Pa;re Two THE T A R H E EL Tuesday, November 6, 1928 s&ui -tn Leading Southern College Tri weekly News ing them to sit together in closed i groups. . leather, hard on those "whose higbheld; .heads demand that they stand aloof from the, rest of the col- egiate world, but on the -whole it's Published three times weekly during the college year, and is the official v newspaper ': -': of the Publications Union of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, ,N. C. Sub scription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni ' Building. . , , Walter Spearman Editor' George Ehrhart .....J Mgr. Ed Marion Alexander ... Bus. Mgr. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Harry Galland Assistant Editor Glenn Holder Assistant Editor John Mebane' Assistant Editor Will Yarborough Sports Editor M. Broadus H. T. Browne W. C. Dunn J: C. Eagles J. P. Jones -W. A. Sheltoh D. L. Wood C. B. McKethan J. C. Williams E. Wilson G. M. Cohen Reporters - ; G. A. Kincaid Dick McGlohon J. Q. Mitchell B. C. Moore K C; Ramsay P. B. Ruff in Linwood' Harrell E. F: Yarbbrough H. H. Taylor E. H. Denning J. D. McNairy ; : BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Executive Staff B. M. Parker Asst Bus. Mgr. H. N. Patterson ...,.. Collection Mgr. Gradon Pendergraph Circulation Mgr. T. R. Karriker ..............A,sst. Col. Mgr. ... Advertising Staff f Leonard Lewis - M. Y. Feimester Harry I-atta Jack Brook Ben Ayeock I. Goldstein J. L. McDonald J. Goldstein Sidney Brick H. Jameson H. Merrell Tuesday, November 6, 1928 PARAGRAPHICS "Vote today or forever hold your ballot!" is the warcry as the presiden tial candidates make their last stand Well, whether the Playmakers per form over Vitaphone or not, they certainly made a big noise"in the Tar Heel! . .... v y-"!U, Carolina debaters are at least courageous as was . demonstrated last night by their boldly daring to debate with three women ! Duke University is' planning humorous publication to be called the Duchess. Every Duke must have his Duchess, we suppose, even though she be only a funny story or a dirty joke. This pre-election period is about as strenuous for campus politicians as rushing season was for the Greeks And the worst of it is' that there is no period of silence! Every time we see . Duke or State freshman caps adorning some hum ble head, we thank the lucky stars of the University that our only simi lar custom is the occasional wearing of little black "literary" caps. This' year being the one hundredth anniversary of Henrik Ibsen's birth; it is especially fitting that the play "An Enemy of the People" be pre sented by local dramatic talent sort of a birthday present, as it were. j , ; I ' Davidson College has passed ruling that lights in the dormitories may now be left on all night. "Le there be light," . said the faculty we suppose in order that the students might spend even more time study ing. -. ; ; , : ' ' ' ' . ; Ibsen may have been right when his "Enemy of the People" declared that the "compact majority" is always wrong but Al Smith or Herbert Hoover will be glad enough to have the sure backing of a compact ma jority today. t Blix '$m Up '.' ; A novel stunt is being tried at the University of Minnesota. Numbers are drawn to ascertain the assigned seat of each member of the student body at all football games. This was done, we understand, in order to mix anxiety, wifely solicitude, and child like reverence for her husband, which I hope still remains the glory of the Continental Germanic home. Alas, rarely if ever seen in this country. With admirable restraint Miss Far- a clever idea and commendable if rar conveyed the well-bred coo emanat- such steps are actually necessary tomg from that noble matron. provide for more" mixing of -the, dif ferent elements of the campus body politic. .. . " " , " That particular problem of at empted exclusiveness is prevalent at most colleges. Here at Carolina it has as yet secured no,, stronghold, but present tendencies denote a possi bility of leaning in that direction which should be halted before it goes too far. The members of each fra ternity naturally are inclined to draw closely together and sever their ties with outsiders, but this should not be , carried to such an extent that there i very little mixing with oth ers. ' . ' - ' . The very fact that a man finds most pleasure in associations with one cer tain group of people usually is evi dence of his likeness to that type of individual. He should not, however, confine his attentions' or limit his time to those from whom he will gain no new experience nor secure an un derstanding of other points of view. Mix up a bit running , with only one sort of crowd all the time is not Bissell did no less ably by his text, for he was deft enough to keep his part out of the caricature into which Ibsen occasionally let it slump. The acting of these two recalls locally the mountain women of Elizabeth Taylor and Mrs. Oscar Cof fin. It was every-minute acting; and if it did lack some of Elizabeth Taylor's . unself consciousness well, living the : role is still another art again. With grateful recollections, , Sincerely, 'John M. Booker. Not a Southern State, nor Kentucky or Missouri, does he award to the Republicans. ' - . - . . ; v : " - " The Kansas editor, Paul Jones of the Lyons Daily News, does not claim his own State at all, but he arrays 280 votes as certain for the Demo crats. In his own neighborhood he claims Colorado, Missouri, and Wis consin; he does not include Oklahoma, formance of stunts by world-famous supporting castand all the techni cal workers, lived within . the broad boundaries of this camp for a month. A natural flying field, represent ing a war-time flying field in France, was the chief reason for the selection of this particular site. The field housed scores of airplanes and the sky - overhead witnessed the per- CLIPPED "One-Eyed" , Automobiles Greensboro Record) The road patrol advocated by Chairman ' Frank Page and Others would speedily eliminate one of the evils of night auto-driving the one light . automobile. There is probably nothing more dangerous on a highway at ; night conducive to gaining the most possible fthan an automobile with only one iignt; ana lnvanaoiy xne upi is uu from the college years. An Inane Resolution Concerning the White Elephant The resolution adopted by the Dialectic Senate last Monday night surpassed even the usual Di and Phi resolution in sheer inanity. It read "Resolved, that the Di Senate go on record as favoring .. immediate com pletion, of the Graham Memorial." The most unsophisticated of fresh men knows that everybody on the campus favors completion of ; the Memorial as soon as it is conceivably possible. Yet the long series of negotiations relative to the structure has seemingly been at an impasse for two years or more. The alumni have wished the white elephant off their hands, and have attempted to officially turn : it over ' to the Uni versity. -The trustees are unwilling to accept it,' as they believe it wise to refuse' the responsibility attendant upon title to the Memorial. , They will not recommend an appropriation from the legislatures with which to com plete it, as they believe classroom structures; and dormitories should come first. The key has been wished off upon the contractor, and he is do ing his darndest to get rid of it, since possession of it lays him open to liability for any damages that may occur to the building. ' ; . , The question of a possible solution of the Memorial problem is one that will require intensive study, rather than asinine resolutions to the effect that one of the four-hundred odd campus organizations favors its completion. GLENN HOLDER. i Open Forum ' : 1 Editor of The Tar Heel. - . ,. . Dear Sir: V - ..' This is a conscientious penny. pushed myself up to The Ptaymakers Saturday night, to begin using up my season ticket. Ibsen. Saw his plays while they, were still alive, and I was, too.' - Prembnitions that I'd merely be reminded of advancing years and served right for not side-stepping, the jolt. Amateurs, furthermore, , And, in addition, one of Mr., Koch's annual centenary anniversary celebrations. Ibsen. ... amateurs. . . . centenary. Even once a century might be too many. Well, anyway, it wasn't to be When We Dead Awaken. Glad I went. Great show." Good cast throughout, and several features. McCorie's Doctor Stockman radiat ed that impervious' character's ever young idealism and aristocratic lifti ness of spiriVwith only a few tired lapses. Looked the- part, too'; and spoke Grade A American . English. Can't see McCone as Joseph Mitchell did.".: :,'. : i 7 f ' J Miss Elizabeth , Farrar .was the German-Scandinavian upper middle class wife and mother to the life, for me; and I've eaten three meals a day with her kind for months on end. If Miss Farrar sot her stage business up the various fraternities and non-1 out of the text .ghe wag inspired, fraternity students instead of allow-1 Especially, the mixture of maternal the right side of the car. Of course the law' requires that two lights be displayed on the front of every auto mobile, .but it is . impossible to en force such a law without officers. There are always those who' are will ing to take a chance driving machines with only one light, and few of these ever stop to consider that they are en dangering not only their own lives but the lives, of others in automo biles approaching from the direction in which they are headed. The road patrol men would not be sent out to "nab" speeders, for it is realized that the speeding automo bile, when properly handled, often is the least dangerous type on the roads. But. those who drive with only one light, pass other cars on curves and when approaching the high points of grades and generally fail to con duct themselves m such a manner that others are not placed in jeopardy would be prey for, the patrolmen. We believe that establishment of such a force would go a long , way toward cutting down the death , list from automobile accidents a list which is assuming tremenderous proportions in North Carolina. An Assessment . r .. Of Edison ; ; .;. (New York World) i We have long regarded Mr. Edison as unique' in. the versatility of his inventive genius, and we shall better appreciate . him if 'we realize, -that he will. probably seem more striking still to future generations. He may loom up as the last of the great individual inventors. More and more invention is passing into the hands' of endowed institutions, industrial laboratories and cp-operative groups, who bring to a focus the latest devices in.? dozen fields of science. The automo bile had a thousand inventors. Tele vision, with all respect to Mr. Baird and Dr. Alexariderson, is developing from the labor of great industrial interests. Mr. Edison did much to usher in the. new approach to inven tion, f or his first modest wealth went into laboratories. But his many-sided talent made him a host in himself. The inventor often has a specially happy reward in living to see the transformations which sprang from his mind. Watt saw the steam engine bring in the industrial revolution; when Stephenson died in 1848 the loco motive had overspread the . Occident and Westinghouse saw his airbrake and alternating-current system uni versally used. But few if any inven tors have witnessed such changes as those to which Mr. Edison contribut ed. ! Medals and monuments are little to the man who gave' us, or helped perfect, the electric light,' the phono graph, the telephone, motion picture and electrical transmission. Forecasting -(From' the New York Times) ." The betting may be 3 or 4 to 1 against Smith in Wall Street (which does not necessarily mean that any money is being put up), but among Democratic editors outside New York ' there seems to be a confident feeling that a Democratic landslide is coming: In one mail the Times has received the predictions of one Georgia editor and an editor in Kansas. The Enquirer-Sun is the Georgia paper its editor Julian Harris; and he tabu lates a minimum of 268 vote's for Smith. In the doubtful column he puts Oklahoma, Maryland, and Con necticut, proving that he is not f ol lowing will-o-the-wisps in his claims Illinois, Nebraska, Minnesota, Mon tana or New' Mexico, although he says that he thinks some of them will be in the electoral list. Nonsense Has Its Place We lately read a piece in the Geor gia Eaucation Journal entitled Raps Insane Conversation With Children, in which an "expert", Mrs. Jessie C. Fenton, was quoted as commenting scathingly on the insanity of much of the conversation adults direct at chil dren. We wondered why . Mrs. . F.enton ' did not include in her remarks of de rogation the inane conversations which adults often direct at ' each other. What Mrs. Fenton obviously lacks is the ability to appreciate nonsense and to rate it at its proper value. Intelli gent adults do not always converse with each other about, philosophy or Shakespeare and- the musical glasses. Even savants have been known to make jokes and to say foolish things to each othe'r and to their - inferiors. Why not, then, say foolish things to children, if the spirit moves ua to do so?' . ; .! Juggling the Figures Probably the happiest man, for the time being, is the one that can ana- yze what; he wants it to show out, of the straw vote, regardless of what it really shows. Oho State Journal. Pat Harrison has been engaging in a debate with George H. Moses, which was inconclusive in spite, of the fact that it, was participated in by two men who knew it all. Raleigh Times. ...... Appeals to the Indian. with a vote may convince him. that he is the noble red man, after all. Boston Trans- cript. -i "". William and Mary v Students in Favor of Hoover in Poll WILLIAMSBURG, VA., Nov. 4 William and Mary students are about divided on the Smith-Hoover arsru ment, if The Flat Hat, student news paper, straw poll caii .be considered indicative. ', ; Unfortunately,' however, it cai hardly, be considered indicative since but ,128 of the thirteen hundred students here bothered to turn in a vote during the two . weeks, i The final result showed 65 ballots were cast for Herbert Hoover, Repub lican nominee, 61 for Alfred E. Smith, Democratic nominee, two., for Will Rogers, independent, while none of the lesser candidates received any votes at all. ; The two for Will Rogers evidently came, from a Will-Rogers-f or-President-Club on - the r. campus which so far has' two buttons out among the students and one among the faculty. . - Little interest was shown for the most part among the students, after the poll was carried over a week and attention was called to the few votes the first week. AT THE CAROLINA A complete tent city, populated by more, than 300 selected citizens, was erected on a Southern Calif or nia mountain plateau to facilitate the filming of the extensive spec tacular airplane battle scenes of "Lilac . Time," First National's spe cial production with Colleen Moore and Gary Cooper which comes to the Carolina Theatre Thursday and Fri day. ' ;. ... v-.;""""' .;4j ' ; Miss Moore, the members of the pilots that, have never been surpassed for: their spefctacular and thrilling features."" V ' 'j';. ' ::- y The camp was erected almost overnight, but so efficiently was the work done that Director George Fitzmaurice . was able to begin film ing the day he arrived with his staff and players. . Removed a half-mile from the camp was the flying field, including a com plete replica of a British air squad ron's field in France during the war. Practical hangars, machine shops, mechanic's quarters, supply . sheds, field officers' headquarters, a hospital and other buildings were a part of the building equipment. ' ; -The camp itself numbered 80 tents. Each tent had wooden - floors and sides, rugs, mirrors, gasoline lamps, a wood stove, a distilled drinking water container screen doors and windows, and a shower bath piped with hot and cold water. When movie people do it; they do it in luxury. ' , : . An American newspaper' has dis covered that, just .when 15 A nations decided to outlaw war, China launched a new battleship named Peace. We daresay the Chinese idea may be just as harmless as. the .other. Punch. Now is the time to send the Tar Heel Home. : .'., v -'' "" Si SUITS $1 Any Suit Or Topcoat In Our Store If You Buy One at the Regular Price 1 BERfJAK'S $11 , Chop Suey Dinner at "THE PINES" is an event to' be treasured forever more. CHOP SUEY, that tasty Chinese dish is our specialty. Drive out any afternoon or evening and taste some real cooking. There is also music and dancing if you, wish. The service and food cannot be duplicated anywhere, in this section. . r r Fried chicken dinner here is also worth the trip. " THE PINES TEA ROOM .CHAPEL HILL BOULEVARD . , 7, Miles from Durham r ; 4 .Miles from. Chapel Hill , Let us plan your club, bridge and fraternity luncheons Have you ever as your nds? Any man who wears John Wards will tell the same 6tory. .The leathers in John Wards are choice 1)6116 The fit an( 1 -t;., 7 tnvWdJct kvercs IMCORPKATBD KB 8. U.M. f AT. OW. Stores in New York Brooklyn Newark and Philadelphia On display at manship are more expert. X. TliAtr 1i4a vMvwA l.1 L' peal to men of the better Stetson "D" Shop ' , class. r p $9V P1 Hill, N. J: Sd shoe to ask for by name V- (X HORSEGUARDS ; . - ' ' " ''" . , 'i. ' - . .; . - . - ' . , . I , - ... . ' im What Shakespeare says about Coca-Cola Delicious and Refreshing ft S-CN - ) s! 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