Carolina magazine [serial] . is-tics that to the North Carolinian are strange andoften repugnant. To these add the traits that thesoutherner dislikes in the Yankee and one has a com-bination that is a difficult thing with which to re-birth of dislike for the Jew engendered by theimmigration from the north has aroused also thebitter resentment of the southern Jew whose fastimproving status on the campus received a real andlasting injury from the new flare up of anti-Semitic sentiment. Regarding first the field of education one findsthat the Jewish student on the whole probably ex-cells.


Carolina magazine [serial] . is-tics that to the North Carolinian are strange andoften repugnant. To these add the traits that thesoutherner dislikes in the Yankee and one has a com-bination that is a difficult thing with which to re-birth of dislike for the Jew engendered by theimmigration from the north has aroused also thebitter resentment of the southern Jew whose fastimproving status on the campus received a real andlasting injury from the new flare up of anti-Semitic sentiment. Regarding first the field of education one findsthat the Jewish student on the whole probably ex-cells. This advantage has been born of the un-usual difficulty that confronts the Jew in his strug-gle to satisfy the more stringent exactments madeupon him. Then too a large percentage of theJewish student body come here from the ratherbetter high schools of the north and coming herebecause of low tuition are often receiving a collegeeducation attended by great sacrifice on the part of(Continued on fage six) SUNDAY, APRIL 30, 1933. One April Evening Our Leading Voices By Bradford White A new edition of Harriet Monroes Anthrologyhas prompted the critics to ask if American poetryis getting anywhere. For the output since the deathof William Vaughan Moody we have formed manynames. It has been variously called The NewPoetry, The New Movement, The Poetry of Today,The Poetry of Revolt—all of which implies thatwe have a product different from any which pre-ceded it. Editors, such as Miss Monroe, have longlooked askance at thees and thous, at tressesfor hair, orb for eye, and limb for leg; and versewhich employs these terms does not get into theirmagazines. The critics however will not be put offby a show of new clothes. They insist that manyof our major poets are Romanticists, differing onlyin degree from Wordsworth and Keats, that the newpoetry is not new in ideas but has only discardedthe poetical language of the nineteenth century. Es-pecially hard on the moderns is Mr. Leonard


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Keywords: ., bookauthoruniversi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1921