Eleanor Maupin vs. Bob Kischman and wine. the ever increasing romantical case Helen Plyler: Women. Wine is secr Lf Mar jorie Johnston vs. Benny Hun ondary. You'd usually take a woman ter. . . . the Joe Dawson Shirley before you would wine. Hobbs affair is going through the re Bill Stauber: Women. You can al ways recover from a hangover, but when a woman gets you down VIRGIN viving stage. CUSS, CUSS Al Hewitt and Helen McCall recently visited a down town slop house. Dieting, two roast pork ; Carroll McGaughey: Not having sandwiches were ordered. Al hastily tried either one, I wouldn't know. took a bite and then discovered a two- Bert Premo: Women, because the inch live worm getting . his share, law of diminishing returns sets in "xx&& said AL To which Helen faster with wine. But even with wo- replied, "Now don't get alarmed, Al, a a . m men. eacn successive unit you rase produces less marginal satisfaction. Fred Jones: Women, Wine wears off I so much more quickly, while women are a constant headache. Jack Fairley: Being a non-drinking man, I'd say women. Shelley Rolfe (the Jersey Lily) : I'm the early worm!" bird always catches the Modern Trends - a ( Continued from first page ) Becker told newsmen Memorial. Wynn Will Read (Continued from' first page) the idea without a dissent. The committee feels that, after weighing the advantages and disad vantages, the proposed central post- now playing in Chicago with -Raymond I office would be desirable and advan Massey in the leading role, is consider- tageous to the University as a whole. ed one of the finest plays of the Lin-1 The committee recommended that no coin cycle. It traces the Great Emanci-1 action be taken until there is an op- pator's rise to prominence, ending with I portunity for some formal expression his election to the presidency. I of opinions by the students concerned. lina press just an innocent country boy, so any- his talk. thing biological has a strange hold He explained the mechanics of the on me. Therefore, I pick women. Be- news photographer's job, taking the sides, the doctor, said I can't drink audience through an assignment step any more amongst other things. by step, pointing out the limitations, Morris Rosenberg: Women, because physical and psychological. they .can handle men who are either "All types of stories can be illus- drunk or sober. Wine is only effective trated, and everybody likes pictures, when you're drunk. Occasionally the value of a picture Vance Hobbs : Women, but both I is great enough to justify its publica- have a great effect in the proper I tion alone, but ordinarily its function places. lis to illustrate, and pictures require Pres Nisbet: I haven't had much as close editing as copy. experience with wine, but I have had WIRE PHOTOS with women. So I say women have the "Recent progress in both prodiic greater effect mostly bad. tion and use has been great, and Eleanor Maupin; (who lives in the J further strides may be next expected Playmaker theater but occasionally with wide use of wire-photo.- Still, comes out ior iresn airl Women, the picture will always remain secon- They always cause more trouble than dary to the story, but it deserves all wine. I Eleanor rarely drinks.) the attention it is receivinc and should Lois Barnes (who can usually think be developed further." 11 I - mm m ' up a reaiiy ciever answer but oc- .Likely, speaking of a valuation of casionally has her lapses): Women, a newspaper, said '"There is nothine but one is no good without the other. I mysterious about the factors, formu- So, come one, come all to Phi Hall. There will be no letdown in action or lae,.and steps in valuing a newspaper. It is merely a problem of applying inrms. one oi tne participants will tne six basic factors earruntrs ;flij ask quarter or. give any. They have I circulation, physical equipment or. girded their loins for battle and for their motto they have adopted the old Shakespearean battle cry, "Lay on, Macduff!" After a sufficient time for discus sion of the plan and for the raising of new objections or other advantages a vote of the students will be taken. Unles's the vote shows that there is decided opposition to the plan, the post-office will be established. ganization, and investment with "common sense adjustments." Regarding the. income from job printing by weeklies ,a n d small dailies, Likely thought that "while this may be quite profitable, it is not as valuable as-the equivalent income from newspaper sources." On the University of California's new geological clock, one second repre sents the passage of 50,000 years. untn CHARLES C00URN FRANK ALDERTSON E. E. CLIVE Tuesday U!iluJ3 AC L w c MT TAYLOR KB NT TAYLOR LINDA HAYES IiluaBood Morgan Coowty -Wednesday r TH E THE NEW KING OF SWING WALTER CATLETT ED BROPHY Thursday "MERLUSSE" In French with English titles Friday UNMATCHED SINCE I "SNOW WHITE"! The mightiest living cast ever assembled for magic adventure ...glorified with Tech nicolor, songs, girls ..2 years to make! 9 4 r C? 9 t ) 1 I --'-'-GASiAKD.' 2 Frank UOSGASt L J RsyECLGEH r "J J V Bsrt WHR--S--1 ! J J2ck BXLET I f j 4 PHOTOGRAPHED IN TECHNICOLOR Saturday WILLIAM BOYD in "SANTA FE MARSHALL"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 21, 1940, edition 1
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