Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 5, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
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h !1 .1 PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB HEE1 SUNDAY, MAY 5, m - ' . - - - L ll . um " ' . i . ..... aMk mm K ... I I 1879. Subscription price, w 1939 - Member 1940 Pssocided GoUege Press National Advertise Service, Inc. CalUv Publeben Keprtseuumtm AZO Mao icon Ave. New YowiC H. Y. Tlnn BishoO.. Charles F. Barrett. Manager ..Circulation Manager Larry . ' ; . t-f KrUf. gou'E Vivian GiUespie. SlArr Photographer: Jack Ihtch s(aff Sports Editor: Bill Beerman. " "r ' Circulation Staff Circulation Staff T 1. tlllnnrl ASSISTANT MANAG:- b, Hall . Office: uraaioru iutvuvu, Justness Staff Assistant Business juAi., -stanba(:k, Jack Dube, Steve .OKTAu-AOBSt Landon Korts, Buck Osborne. Collections Manages: Phil Haigh. Assistant ""unRobertson, Mary Ann Koonce. OmcE Staff: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Hainan, vn ; . yews: RUSH HAMRICK ""s HABRY HOLLIKGSWOKTH. Editorial Objectives O Better domitory-frate"ty relations. O Clean Buccaneer. (The Daily Tar Heel will add to its editorial objectives each Week, omit- ting one only after it nas Deen iuiuii. Carographics . . . ... Women's council key has on it a battle'-aie.' Symbolic, eh? i TTuJnnn TTo f 2 rrmtR for. Beauty" reads headline in vour favorite campus daily. Watch local carrot business boom. 7 SomTE rfewey may speak to CPU. , DeWey think he can con vert us? "Some growth in U. S. of intellectual sentiment, 'Britain fighting our fightpecially among college profs," wntes Kleeman. "Especially among college profs too old to fight, he might have added. - ' ' ' . Odor of hydrogen sulfide (rotten egg smell) is'str0s when chem students are conducting experiments. "makers PirtoSce Bill of Experiments reads DTH headline. Don't blame it all on the lads in Venable. : Simple Simon's Almanac o By SIMONS ROOF On Following the Leader "You can't havea leader until you have a follower." inis is a saying which acts in a vice versa manner. The uoint Is that a good performance results from unified action, this ac- f? hPiW from a group m two parts, t ho rmner. the leader, and the lower, trr ' ..... the follower. When the unity is dtok- on w mmer or lower, the perform ance flops, and someone blames it on someone else. Thi comes as a result of the Offi- conference, where you v, lot of people very leader-con- e;c Most of the campus consists of followers. It's still early enough for a few people to get follower-con- The crown of glory rests where the leader is also the duncehat. If the i-a W clear idea of what he is doing, , and his idea becomes a real thing, the outcome is tne arouwuw f a marv. But a leader who blun ders like a poodle in and out of a niV trives a proof: im tne Leader and Blind Mans isiuix mix. - ' " ' The followers usually gather around fV,o i0fl?prs chair. This is wrong. Apt is never seated. (Of course.) The leader is supposed to i,o vo n uncommon insight, and a iiM Vr clarity of judgment which can deter mine, through the fog of the im mediacy, the course to be used m reaching - home wnetner a realizing a better student government, or raising funds to provide the public with illuminated Chinese manuscripts. Here is the importance of the proce- dure: The followers snouiu uuu strong leader, the leader should con vince the followers his ideas are good, and the leader should be good enough that the ideas are successful. Wrong ideas produce strange results., The leader may be refused permission to read the club's books, or find he has 13 or 14 colonies celebrating the Fourth of July Any way you look at it, we need leaders and followers. If you be one, then be the other. You as well try. Other people do. you may not even get what deserve. A SOLDIER PRESIDENT EOHIZONTAI Acswer 15 Frtjlocs Pczzle 1 18th U. S. A. tHSUEiN President 12 To crawL . 13 Female deer. 14 Rich TrnTk. 16 Breakfast food. 17King. 19 Concern. 20 Thing. 21 Archives. 22 Male cat. 23 Plural pronoun. 24 Fence door. 26 Toward. 27 Smooth. 28 While. 30 Large antelope. 33Fruit: 35 Wheel hub. , 36 Sound of surprise. 37 Rainbow. 38 Cherry color. 40 To scatter hay. 41 All Tight. 42 Kind of pier. mutate am tglgp m-mm grw& ,b.."kn lxlIS 43 Transactions. 45 Electric term. 47 Measure of length. 48 To capsize. 50 Quite. 52 Indian. 54 Microscope lens. 57 Shoemaker's tooL 59 He was an outstanding - leader in the Civil War. 60He General Lee's surrender. VERTICAL 1 Impels. 2 Limbs. 3 Affirmative 4 Spain. 5 To elicit. 6 Song for one 11 Playing card. 12Earwax. 15 He "wrote his or -r-- 17 Plexus. 18 Road. 21 Inner sole. 24 His military title. 25Punishable .with death. 27 To bathe. -29 Withered. 31 Want 32 Swindler. 34 Naval officer assistant. 36 Hops kiln. 39 Orifice. 41 Egg. 43 Ready. . 44Rootstock. 46 Bartered. - 47 Snaky fish. 49 Frosty. 51 Lacquer. ingredient. vftifl 7 Crystal gazer. 53 Musical note. 8 Red Cross. ooaun goa. 9 Circle part. 56 Preposition. mTidv. 58 You pjid I. I 2 H !2 b 123- 30 35 141 127 131 38 52 59 153 124 WT Al ;I7 21 59 ,54 3b 5S 5 18 14 no 122 m wiiif H8 43 W 6b 60 25 23 29 133 it 15! :!5 B4 57 B8 can't may And you On Other Campuses From c OBSt DO By BEN ROEBUCK OSS' State Symphony (Continued from first paSs it in Spillville, Iowa, a Czech nity where he was fond of sta -' Among the themes in this "American" symphony are local f tunes and negro spirituals. ' . Billings, originally a tanner, abaa loned his business to compose as a profession, thus becoming the f native American composer.. "Chester'' was first a hymn, but was sun b American troops in the Revolutionary war to words written by Billing. xve orchestral composition is arran?i c strings alone. Symphony Society Members Activities of the State Sv-r.. are made possible through the efforts of the members of the North Carolina symphony society of which Mrs. Kath erine Pendleton Arrington, Mrs. Caesar Cone, Mrs. Thomas, Edward Benjamin, Struthers Burt and Geirge Jenks are charter members. Patrons and 'patronesses include Mrs. Harold W. Brown, Mrs. Athol C. Burnham, Dr. Thomas B. Coolide, Mrs. George Watts Hill, Mrs. William Meade Prince, Dr. and Mrs. Milton Rosenau, and Mrs. Robert Wettach. Svmphony society members will bo admitted tonight upon presentation of membership cards, and students br Student Entertainment passtwoks. Graduate students, being members of the student union, will also be admitted free. Party Heads Say (Continued from fn st page) $1,000 in search of a few student of fices. "Few of these offices are of major significance, and when someone spends 20 or 30 dollars attempting to secure them most of the money is wasted. "A general regulation, setting max imums on expenditures ot parties, and establishing a scale of expenses for candidates according to the im portance of the office, would remedy one of the most, critical needs in stu dent politics." tb.d-a-y "England's War Is Our War "Safety lies only in the elimination of Hitler and dictatorship from the map of the world. The Allies' victory is essential. Ap parently they cannot gain it without help. It is our help they re quire, not so much in troops as.in materials, m decisive leadership and continuous assurance of support so as to upset German morale. i a j uoM, cav. 'That's not our war,' 'There's no use in fighting and 'We didn't raise our boys for war ( . . . a thought v-.i- hnt nne nart wisdom and over three parts coward . .') : We will not let these phrases interfere with our de- sire to uphold the security, liberty ana nappmess oi uur wj, 'uv. nvpr sM. We don't.like'to fight, but if it's best for the happiness of our people we'll do it. It's better to die fighting for a glorious cause than toJive the miseraDie me ui vW. c,a flip Hind and stUDid preachings of a generation ago, when Americans really thought they could preserve democracy by stamping out the Kaiser Wilhelm menace, doesn't it? You would think that by now, after studying the course of world history in the last 20 years, Americans especially intelligent Americans would realize that Europe's squabbles should not concern us; that it is a war of military domination on one side against economic domination on the other, with America not likely to benefit by vic tory on either side. The quoted passage comes from the Daily Maroon, the Univer sity of Chicago student paper. It is too bad that Americans are so blind as to reecho the hurrahs for democracy which went up a gen . eration ago. It's even worse that supposedly-educated college stu dents are doing the sounding off. i Double Feature Program Local music lovers will be given two programs of classical, light classical and march music today. Under the direction oi iroxes Ror Eari Slocum.the University band will play light classics and march tunes in an open air concert this afternoon at 5 o'clock under Davie Poplar; . Tonight at 8:30 the North Carolina Symphony, con ducted by Pro?essor Benjamin Swalin, will perform in Hill Music hall in a program of classics. These musical nroerams'and others like them add much to what might otherwise be a dull weekend. Chapel Hill, located in a state and section in which "good music" often is not appreciated is fortunate in being able to present two programs in the same day. 1:30YM-YWCA training retreat be gins in front of YMCA. 2:00 Coed dorm scene rehearsal for "One More Spring" in Gerrard hall. 3:00--Recital by Robert Brawley from rnmnus studio over Southern ST Broadcasting system. 4:00 Bus -station scene rehearsal for "One More Spring" in Gerrard. 7:00 Dress rehearsal of "One More Sorine" in Memorial hall. ' Baptist forum meets in church narlor. Group interested in liberal re ligion on second floor Graham Memorial. Q.sn TTniwrsitv svmnhony concert in Hill Music halL Tomorrow 2:00 Coed golf. 3:00 Coed badminton. 4:00 Coed swimming. 4:30"Taffy, the Tiger," children's 1 play, presented in the Play maker theater. 5:00 Coed tennis. 7:30 CPU applicants meet in Graham Memorial for reception. 7:45 IRC meeting in main lounge Graham Memorial. wi 1 BIRTHDAYS (Students having birthdays may get free tickets to the movies by wiling by the boxoffice of the Car- Bloomer, Robert Oliver Bryan, James Everette Bulka, Gladys K... Dyer, Sidney Gardner Evans, Elizabeth Godfrey Graham, Lawrence Pittman Holmes, Frank Varvin Langsam, Herbert David Moore, Lucius Lee Ardrey, Jr. Rodman, Clark Sloop, Charles Blume TOMORROW Ashburri, Ruth Hastings Connor, Roy Lee Dichter, Theodore Gordon, William Jones, Jr. Kline, Charles Logan, Henrietta Bryan APRIL 8 Abernethy, Leroy Franklin Griffin, Thomas Brooks Kinney, Willis Holt ; Malliton, William Thomas Raisin, Aaron Solomon Royall, George Claiborne, Jr. Tenenblatt, William Bon Bon Will Sing At Junior-Seniors Vance Hobbs says Bon Bon, Jan Savitt's colored vocalist, will sing for the junior-senior dances and that's great news. Vance says there is a special provision in the contract. We were beginning to wonder if Bon Bon would be coming since an other vocalist (Allen DeWitt) sang with the band on, recent broadcasts. However, Saturday a week ago, at 7:30 p.m., the closing program of the orchestra from New York's Hotel Lincoln, the NBC announcer said Bon Bon "will make the tour with thej band. Versatile Bon Bon's latest record ing is Decca's 2 9 9 0 B singing "Imagination" with the orchestra. On the other side is "Make Love With a Guitar" and Bon Bon sings. We went down yesterday and purchased that disc and if you wanna get an idea of Bon Bon's fine singing, go down town and get your "Imagina tion." Better , still send your date a recording. Fraternity fellows you might include the number in your Jan Savitt library and preview the band during the next two weeks. Did Your Girl , Ask What to Wear To Junior-Seniors? Here's a story from the Oregon State Barometer which will cover the subject. Often your date asks what! to wear . . . and you don't know. Clip t the following piece and send it on to j her. The dances are May 17, 18.! Here's the solving: "Your suitcase is open on the chair in front of you and you are standing right beside it wondering what you are going to bring to Oregon State Junior weekend, aren't you? "You want to dress with the coeds, comfortably. Also, you will definitely decide to dress for the men dashing ly. The two main types of dress need ed are sport for daytime and dressy silk for nighttime. "Perhaps an outline of events for Junior , weekend would J solve your i problem of packing suitable clothes to wear on the Corvallis campus. "Driving down in a car or bus will, of course, mean that you will wear, a comfortable cool suit or dressysport dress, hat, gloves and purse. Your ar rival at one of the sorority houses or dormitories (it can't happen here) will probably be around dinner ime. Just freshen up in your travelling itogs and you will be all set for the first course. "After dinner there will be a min strel show in the men's gymnasium. Your hostesses will entertain you this evening and they will wear tailored suits or simple silk ensembles. Just (Continued on page U, column 4) WRIST WATCHES Slightly used and at great reductions Hamilton, Elgin, Waltham and other popular makes. Highest prices paid for used suits. Providence Loan Office 108 E. Main St. Opposite Harvey's Cafeteria DURHAM, N. C. Did TMATM SUNDAY ITbat Pna! IVhat Ugh Adyentare! TWO YEARS TO MAKEI A LIFETIME TO REMEMBER! fUtl UUGTH FEATURE HI TECHHICOtOR s Also NfeWS SPORTLIGHT Monday DEANNA DURBIN in TntSTLOVE" Tuesday IRENE DUNNE "THEODORA GOES Wednesday NOW ON THE SCREEN "THE Maxim Gorky's LOWER DEPTHS" . Famous Play w In French with English Titles ' T Thursday Friday Saturday "GONE WITH THE WIND" Reserve Seat Tickets Now on Sale - ti
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 5, 1940, edition 1
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